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Undeservedly out of print for decades, American Plants for American
Gardens was one of the first popular books to promote the use of
plant ecology and native plants in gardening and landscaping.
Emphasizing the strong links between ecology and aesthetics, nature
and design, the book demonstrates the basic, practical application
of ecological principles to the selection of plant groups or
"associations" that are inherently suited to a particular climate,
soil, topography, and lighting. Specifically, American Plants for
American Gardens focuses on the vegetation concentrated in the
northeastern United States, but which extends from the Atlantic
Ocean west to the Alleghenies and south to Georgia. The plant
community settings featured include the open field, hillside, wood
and grove, streamside, ravine, pond, bog, and seaside. Plant lists
and accompanying texts provide valuable information for the design
and management of a wide range of project types: residential
properties, school grounds, corporate office sites, roadways, and
parks. In his introduction, Darrel G. Morrison locates American
Plants for American Gardens among a handful of influential early
books advocating the protection and use of native plants--a major
area of interest today among serious gardeners, landscape
architects, nursery managers, and students of ecology, botany, and
landscape design. Included is an appendix of plant name changes
that have occurred since the book's original publication in 1929.
Ahead of their time in many ways, Edith A. Roberts and Elsa Rehmann
can now speak to new generations of ecologically conscious
Americans.
Thinking and reasoning, long the academic province of philosophy,
have over the past century emerged as core topics of empirical
investigation and theoretical analysis in the modern fields of
cognitive psychology, cognitive science, and cognitive
neuroscience. Formerly seen as too complicated and amorphous to be
included in early textbooks on the science of cognition, the study
of thinking and reasoning has since taken off, brancing off in a
distinct direction from the field from which it originated.
The Oxford Handbook of Thinking and Reasoning is a comprehensive
and authoritative handbook covering all the core topics of the
field of thinking and reasoning. Written by the foremost experts
from cognitive psychology, cognitive science, and cognitive
neuroscience, individual chapters summarize basic concepts and
findings for a major topic, sketch its history, and give a sense of
the directions in which research is currently heading. Chapters
include introductions to foundational issues and methods of study
in the field, as well as treatment of specific types of thinking
and reasoning and their application in a broad range of fields
including business, education, law, medicine, music, and science.
The volume will be of interest to scholars and students working in
developmental, social and clinical psychology, philosophy,
economics, artificial intelligence, education, and linguistics.
The year 1959 has been called The Centennial Year in view of the
anniversary of the publication of The Origin of SPecies and the
centenary of the births of many who later contributed much to the
philosophy of the recent past, such as Samuel Alexander, Henri
Bergson, John Dewey and Edmund Husser ' The essays in the present
volume which are on subjects germane to any of the anniversaries
celebrated this year have been placed first in the present volume.
CENTENNIAL YEAR NUMBER DARWIN AND SCIENTIFIC METHOD JAMES K.
FEIBLEMAN The knowledge of methodology, which is acquired by means
of formal education in the various disciplines, is usually com
municated in abstract form. Harmony and counterpoint in musical
composition, the axiomatic method of mathematics, the established
laws in physics or in chemistry, the principles of mathematics -
all these are taught abstractly. It is only when we come to the
method of discovery in experimental science that we find abstract
communication failing. The most recent as well as the greatest
successes of the experimental sciences have been those scored in
modern times, but we know as yet of no abstract way to teach the
scientific method. The astonishing pedagogical fact is that this
method has never been abstracted and set forth in a fashion which
would permit of its easy acquisition. Here is an astonishing
oversight indeed, for which the very difficulty of the topic may
itself be responsible."
This book presents current research focusing on sexual minorities.
Topics discussed include gay and lesbian parenthood; asexuality;
media representations of marginalised minorities; the effect of
image contact on heterosexual women's attitudes toward lesbian
women; the high-school experiences of sexual and gender minority
youth and best practices in the development of interventions
designed to attenuate homonegativity. The final entry is a "virtual
discussion" in which contributors responded to a set of questions
that focused on key issues in the field of sexual minority studies.
Robert Morrison offers an illuminating comparative study of two
linked and interactive traditions that have had great influence in
twentieth-century thought:Buddhism and the philosophy of Nietzsche.
Nietzsche saw a direct historical parallel between the cultural
situation of his own time and of the India of the Buddha's age: the
emergence of nihilism as a consequence of loss of traditional
belief. Nietzche's fear, still resonant today, was that Europe was
about to enter a nihilistic era, in which people, no longer able to
believe in the old religious and moral values, would feel
themselves adrift in a meaningless cosmos where life seems to have
no particular purpose or end. Though he admired Buddhism as a noble
and humane response to this situation, Nietzsche came to think that
it was wrong in not seeking to overcome nihilism, and constituted a
threat to the future of Europe. It was in reaction against nihilism
that he forged his own affirmative philosophy, aiming at the
transvaluation of all values. Nietzsche's view of Buddhism has been
very influential in the West; Dr Morrison gives a careful critical
examination of this view, argues that in fact Buddhism is far from
being a nihilistic religion, and offers a counterbalancing Buddhist
view of the Nietzschean enterprise. He draws out the affinities and
conceptual similarities between the two, and concludes that,
ironically, Nietzsche's aim of self-overcoming is akin to the
Buddhist notion of citta-bhavana (mind-cultivation). Had Nietzsche
lived in an age where Buddhism was better understood, Morrison
suggests, he might even have found in the Buddha a model of his
hypothetical Ubermensch.
