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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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Logic (Hardcover)
Richard F Clarke (S J )
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R1,048
Discovery Miles 10 480
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Life By Suicide is about one mans struggle to rid himself of all
the things that were keeping him from being happy and seeking his
salvation . Things like depression, drugs and alcohol. He also had
several mental illnesses such as post traumatic stress disorder,
agoraphobia, as well as overeating.All of these things left him
feeling suicidal and not wanting to live. His thoughts began to
become his reality, but his love for God and his daugther prevented
him from killing himself. However he still was a very sick man. He
left notes on his front and back doors that he died from a heart
attack. He also left on his answering machine the same message.
While in this dark area of his life he found the secrets to life
it's self. It was at this point in his life thatLife By Suicide was
revealed to him. Because of his love for other people he has
released his expereinces in this extraordinary book in hopes that
you to can live through Life By Suicide.
In Ways of Listening, musicologist Eric Clarke explores musical
meaning, music's critical function in human lives, and the
relationship between listening and musical material. Clarke
outlines an "ecological approach" to understanding the perception
of music, arguing that the way we hear and understand music is not
simply a function of our brain structure or of the musical "codes"
given to us by culture, but must be considered within the physical
and social contexts of listening.
Affecting over a hundred million individuals worldwide, retinal
diseases are among the leading causes of irreversible visual
impairment and blindness, and appropriate study models, especially
animal models, are essential to furthering our understanding of the
etiology, pathology, and progression of these endemic diseases. In
Animal Models for Retinal Diseases, recognized experts in the field
highlight valuable techniques as well as animal models for the
prominent retinal diseases in order to aid in the evaluation,
development, and improvement of therapeutic strategies. Beginning
with an overview of the morphology of the retina, visual behavior,
and genetics and genomics approaches for retinal research, the book
continues by covering animal models for the research of specific
human retinal diseases, e.g., retinal degeneration, age-related
macular degeneration, retinopathy of prematurity, diabetic
retinopathy, glaucoma, retinal ischemia, and retinal inflammation.
As a volume in the successful Neuromethods series, the chapters
provide authoritative reviews of the most commonly used approaches
in the field. Vital and easy to use, Animal Models for Retinal
Diseases serves to support the important future research of ocular
investigators, ophthalmologists, and neuroscientists currently
delving into this fascinating field of study.
With 365 days of guidance, inspiration and positivity, this
five-minutes-a-day journal can help you develop into 'the best
possible you' using the pathways of positive psychology. Using
science-backed research, this journal offers inspiring tips,
prompts and exercises to guide you to long-term happiness and a
fulfilling life. The book includes inspirational quotes and
additional decorative borders on some pages to doodle or colour in
as well.
Most African states experienced only a few fleeting years of
democratic rule after independence before succumbing to
authoritarianism. During the 1970s and 1980s, Africans and
Westerners alike came to view dictatorship to be as much a part of
the region's social landscape as its grinding poverty. Yet the end
of the Cold War and the sharpening of th
The business side of running a medical practice may be unappealing
but it's crucial "How to Manage Your GP Practice" is written for
GPs and other health professionals running their own practices.It
tells you in simple, engaging style what the pitfalls are and how
to avoid them.It illustrates the good and bad ways of negotiating
through management issues, using case examples and lightening the
messages with witty cartoons.
Written by a GP with over 10 years' experience editing a leading
GP magazine, and an accountant whose firm advises over 2500 GPs,
the information here is sound, relevant and up to date. It provides
reliable and reassuring information for doctors starting out in
their careers as well as those looking to refresh their management
skills.
Lisa Clark's scholarly account of the development of the organic
movement in the United States and Canada beautifully explains the
decades-long transition from understanding organic production as
inextricably tied to healthy soils, communities, and social justice
('process-based') to views of organics as meeting certain standards
for marketing purposes (product-based). Read this book and you will
care deeply about the difference in these views as well as
understand current debates about the future of organics.' - Marion
Nestle, New York University, US and author of What to Eat'In this
fascinating book, Lisa F. Clark presents the history of organic
food in North America, from its early roots as a marginal farming
activity to its well-established position in today's food market.
