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Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
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My Arctic Journal (Hardcover)
Josephine (Diebitsch) [F Peary, Robert E (Robert Edwin) 1856 Peary
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R860
Discovery Miles 8 600
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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If prayer has ever felt frustrating, complicated, laborious or
even useless to you, this book has the potential to give you a
fresh perspective on the heart of prayer. The author shares her
experience of crying out, "Lord, teach me to pray " and the Holy
Spirit's response to her cries. Included are six lessons about the
principles of prayer and the author's gained insight into why
prayer is a necessity; the very heartbeat of a believer. These
insights can move you into a place of simplicity and rest in prayer
and reveal that prayer is not something you do, but rather someone
you become; a pray-er.
What difference does a worldview make? These eclectic essays from
twenty scholars show how embodying a biblical Christian worldview
helps transform mere existence into fullness of life. Read them to
discover . . . How Genesis answers the four most important human
questions of pre-modern and post-modern times (W. Brouwer); Why the
concept "Christian worldview" fits the unique experience of reality
Christianity affords, despite recent criticisms of the term and
concept (R. Kurka); How worldview competition in the global South
differs from the West (D. Button); How Western civilization lost
its Christian mind and can find it again (M. E. Roberts); How well
the reasons celebrity scholar Bart Ehrman gives for his
"deconversion" stack up (E. Meadors); How higher education has
abandoned its own source by expelling "religion of the heart" (R.
Wenyika & W. Adrian); How an "engineering mindset" helps
evaluate worldviews and how a Christian worldview fares (D.
Halsmer); Christian Humanism as an exodus from the cultural
wasteland for today's youth (R. Williams); The worldview John
Grisham's fiction expresses (J. Han & M. Bagley); How
Intelligent Design strengthens its status as science by using the
concept of "design" in a new way (D. Leonard); In the spirit of
"The Screwtape Letters," a new epistle to Wormwood that praises
compartmentalized Christianity (D. K. Naugle); How an orphaned
Japanese girl experienced "the American dream," God's way (K.
Takeuchi); How words, grammar, and style embody one's worldview,
for good or ill (S. Robbins); What happens to preaching-and the
church-when emotional response to visual stimuli preempts thought
(W. Wilson II); . . . and much more. "That which God has created
and sin has divided Christ is reuniting . . ., and this includes
the divisions generated by our . . . compartmentalizations. Our
gracious, redeeming God is putting Humpty Dumpty back together
again For Christian scholars and teachers, this magnificent truth
is fraught with implications for us . . . personally and
professionally." - David K. Naugle, "Squashing Screwtape: Debunking
Dualism and Restoring Integrity in Christian Educational Thought
and Practice"
Dr. Andrew Turnbull, a Scottish physician practicing in London,
answers the call from The Crown to start a large colony in Florida.
His partners include a former Prime Minister, the personal
physician to King George III and the Commander of the British Navy.
They plan to gather 500 colonists, with 1,450 joining them.
Colonists came from Greece, Italy and the greater number from the
Island of Minorca.
At one time they board eight ships for the ocean crossing, only
to meet the terrible storm from the south, damaging both ships and
passengers. Expecting one month for the voyage, some ships take
four months, resulting in scurvy taking a great number.
They land at a place the Doctor names New Smyrna, a wild jungle
where the Spanish landed years earlier and named it The Mosquitoes.
These pests brought The Fever to the colony taking many more lives.
After an early mutiny, the plantation manages to produce a number
of crops and tons of indigo are exported to England.
The Revolution begins in the north and this major story was
overshadowed by its success.
June Roberts explores the complicated post-colonial infrastructure
of Caribbean society and life as an African American through the
work of Erna Brodber. Brodber's novels Jane and Louisa Will Soon
Come Home, MYAL, and Louisiana all explore various facets of the
Caribbean and African American experiences, and Roberts greatly
adds to their value through her commentary and interpretation.
