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A wonderful collection of characters and incidents in the works of
Chaucer, Pope, Keats, Browning, and other great poets. Beautifully
illustrated in colour and black and white by Frank Adams. Many of
the earliest children's books, particularly those dating back to
the 1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly
expensive. Pook Press are working to republish these classic works
in affordable, high quality, colour editions, using the original
text and artwork so these works can delight another generation of
children. . About the Illustrator: Frank Adams (1914-1987) was an
American landscape artist and illustrator. He is well known for
"The Home Front," a book of cartoons depicting men and women
working together for the war effort but also illustrated many
children's books of which Alice in Wonderland, Babes in the Wood
and others.
This delightful edition of Alice in Wonderland was originally
published in 1912. Here the classic tale is decorated with bold,
colourful plates by Frank Adams. Pook Press celebrates the great
Golden Age of Illustration in children's literature and are
reprinting this book for adults and children to enjoy once again.
This book is a collection of 55 case studies intended for a graduate level educational psychology course. The cases are broken down into ten units. At the end of each case study there is a set of discussion questions that both stimulate discourse around the important issues in Educational Psychology and bring to light the practical implications/applications of each study. This includes: _ _ *classroom management *child development *moral development *peer groups *troubled teenagers *troubled young adults* *poverty *homelessness *theorists and theories.
J. Frank Adams was one of the world's leading topologists. He
solved a number of celebrated problems in algebraic topology, a
subject in which he initiated many of the most active areas of
research. He wrote a large number of papers during the period
1955-1988, and they are characterised by elegant writing and depth
of thought. Few of them have been superseded by later work. This
selection, in two volumes, brings together all his major research
contributions. They are organised by subject matter rather than in
strict chronological order. The first contains papers on: the cobar
construction, the Adams spectral sequence, higher-order cohomology
operations, and the Hopf invariant one problem; applications of
K-theory; generalised homology and cohomology theories. The second
volume is mainly concerned with Adams' contributions to:
characteristic classes and calculations in K-theory; modules over
the Steenrod algebra and their Ext groups; finite H-spaces and
compact Lie groups; maps between classifying spaces of compact
groups. Every serious student or practitioner of algebraic topology
will want to own a copy of these two volumes both as a historical
record and as a source of continued reference.
J. Frank Adams was one of the world's leading topologists. He
solved a number of celebrated problems in algebraic topology, a
subject in which he initiated many of the most active areas of
research. He wrote a large number of papers during the period 1955
1988, and they are characterised by elegant writing and depth of
thought. Few of them have been superseded by later work. This
selection, in two volumes, brings together all his major research
contributions. They are organised by subject matter rather than in
strict chronological order. The first contains papers on: the cobar
construction, the Adams spectral sequence, higher-order cohomology
operations, and the Hopf invariant one problem; applications of
K-theory; generalised homology and cohomology theories. The second
volume is mainly concerned with Adams' contributions to:
characteristic classes and calculations in K-theory; modules over
the Steenrod algebra and their Ext groups; finite H-spaces and
compact Lie groups; maps between classifying spaces of compact
groups. Every serious student or practitioner of algebraic topology
will want to own a copy of these two volumes both as a historical
record and as a source of continued reference.
The theory of infinite loop spaces has been the center of much
recent activity in algebraic topology. Frank Adams surveys this
extensive work for researchers and students. Among the major topics
covered are generalized cohomology theories and spectra;
infinite-loop space machines in the sense of Boadman-Vogt, May, and
Segal; localization and group completion; the transfer; the Adams
conjecture and several proofs of it; and the recent theories of
Adams and Priddy and of Madsen, Snaith, and Tornehave.
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My Lifestyle
Paul Frank Adams; Dick Bell Mbe
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R216
Discovery Miles 2 160
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This volume offers a systematic treatment of certain basic parts of
algebraic geometry, presented from the analytic and algebraic
points of view. The notes focus on comparison theorems between the
algebraic, analytic, and continuous categories. Contents include:
1.1 sheaf theory, ringed spaces; 1.2 local structure of analytic
and algebraic sets; 1.3 Pn 2.1 sheaves of modules; 2.2 vector
bundles; 2.3 sheaf cohomology and computations on Pn; 3.1 maximum
principle and Schwarz lemma on analytic spaces; 3.2 Siegel's
theorem; 3.3 Chow's theorem; 4.1 GAGA; 5.1 line bundles, divisors,
and maps to Pn; 5.2 Grassmanians and vector bundles; 5.3 Chern
classes and curvature; 5.4 analytic cocycles; 6.1 K-theory and Bott
periodicity; 6.2 K-theory as a generalized cohomology theory; 7.1
the Chern character and obstruction theory; 7.2 the
Atiyah-Hirzebruch spectral sequence; 7.3 K-theory on algebraic
varieties; 8.1 Stein manifold theory; 8.2 holomorphic vector
bundles on polydisks; 9.1 concluding remarks; bibliography.
Originally published in 1974. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the
latest print-on-demand technology to again make available
previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of
Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original
texts of these important books while presenting them in durable
paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy
Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage
found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University
Press since its founding in 1905.
This volume offers a systematic treatment of certain basic parts of
algebraic geometry, presented from the analytic and algebraic
points of view. The notes focus on comparison theorems between the
algebraic, analytic, and continuous categories. Contents include:
1.1 sheaf theory, ringed spaces; 1.2 local structure of analytic
and algebraic sets; 1.3 Pn 2.1 sheaves of modules; 2.2 vector
bundles; 2.3 sheaf cohomology and computations on Pn; 3.1 maximum
principle and Schwarz lemma on analytic spaces; 3.2 Siegel's
theorem; 3.3 Chow's theorem; 4.1 GAGA; 5.1 line bundles, divisors,
and maps to Pn; 5.2 Grassmanians and vector bundles; 5.3 Chern
classes and curvature; 5.4 analytic cocycles; 6.1 K-theory and Bott
periodicity; 6.2 K-theory as a generalized cohomology theory; 7.1
the Chern character and obstruction theory; 7.2 the
Atiyah-Hirzebruch spectral sequence; 7.3 K-theory on algebraic
varieties; 8.1 Stein manifold theory; 8.2 holomorphic vector
bundles on polydisks; 9.1 concluding remarks; bibliography.
Originally published in 1974. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the
latest print-on-demand technology to again make available
previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of
Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original
texts of these important books while presenting them in durable
paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy
Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage
found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University
Press since its founding in 1905.
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