She analyses political institutions, social movements and corporate
actors in how they deal with the delicate question of balancing the
search for increasing the market for organic food while maintaining
broad organic values. Without offering simple answers to this
question, Clark offers important insights into the different
approaches to this question. This book is very interesting and
highly relevant for anyone interested in organic food in North
America and beyond.' - Peter Oosterveer, Wageningen University, the
Netherlands 'In a globalized food system that struggles to connect
the environmental, social, economic and governance dimensions of
sustainability, this book provides precious insights. It documents
the birth, development and 'mid-age crisis' of the organic movement
in North America. The historic lack of clarity between organic
principles and practices, and especially the insertion of the
organic sector into the global trade regime, have left behind the
process-related goal of organic production. Seventy years of
lessons, ebbs and flows of a movement searching for an authentic
future. A must read for all those interested in sustainable
agriculture, institutional challenges faced by value-based
movements and visioning organic agriculture pathways.' - Nadia
El-Hage Scialabba, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations, Italy The Changing Politics of Organic Food in North
America explores the political dynamics of the remarkable
transition of organic food from a 'fringe fad' in the 1960s to a
multi-billion dollar industry in the 2000s. Taking a
multidisciplinary, institutionalist approach that integrates social
movement theory, public policy analysis and value chain analysis,
it tells the story of how the organic movement responded to the
social, economic and political changes brought on by the rise of
industrial agriculture in the twentieth century. This book examines
how the changing constellation of actors, institutions and ideas
involved in the politics of organic food influenced the evolving
goals and principles of the organic movement, including the muting
of social and political organic principles in formal policy and the
eclipse of the 'process-based' definition of organic by the
'product-based' definition. It discusses the integration of organic
food into the globalized food system and how food and agriculture
movements have responded to the forces of industrialization and
globalization, as well as critically analyzing the vulnerability of
social movements that do not address market interactions in their
mandates. This timely and impactful book is a theoretical and
empirical resource for researchers and advanced students working on
organic food, agriculture, comparative public policy analysis,
trade policy, institutionalism and social movements, as well as
those involved in making food and agriculture policy.
The fourth edition of the Historical Dictionary of Republic of the
Congo provides a comprehensive set of references on the country s
history, politics, economics, and culture. It traces the careers of
the country s leading personalities into the era following the
democratic experiment of the 1990s. It updates the country s
social, economic, and political evolution through the first decade
of the 21st century. Clark and Decalo provide a snapshot of the
Republic of the Congo through a chronology, an introductory essay,
appendixes, an extensive bibliography, and the dictionary section
of over 700 cross-referenced entries on important personalities,
leading political figures, institutions, economic enterprises,
ethnic communities, and cultural features. It provides information
on many aspects of Congolese society, culture, and society not
available on any web-based source or in any other publication. It
is an excellent access point for students, researchers, and anyone
wanting to know more about the Republic of the Congo."
The book contains 48 articles presented at the 11th International
Conference on Cerebral Vasospasm held in Cincinnati, Ohio, USA, in
July 2011. This collection of papers represents a cross-section of
the enormous progress that has been made towards a thorough
understanding and effective treatment of neurovascular events
following aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage, including cerebral
vasospasm. It is of interest to clinicians who wish to apply
state-of-the-art knowledge to their management of this devastating
condition and to basic scientists wishing to expand their
understanding of cerebrovascular and neural pathophysiology related
to subarachnoid hemorrhage.
The two organs of the body most accessible to examination are the
eye and the skin and its appendages. That is why, it is said,
ophthalmological genetics is in such flourishing good health.
Dermatological genetics does not seem to have benefited so much
from the skin being on the outside, and there are but few
dermatological counterparts to the volumes of Sorsby, Waardenburg,
Franceschetti and Franr; ois, among others. But thanks to the
growing interest in medical genetics, and the modern sophisticated
tech niques of molecular, biochemical, and ultrastructural
examination, der matology is beginning to catch up, as the
appearance of this volume testifies. Because of the growing body of
knowledge and the heightened awareness of genetics by both patients
and physicians, dermatologists not only will be asked more often
about the inheritance of skin conditions they diagnose but
increasingly will have the opportunity to diagnose a variety of
inborn errors and syndromes by their dermatologic manifestations.
On the other hand, syndromologists, clinical geneticists, and
physicians are continually seeing patients with diagnostic clues in
the skin that they must be able to appreciate. For both groups this
book will be a new and valuable source of help. Spring 1979 F.
CLARKE FRASER, Ph.D., M.D."