While she uses Erna Brodber's books' organizing themes as a home
base, Roberts doesn't limit her work to strict criticism and
analysis of the novels. Instead, she traces countless issues as
varied as the nuances of the Caribbean psyche, the importance of
matriarchs, traditional slave dances, obeahs, Santeria and other
African-based religious expressions, as well as politics and
history, and the perspectives of past and present scholars of the
Caribbean and African-American experience. Most importantly,
Roberts investigates how the colonial system's exploitation and
dehumanization of the black people affected their spirits. This
text is broad enough to appeal to all enthusiasts of Caribbean and
African-American topics, and it can especially benefit academic
courses related to these topics.
This book addresses how Christian leaders integrate faith into the
workplace, through a love-based altruistic system of Christian
Servant Leadership Spiritual Intelligence (CSLSI). It hypothesizes
how CSLSI positively influences a range of desirable employee
attitudes and behaviors including servant leadership and
followership, organizational citizenship, and positive stress
coping and adaptation strategies. This book embraces an
interdisciplinary approach to present the global attributes of
CSLSI, which includes following God's will and Golden Rule
workplace love expression, with specific workplace applications.
The empirical research is supplemented by approximately 100
interviews with Christian leaders providing workplace exemplars and
a compelling overview of how Christians honor God in the
marketplace. This book will appeal to academics and practitioners
in business, psychology, medicine, management, leadership, and
theology looking to develop a God-honoring work life. Readers will
benefit from the principles and the self-diagnostic surveys that
assess spiritual intelligence and ways to enhance it.
Perhaps no other symbol has more resonance in African American
history than that of "40 acres and a mule"-the lost promise of
Black reparations for slavery after the Civil War. In I've Been
Here All the While, we meet the Black people who actually received
this mythic 40 acres, the American settlers who coveted this land,
and the Native Americans whose holdings it originated from. In
nineteenth-century Indian Territory (modern-day Oklahoma), a story
unfolds that ties African American and Native American history
tightly together, revealing a western theatre of Civil War and
Reconstruction, in which Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, and
Seminole Indians, their Black slaves, and African Americans and
whites from the eastern United States fought military and
rhetorical battles to lay claim to land that had been taken from
others. Through chapters that chart cycles of dispossession, land
seizure, and settlement in Indian Territory, Alaina E. Roberts
draws on archival research and family history to upend the
traditional story of Reconstruction. She connects debates about
Black freedom and Native American citizenship to westward expansion
onto Native land. As Black, white, and Native people constructed
ideas of race, belonging, and national identity, this part of the
West became, for a short time, the last place where Black people
could escape Jim Crow, finding land and exercising political
rights, until Oklahoma statehood in 1907.
Stochastic portfolio theory is a mathematical methodology for constructing stock portfolios, analyzing the behavior of portfolios, and understanding the structure of equity markets. Stochastic portfolio theory has both theoretical and practical applications: as a theoretical tool it can be used to construct examples of theoretical portfolios with specified characteristics, and to determine the distributional component of portfolio return. On a practical level, stochastic portfolio theory has been the basis for strategies used for over a decade by the institutional equity manager INTECH, where the author has served as chief investment officer. This book is an introduction to stochastic portfolio theory for investment professionals and for students of mathematical finance. Each chapter includes a number of problems of varying levels of difficulty and a brief summary of the principal results of the chapter, without proofs.
Among the most influential, world-renowned scientists during the
early decades of the twentieth century was the Dutch astronomer
Jacobus Cornelius Kapteyn (1851-1922). Kapteyn's influence resulted
from and contributed to the golden age of Dutch science. In the
words of the brilliant English astrophysicist, Arthur S. Eddington:
Holland has given many scientific leaders to the world: it is
doubtful whether any other nation in proportion to its size can
show so fine a record. J.C. Kapteyn was among the most
distinguished of its sons -- a truly great astronomer'. The present
text is an English translation of Kapteyn's 1928 (Dutch) biography
by his daughter Henrietta Hertzsprung-Kapteyn. While the original
biography suffers from -- but in many ways is also enriched by --
the emotional excesses of a loving daughter writing of her famous
father, this new translation provides an annotated assessment of
Kapteyn as family man, scientist and world leader. This new volume
also opens up to a much wider reading public many of the enormously
rich contributions, not only of Kapteyn the man but also of the
Dutch, to the emergence of astronomy as a major intellectual force
in the world. Perhaps equally important, the translated biography
reproduces many biographical and technical details from Kapteyn's
correspondence with numerous other scientists and scholars. Access
to the Kapteyn biography becomes an archival treasure for future
studies dealing with Kapteyn himself, as well as with the history
of both modern and Dutch astronomy and with the rise of
international astronomy.