Ravensbruck was a labour camp within German borders, not far from
Berlin. In the beginning it was, by camp standards, a ""better""
camp, designed for indoctrination and industrial production, but by
the end of the war it was just another overcrowded locus of horror
complete with gas chamber. The result is a fascinating case study
of how women of different nationalities and social backgrounds
coped for years with lack of food and basic sanitation, illnesses,
prejudices and death by carving out their own cultural life.
Morrison's reconstruction of the dynamics of camp life presents a
vivid picture for today's readers, highlighting the experiences of
many individuals, such as the story of one of Ravensbruck's first
inmates, an upper-class woman who arrived in her own car and soon
found herself standing completely naked in a group of women for
seven hours to undergo a humiliating medical examination in front
of laughing SS officers. But the women developed all kinds of
survival skills, many of which stand as a monument to the human
spirit. Bonds of friendship and the creation of ""camp families""
helped alleviate the miseries of camp routine, as did a highly
sophisticated educational system developed by Polish inmates. Women
artists from several countries provided a further cultural
dimension from crafts to poetry, theatre, music and drawings. As
the war progressed, camp life deteriorated. More and more victims
were concentrated in Ravensbruck, and the Nazis installed a gas
chamber. About 140,000 Ravensbruck inmates did not survive the war.
In 1945 life in Ravensbruck came to an abrupt end with a dramatic
and macabre death march, in which many inmates perished and Nazis,
clad as inmates, tried to escape the Russian troops.
Robert Morrison offers an illuminating comparative study of two linked traditions that have figured prominently in twentieth-century thought: Buddhism and the philosophy of Nietzsche. Nietzsche admired Buddhism, but saw it as a dangerously nihilistic religion; he forged his own affirmative philosophy in reaction against the nihilism that he feared would overwhelm Europe. Morrison shows that Nietzsche's influential view of Buddhism was mistaken, and that far from being nihilistic, it has notable and perhaps surprising affinities with Nietzsche's own project of the transvaluation of all values.
The Making of Modern Law: Foreign, Comparative and International
Law, 1600-1926, brings together foreign, comparative, and
international titles in a single resource. Its International Law
component features works of some of the great legal theorists,
including Gentili, Grotius, Selden, Zouche, Pufendorf,
Bijnkershoek, Wolff, Vattel, Martens, Mackintosh, Wheaton, among
others. The materials in this archive are drawn from three
world-class American law libraries: the Yale Law Library, the
George Washington University Law Library, and the Columbia Law
Library.Now for the first time, these high-quality digital scans of
original works are available via print-on-demand, making them
readily accessible to libraries, students, independent scholars,
and readers of all ages.+++++++++++++++The below data was compiled
from various identification fields in the bibliographic record of
this title. This data is provided as an additional tool in helping
to insure edition identification: +++++++++++++++Harvard Law School
LibraryLP2H011220019050101The Making of Modern Law: Primary
Sources, Part IIMissouri: The City of Webb, 1905]. 1]-231, 1-10] p.
port. and ill. 8voUnited States
The KC-135 airframe suffers from an aft Center of Gravity (CG).
Boeing accounts for this aft CG by requiring that ballast fuel be
carried in the forward body tank to maintain a CG forward of the
aft limit. Boeing has analyzed the issue and states that 3,500 lbs
of fuel is to be left in the forward body tank strictly for
ballast. Using fuel in the forward body tank for ballast has two
significant drawbacks; the forward body tank has a very short
moment-arm necessitating more weight than that of ballast on a
longer moment-arm, and ballast fuel displaces fuel that could be
used for mission purposes by using the tank to hold ballast weight.
Reducing aircraft gross weight is a cost issue, because excess
weight incurs a carriage cost. The carriage cost for weight on the
KC-135 is 4.97% of the weight in pounds of fuel burned per hour.
This thesis focuses on the cost recoupment horizon for reballasting
the KC-135 fleet and whether the cost will justify the fuel
efficiency and increased mission capability. Specifically, this
research examines replacement of fuel ballast with lead ballast on
a longer moment arm and/or weight with a mission purpose, in the
form of cockpit armor, to minimize ballast weight requirements.
This will reduce aircraft gross weight and generate increased fuel
efficiency.
This book presents current research focusing on sexual minorities.