In the midst of the "cognitive revolution," there has been a
veritable ex plosion of interest in topics that have been long
banished from academic consideration under the intellectual
hegemony of behaviorism. Most notably, notions of self, ego, and
identity are reasserting themselves as fundamental problems in a
variety of research traditions within psychol ogy and the social
sciences. Theoretical models, review articles, edited vol umes, and
empirical work devoted to these constructs are proliferating at a
dizzying rate. This clearly attests to the renascent interest in
these topics, the vitality of these research paradigms, and the
promise that these constructs hold for explaining fundamental
aspects of human development and behavior. Although the renewed
academic interest in self, ego, and identity is obviously an
exciting and healthy development, there is always the tenden cy for
research to take on a parochial character. When boundaries are
erected among different theoretical perspectives, when empirical
findings are viewed in isolation, when theories are too sharply
delimited and segre gated from other domains of behavior, then what
may seem like progres sive, healthy, and content-increasing
tendencies in a research paradigm may turn out to be, on closer
inspection, merely an inchoate thrashing about. Fortunately there
is an internal dynamic to scientific investigation that tends to
combat this degenerating tendency. There is something about the
rhythm of science that bids us to transcend parochial theoretical
in terests and seek the most general theory."
In 1889 the Jesuit Richard F. Clarke published this biography of
Charles Lavigerie (1825-1892), the French cardinal and Primate of
Africa. From the moment of his arrival in Algeria in 1868,
Lavigerie became a key, if sometimes controversial, figure in
organising Catholic missions in Africa. In 1874 he founded the
Society of Missionaries for Africa, otherwise known as the White
Fathers after the white Arab dress they wore. Lavigerie's later
career was devoted to the battle against slavery and in 1888 he
conducted a campaign in several European capitals denouncing the
practice. Clarke's book, which appeared a year after Lavigerie's
visit to London, provides an account of the cardinal's career in
France and Africa up to that date. It emphasises and praises
Lavigerie's anti-slavery message, referring to him in the preface
as 'the apostle of the slaves of all Africa'.
Creative practice in music, particularly in traditional concert
culture, is commonly understood in terms of a rather stark division
of labour between composer and performer. But this overlooks the
distributed and interactive nature of the creative processes on
which so much contemporary music depends. The incorporation of two
features-improvisation and collaboration-into much contemporary
music suggests that the received view of the relationship between
composition and performance requires reassessment. Improvisation
and collaborative working practices blur the
composition/performance divide and, in doing so, provide important
new perspectives on the forms of distributed creativity that play a
central part in much contemporary music. Distributed Creativity:
Collaboration and Improvisation in Contemporary Music explores the
different ways in which collaboration and improvisation enable and
constrain creative processes. Thirteen chapters and twelve shorter
Interventions offer a range of perspectives on distributed
creativity in music, on composer/performer collaborations and on
contemporary improvisation practices. The chapters provide
substantial discussions of a variety of conceptual frameworks and
particular projects, while the Interventions present more informal
contributions from a variety of practitioners (performers,
composers, improvisers), giving insights into the pleasures and
perils of working creatively in collaborative and improvised ways.
Select nursing interventions with the book that standardizes
nursing language! Nursing Interventions Classification (NIC), 8th
Edition provides a research-based clinical tool to help you choose
appropriate interventions. It standardizes and defines the
knowledge base for nursing practice as it communicates the nature
of nursing. More than 610 nursing interventions are described -
from general practice to all specialty areas. From an expert author
team led by Cheryl Wagner, this book is an ideal tool for
practicing nurses and nursing students, educators seeking to
enhance nursing curricula, and nursing administrators seeking to
improve patient care. It's the only comprehensive taxonomy of
nursing-sensitive interventions available! 614 research-based
nursing intervention labels - with 60 new to this edition - are
included, along with specific activities used to carry out
interventions. Specialty core interventions are provided for 57
specialties. Descriptions of each intervention include a
definition, a list of activities, a publication facts line, and
references. NEW! 60 interventions are added to this edition,
including several related to the care of patients with COVID
considerations. UPDATED! Approximately 220 existing interventions
have been revised.
Most African states experienced only a few fleeting years of
democratic rule after independence before succumbing to
authoritarianism. During the 1970s and 1980s, Africans and
Westerners alike came to view dictatorship to be as much a part of
the region's social landscape as its grinding poverty. Yet the end
of the Cold War and the sharpening of the economic crisis at the
end of the 1980s have breathed new life into campaigns for
democracy in Africa, shaking the foundations of many long-standing
autocracies. In some cases, dramatic transitions took place, though
the fate of the new democracies is far from certain.This volume
explores the origins and evolution of political reform movements in
several states of Francophone Africa. The authors first make the
case for the distinctiveness of Francophone Africa, based on the
influences of colonial history, language, and France's contemporary
role in Africa, then survey the challenges of reform, including the
problems of transition from authoritarianism and consolidation of
democratic regimes. Case studies of thirteen former French and
Belgium colonies follow, organized by level of reform achieved:
peaceful regime change, incremental reforms, repressed reform
efforts, and reform in the mist of war.
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