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While skeptics once saw the concept of business ethics as an
oxymoron, modern businesses are proving them wrong. Success depends
not only on educating young professionals about ethical practices,
but on the implementation of these practices in all aspects of a
company The Handbook of Research on Business Ethics and Corporate
Responsibilities explores the fundamental concepts that keep
companies successful in the era of globalization and the internet.
Investigating the implementation of best practices and how ethics
can be taught to the next generation of business experts, this
handbook is an essential reference source for students, academics,
business managers, or anyone interested in the increasingly
interdisciplinary field of business ethics and its applications in
the world today.
Author Paul Palmer first began idolizing highway patrolmen when he
was a boy living in Gila Bend, Arizona. As the patrolmen stopped by
to visit his father, Paul soon realized that these brave men were
true heroes. He had no idea then that one day he would work with
the same men he held in such high esteem. As he shares a
chronological glimpse into the life and career of an Arizona
patrolman, Paul begins with his first job in 1966 as a dispatcher
in Holbrook, Arizona, where he jokes his best view of the town was
in his rearview mirror. While providing amusing portrayals of the
men and women he worked with, Paul relies on slightly exaggerated
real-life experiences to depict the wonderful, wild, and wacky
people who made up the Arizona Highway Patrol. Paul shares his
experiences of the next 40 years, serving in both civilian and
sworn capacities and how he developed lasting friendships with the
heroes who put their lives on the line every day to ensure the
safety of others. The Arizona Highway Patrol as I Disremember It
provides an unforgettable look at the humorous side of law
enforcement through the eyes of one of its own.
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Tuberculosis (Hardcover)
Anthony M. Lowell, Lydia B. Edwards, Carroll E. Palmer
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R1,813
Discovery Miles 18 130
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This classic, first published in 1969, introduces to
English-speaking readers a field which is of increasing importance
in contemporary philosophy and theology--hermeneutics, the theory
of understanding, or interpretation. Richard E. Palmer, utilizing
largely untranslated sources, treats principally of the conception
of hermeneutics enunciated by Heidegger and developed into a
"philosophical hermeneutics" by Hans-Georg Gadamer. He provides a
brief overview of the field by surveying some half-dozen alternate
definitions of the term and by examining in detail the
contributions of Friedrich Schleiermacher and Wilhelm Dilthey. In
the Manifesto which concludes the book, Palmer suggests the
potential significance of hermeneutics for literary interpretation.
The aim of this dictionary was to provide reference of all the
words in use in colloquial Persian, particularly for beginners.
Especially for the candidates in the Indian Civil Service, all the
words in the Gulist n and other prescribed text-books were also
included.
This 1997 book examines the income distributional experience of
fifteen developed economies - representing a wide range of social
and economic strategies - over the past two decades. Experts from
each of the countries have carefully documented the pattern of
distributional change in individual earnings and household income
in their countries and analysed the driving forces behind these
changes. Separate chapters are devoted to the experiences of
Australia, Canada, the Czech Republic, Finland, France, West and
former East Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Israel, Japan, the
Netherlands, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States. The
authors examine the effects on the inequality of household income
of the development of individual earnings, unemployment, inflation,
public sector transfers and taxes, and demographic changes.
It is the dream of every publisher to hit upon a project that will
win praise for contributing to the intellectual and cultural life.
Theology Today Ignatius of Loyola: Spiritual Exercises and Selected
Works edited by George E. Ganss, S.J. with the collaboration of
Parmananda R. Divarkar, S.J., Edward J. Malatesta, S.J., and Martin
E. Palmer, S.J. preface by John W. Padberg, S.J. I close by asking
God through his infinite goodness to give us the perfect grace to
know his most holy will and fulfill it completely. May it please
the Sovereign Goodness that everything be ordered to his holy
service and continual praise. Ignatius of Loyola (1491-1556)
September 27, 1990 marks the 450th anniversary of the foundation of
the Society of Jesus in 1540, and the year 1991 brings the 500th
anniversary of the birth of its founder, St. Ignatius of Loyola. In
these circumstances the present volume will contribute to the study
of Ignatius' charism and of the ministries he initiated-in
Christian education, foreign missions, and other fields. It
presents his four major writings: the Autobiography and Spiritual
Exercises in their entirety, and his Spiritual Diary and
Constitutions of the Society of Jesus in selections so chosen as to
give an overview of each work. It also offers ten samples of his
almost 7,000 letters. Ample explanations are given in the
introductions and commentaries by way of notes. The General
Introduction is an intellectual and spiritual biography that
sketches the fascinating steps by which, largely through mystical
favors from God, Ignatius reached his inspiring worldview, with
everything in it ordered to the greater glory of God. In his
Exercises we find a synthesis of his chief spiritual principles,
and in his Constitutions an example of his organizational ability.
The Autobiography tells of his mystical illuminations and gifts,
and the Spiritual Diary lets us peer deeply into his heart in his
most intimate dealings with God. His writing reveals many facets of
the warm personality of this influential saint.
This 1997 book examines the income distributional experience of
fifteen developed economies - representing a wide range of social
and economic strategies - over the past two decades. Experts from
each of the countries have carefully documented the pattern of
distributional change in individual earnings and household income
in their countries and analysed the driving forces behind these
changes. Separate chapters are devoted to the experiences of
Australia, Canada, the Czech Republic, Finland, France, West and
former East Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Israel, Japan, the
Netherlands, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States. The
authors examine the effects on the inequality of household income
of the development of individual earnings, unemployment, inflation,
public sector transfers and taxes, and demographic changes.
What do we do when we view a work of art? What does it mean to have
an "aesthetic" experience? Are such experiences purely in the eye
(and brain) of the beholder? Such questions have entertained
philosophers for millennia and psychologists for over a century.
More recently, with the advent of functional neuroimaging methods,
a handful of ambitious brain scientists have begun to explore the
neural correlates of such experiences. The notion of aesthetics is
generally linked to the way art evokes an hedonic response-we like
it or we don't. Of course, a multitude of factors can influence
such judgments, such as personal interest, past experience, prior
knowledge, and cultural biases. In this book, philosophers,
psychologists, and neuroscientists were asked to address the nature
of aesthetic experiences from their own discipline's perspective.
In particular, we asked these scholars to consider whether a
multidisciplinary approach, an aesthetic science, could help
connect mind, brain, and aesthetics. As such, this book offers an
introduction to the way art is perceived, interpreted, and felt and
approaches these mindful events from a multidisciplinary
perspective.
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