Topics discussed include gay and lesbian parenthood; asexuality;
media representations of trebly marginalised minorities; the effect
of imaged contact on heterosexual women's attitudes toward lesbian
women; the high-school experiences of sexual and gender minority
youth and best practices in the development of interventions
designed to attenuate homonegativity. The final entry is a "virtual
discussion" in which contributors responded to a set of questions
that focused on key issues in the field of sexual minority
studies..
Modern prejudice refers to the subtle negative attitudes that are
directed toward stigmatised groups such as African-Americans and
gay men and lesbian women. Individuals categorised as high in
modern prejudice deny the existence of discrimination against
stigmatised groups; believe that demands made by these groups are
unfair; assert that social institutions accord disproportionate
attention to such groups; and reject their efforts to change the
status quo. Stated simply, the ethos of an individual high in
modern prejudice is: "Discrimination is a thing of the past because
groups now have all the rights they need." social scientists have
devoted considerable attention to studying modern prejudice;
however, no book has provided comprehensive coverage of this
topic-until now. It also offers students and academics, as well as
the interested layperson, a thorough review of modern prejudice; a
construct that is at the centre of some of the most innovative
studies currently conducted by psychologists.
This book contains an edition - with an extensive introduction,
translation and commentary - of The Light of the World, a text on
theoretical astronomy by Joseph Ibn Nahmias, composed in
Judeo-Arabic around 1400 C.E. in the Iberian Peninsula. As the only
text on theoretical astronomy written by a Jew in any variety of
Arabic, this work is evidence for a continuing relationship between
Jewish and Islamic thought in the late fourteenth and early
fifteenth centuries. The text's most lasting effect may have been
exerted via its passage to Renaissance Italy, where it influenced
scholars at the University of Padua in the early sixteenth century.
With its crucial role in the development of European astronomy, as
well as the physical sciences under Islam and in Jewish culture,
The Light of the World is an important episode in Islamic
intellectual history, Jewish civilization, and the history of
astronomy.
This collection of essays studies the movement of texts in the
Mediterranean basin in the medieval period from historical and
philological perspectives. Rejecting the presumption that texts
simply travel without changing, the contributors examine closely
the nature of these writings, which are concerned with such topics
as science and medicine, and how they changed over the course of
their journeys. Transit and transformation give texts new subtexts
and contexts, providing windows through which to study how memory,
encryption, oral communication, cultural and religious values, and
knowledge traveled and were shared, transformed, and preserved.
This volume broadens how we think about texts, communication, and
knowledge in the medieval world. Aside from the editors, the
contributors are Mushegh Asatryan, Brian N. Becker, Leonardo
Capezzone, Leigh Chipman, Ofer Elior, Zohar Hadromi-Allouche, B.
Harun Küçük, Israel M. Sandman, and Tamás Visi.
Every year, many thousands of acres of woodlands, deserts,
meadowlands, and coastal scrub are turned into home or commercial
sites. Ironically, by the time these structures are complete,
bulldozers have scraped the land clean of its natural vegetation
and character, the very features that attracted buyers in the first
place. In Building within Nature, Andy and Sally Wasowski introduce
new and exciting techniques for preserving the natural land on
which we build new homes, offices, or even shopping centers.
Building within Nature stresses that the unnatural landscapes so
common in America literally exist on artificial life support. A
natural landscape, on the other hand, is filled with native flora
and can exist on rainfall alone. A structure built within nature
looks as if it has been gently set down into a mature and
established landscape-the easiest kind of landscape to maintain.
The Wasowskis illustrate this new concept in construction through
profiles of sites in California, Arizona, South Carolina,
Minnesota, and other locations in North America. They also
highlight useful techniques for revegetation, discuss the
importance of soils, and argue for the preservation and maintenance
of natural habitats. Building within Nature offers a practical
blueprint for creating communities where both wildlife and human
life thrive in a harmonious relationship. "For offering workable
alternatives in nontechnical terms to ecologically minded home
owners, contractors, and architects, the Wasowskis' book is highly
recommended." -Library Journal Andy and Sally Wasowski are the
authors of nine books about gardening and landscaping with native
plants, including Gardening with Prairie Plants: How to Create
Beautiful Native Landscapes (Minnesota, 2002). Their work has
appeared in the Brooklyn Botanical Gardens handbooks, Country
America, National Gardening, Sierra, Audubon, American Gardener,
and Fine Gardening. Darrel G. Morrison, FASLA, is one of the
nation's most respected native plant landscape architects.
The Cambridge Handbook of Thinking and Reasoning is the first
comprehensive and authoritative handbook covering all the core
topics of the field of thinking and reasoning. Written by the
foremost experts from cognitive psychology, cognitive science, and
cognitive neuroscience, individual chapters summarize basic
concepts and findings for a major topic, sketch its history, and
give a sense of the directions in which research is currently
heading. The volume also includes work related to developmental,
social and clinical psychology, philosophy, economics, artificial
intelligence, linguistics, education, law, and medicine. Scholars
and students in all these fields and others will find this to be a
valuable collection.
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