A critical analysis of the connections that the United States
Supreme Court has made between campaign finance regulations and
voters' behavior. The sanctity of political speech is a key element
of the United States Constitution and a cornerstone of the American
republic. When the Supreme Court linked political speech to
campaign finance in its landmark Buckley v. Valeo (1976) decision,
the modern era of campaign finance regulation was born. The
decision stated that in order to pass constitutional muster, any
laws limiting money in politics must be narrowly tailored and serve
a compelling state interest. The lone state interest the Court was
willing to entertain was the mitigation of corruption. In order to
reach this conclusion, the Court advanced a sophisticated
behavioral model that made assumptions about how laws affect
voters' opinions and behavior. These assumptions have received
surprisingly little attention until now. In The Appearance of
Corruption, Daron Shaw, Brian Roberts, and Mijeong Baek analyze the
connections that the Court made between campaign finance
regulations and voters' behavior. The court argued that an increase
in perceived corruption would lower engagement and turnout. Drawing
from original survey data and experiments, they confront the
question of what happens when the Supreme Court is wrong-and when
the foundation of over 40 years of jurisprudence is simply not
true. Even with the heightened awareness of campaign finance issues
that emerged in the wake of the 2010 Citizens United decision,
there is little empirical support for the Court's reasoning that
turnout would decline. A rigorous statistical analysis, this is the
first work to simultaneously name and test each and every one of
the Court's assumptions in the pre- and post-Citizen's United eras.
It will also fundamentally reshape how we think about campaign
finance regulation's effects on voter behavior.
Over the years the Supreme Court of the United States, and other
courts, have been subjects of controversy, disagreement, praise,
and condemnation. Many of the expressed misgivings regarding the
expansion of judicial power have been born out by the decisions
reflected not only in the verdicts of the Supreme Court of the
United States, but also in other judicial forums of American
society. The effect of these decisions has resulted in an attack on
the American civil society that compels the nation to follow
courses of development that, were they to be legitimate, would have
emanated from the political institutions of the country, not from
the legal institutions. The Most Dangerous Branch is a collection
of essays that provide support for these contentions and hope to
prompt citizens to demand greater responsibility by the courts and
their adherence to their proper role in a system under the rule of
law.
The crisis of western civilization is a crisis of public
philosophy. This is the charge of Public Philosophy and Political
Science, a stunning new collection of essays edited by E. Robert
Statham Jr. Vividly cataloging the decay of the moral and
intellectual foundations of civic liberty, the book portrays a
generation of Americans alienated from institutions built on public
philosophy. The work exposes the failure of America's political
scientists to acknowledge and understand this alarming crisis in
the American body politic. The distinguished contributors examine
the evolution of public philosophy; the inextricable relationship
between politics and philosophy; and the interplay between public
philosophy, the constitution, natural law, and government. They
reveal the dire threat to deliberative democracy and the
fundamental order of constitutional society posed by public
philosophy's waning power to refine, cultivate, and civilize. The
work is an indictment of a society which has discarded a way of
life rooted in natural law, democracy and the traditions of
civility; and is a denunciation of an educated elite that has
divorced itself from the standards upon which public philosophy
rests. It is essential reading for philosophers and political and
social scientists seeking to resurrect the standards of American
public life.
The crisis of western civilization is a crisis of public
philosophy. This is the charge of Public Philosophy and Political
Science, a stunning new collection of essays edited by E. Robert
Statham Jr. Vividly cataloging the decay of the moral and
intellectual foundations of civic liberty, the book portrays a
generation of Americans alienated from institutions built on public
philosophy. The work exposes the failure of America's political
scientists to acknowledge and understand this alarming crisis in
the American body politic. The distinguished contributors examine
the evolution of public philosophy; the inextricable relationship
between politics and philosophy; and the interplay between public
philosophy, the constitution, natural law, and government. They
reveal the dire threat to deliberative democracy and the
fundamental order of constitutional society posed by public
philosophy's waning power to refine, cultivate, and civilize. The
work is an indictment of a society which has discarded a way of
life rooted in natural law, democracy and the traditions of
civility; and is a denunciation of an educated elite that has
divorced itself from the standards upon which public philosophy
rests. It is essential reading for philosophers and political and
social scientists seeking to resurrect the standards of American
public life.
A guide for using computational text analysis to learn about the
social world From social media posts and text messages to digital
government documents and archives, researchers are bombarded with a
deluge of text reflecting the social world. This textual data gives
unprecedented insights into fundamental questions in the social
sciences, humanities, and industry. Meanwhile new machine learning
tools are rapidly transforming the way science and business are
conducted. Text as Data shows how to combine new sources of data,
machine learning tools, and social science research design to
develop and evaluate new insights. Text as Data is organized around
the core tasks in research projects using text-representation,
discovery, measurement, prediction, and causal inference. The
authors offer a sequential, iterative, and inductive approach to
research design. Each research task is presented complete with
real-world applications, example methods, and a distinct style of
task-focused research. Bridging many divides-computer science and
social science, the qualitative and the quantitative, and industry
and academia-Text as Data is an ideal resource for anyone wanting
to analyze large collections of text in an era when data is
abundant and computation is cheap, but the enduring challenges of
social science remain. Overview of how to use text as data Research
design for a world of data deluge Examples from across the social
sciences and industry
Answers to how various mythological, Biblical, and literary themes have been treated in literature, art, music, and the performing arts can be found in this work. It provides an analysis of over 100 selected themes that reflect the increasingly interdisciplinary nature of scholarly and academic work through the use of various iconographical sources. The alphabetical arrangement facilitates browsing, while the six indexes provide multiple access by considering, among others, references to the Bible; Judeo-Christian personages, places and concepts; and artists and works of art".--"Outstanding Reference Sources : the 1999 Selection of New Titles", American Libraries, May 1999. Comp. by the Reference Sources Committee, RUSA, ALA.
This book addresses how Christian leaders integrate faith into the
workplace, through a love-based altruistic system of Christian
Servant Leadership Spiritual Intelligence (CSLSI). It hypothesizes
how CSLSI positively influences a range of desirable employee
attitudes and behaviors including servant leadership and
followership, organizational citizenship, and positive stress
coping and adaptation strategies. This book embraces an
interdisciplinary approach to present the global attributes of
CSLSI, which includes following God's will and Golden Rule
workplace love expression, with specific workplace applications.
The empirical research is supplemented by approximately 100
interviews with Christian leaders providing workplace exemplars and
a compelling overview of how Christians honor God in the
marketplace. This book will appeal to academics and practitioners
in business, psychology, medicine, management, leadership, and
theology looking to develop a God-honoring work life. Readers will
benefit from the principles and the self-diagnostic surveys that
assess spiritual intelligence and ways to enhance it.
Warren Roberts has discovered a Rossini that others have not seen,
a composer who commented ironically and satirically on religion and
politics in Post-Napoleonic Europe. This book examines Rossini
within the context of his own time, one of Napoleonic domination of
Italy, restoration of the Bourbon monarchy in Naples in 1815, and
the 1830 Revolution in Paris. Using the techniques of the
historian,and reading librettos as texts, the author analyzes the
five operas treated in detail in the book (Il barbiere di Siviglia,
Cenerentola, La gazza ladra, Matilde di Shabran, and Il viaggio a
Reims) as responses, each in its own way, to the history that the
composer experienced. Roberts shows that Rossini made probing
commentaries on politics and religion in a time of reaction and
revolution, and that the composer was well-informed on
post-Napoleonic politics. Rossini's comic writing served very
serious purposes, exposing the problems and complications of an age
that he observed with striking clarity. Warren Roberts is Professor
Emeritusof History at the University at Albany, SUNY, and has
published extensively on eighteenth-century French culture.
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