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This volume offers a rich and accessible introduction to
contemporary research on Buddhist ethical thought for interested
students and scholars, yet also offers chapters taking up more
technical philosophical and textual topics. A Mirror is For
Reflection offers a snapshot of the present state of academic
investigation into the nature of Buddhist Ethics, including
contributions from many of the leading figures in the academic
study of Buddhist philosophy. Over the past decade many scholars
have come to think that the project of fitting Buddhist ethical
thought into Western philosophical categories may be of limited
utility, and the focus of investigation has shifted in a number of
new directions. This volume includes contemporary perspectives on
topics including the nature of Buddhist ethics as a whole, karma
and rebirth, mindfulness, narrative, intention, free will,
politics, anger, and equanimity.
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Amulet (Paperback)
Frederick Westley and a H Davi Company
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R536
Discovery Miles 5 360
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Language plays a major role in our daily lives. Humans are
specialized to live in a social environment, and our brains are
"designed" to manage interactions with others which are, for the
most part, accomplished through words. Language allows us to
function both cognitively and interpersonally, and without language
there are constraints on our ability to interact with others.
Language also plays a major role in that specialized form of
interpersonal interaction that we call psychotherapy or
psychoanalysis. In that setting we use words to express and
communicate meaning clearly, and through spoken language we help
our patients to organize and modify their experiences of self and
of the world, fostering adaptive change. Like the air we breathe,
when our language serves its function it is transparent to us. We
notice it most when it fails. When it does fail its basic function,
in life and in psychotherapy, it fails to reliably, effectively,
and comfortably help us to connect with others, as we deal with the
world around us. In Language and Connection in Psychotherapy: Words
Matter, Dr. Mary Davis addresses the role of language in our lives,
both internally, in creating psychic structure and regulating
affect, and interpersonally, in facilitating relationships with the
figures that have shaped our development and that inhabit our adult
lives. Using clinical material to illustrate, Davis looks at the
development of language and its role in creating our personalities,
at the life events which can distort our use of language to
interact with others, and the ways that language can lead to
misunderstanding as well as to understanding. Throughout, Language
and Connection in Psychotherapy: Words Matter explores various
facets of the ways in which words matter as well as the times when
words are important but not sufficient to our ability to
communicate interpersonally. Davis suggests that the
psychotherapist is a master in bridging the gap between being and
saying: she can be conceptualized as an "interpreter," one who
turns behavioral language into verbal language, action language
into words, emotions into thoughts, who focuses and uses the
capacity of words to help us connect both with our internal selves
and with others.
It has been well chronicled that Black professors have experienced
a long history of inequities and inequalities within the academic
space. This volume explores the experiences, challenges and
triumphs experienced by Black professors. Including personal essays
written by Black professors, this volume showcases personal
insights and inspirational stories from leading Black scholars
across the US. It highlights and problematizes the uncomfortable
truth of the lack of diversity in many higher education
institutions in order to further discussions on the topic of race
in academia, and to assist academics of color in preparing for
their careers. Future academics will gain a sense of how to launch
their careers, stay productive in research, teaching and service,
and avoid the racial-related malaise that can hinder new academics
of color. By presenting discussions on professional development,
and emphasizing the challenges and triumphs experienced by Black
professors across disciplines, this book provides advice for junior
Black scholars on how to navigate academe and tackle the challenges
that Black scholars often face.
This book explores how religious groups work to create sustainable
relationships between people, places and environments. This
interdisciplinary volume deepens our understanding of this
relationship, revealing that the geographical imagination-our sense
of place-is a key aspect of the sustainability ideas and practices
of religious groups. The book begins with a broad examination of
how place shapes faith-based ideas about sustainability, with
examples drawn from indigenous Hawaiians and the sacred texts of
Judaism and Islam. Empirical case studies from North America,
Europe, Central Asia and Africa follow, illustrating how a local,
bounded, and sacred sense of place informs religious-based efforts
to protect people and natural resources from threatening economic
and political forces. Other contributors demonstrate that a
cosmopolitan geographical imagination, viewing place as extending
from the local to the global, shapes the struggles of Christian,
Jewish and interfaith groups to promote just and sustainable food
systems and battle the climate crisis.
Broadly organized around the applications of Fourier analysis,
"Methods of Applied Mathematics with a MATLAB Overview" covers both
classical applications in partial differential equations and
boundary value problems, as well as the concepts and methods
associated to the Laplace, Fourier, and discrete transforms.
Transform inversion problems are also examined, along with the
necessary background in complex variables. A final chapter treats
wavelets, short-time Fourier analysis, and geometrically-based
transforms. The computer program MATLAB is emphasized throughout,
and an introduction to MATLAB is provided in an appendix. Rich in
examples, illustrations, and exercises of varying difficulty, this
text can be used for a one- or two-semester course and is ideal for
students in pure and applied mathematics, physics, and engineering.
This book is a collection of editorial articles written by George
in the monthly newsletters he published over a period of thirty
years. Some are funny, some are inspirational, and some are nothing
more than information about the activities that may have been going
on at the time.
The MSP430 is a simple 16-bit microcontroller with a compact and
economical CPU containing only 27 instructions and 16 registers. It
offers other advantages which make it suitable for low power
applications: a rich variety of peripherals for analog input and
output; rapid processing wake up time; the treatment of data and
address on equal footing.
Introduction to the MSP430 combines a tutorial approach with a
description of the CPU and main peripherals. The tutorial builds
from a basic program for lighting LEDs to the use of a timer. It
uses the C programming language from the start but programs are
also developed in assembly language to show how a program interacts
with the hardware. To demonstrate the special features of the
MSP430 full coverage is given to the instruction set, sigma-delta
analog-digital converters and timers. Finally, the book gives an
introduction to the MSP430 which extends the architecture to
address more memory and which provides a bridge to the ARM 7
processor.
Contents:
1.Embedded electronic systems and microcontrollers; 2. Texas
MSP430; 3. Development; 4. A simple tour of the MSP430; 5.
Architecture of the MSP430; 6.Functions, interrupts and low-power
modes; 7.Digital input, output and displays; 8. Timers; 9.
Mixed-signal systems: Analog input and output; 10. Communication;
11. The future: MSP430X; Appendices.
*The only tutorial book on the MSP430
*Uses both C and assembly language
*A CDROM containing a development kit to help the engineer and
hobbyist program the MSP430.
This volume shows how the theoretical ideas of three famed
psychologists evolved from the scientific base envisioned by Freud
into different belief systems based on clinical observations by
their practitioners. Davis traces ideas and influences that
provided the context in which depth psychology evolved. Following
in the footsteps of great philosophers, like Nietzsche and
Schopenhauer, Jung and Freud helped set the stage for the
postmodern world, with their emphasis on the role in human
psychology of the irrational, unconscious, instinctual, fantasy,
and mythology. Unlike Freud and Jung, who clung tenaciously to the
belief that they were scientists creating universal theories of
human behavior, Hillman does not share that illusion. Hillman finds
his inspiration in Renaissance philosophers and romantic poets.
Placing the three men's work in context with a history of ideas in
their respective periods, Davis aims to present an academic and
objective view of the depth psychologists. Included are some of the
familial, social, and cultural factors that influenced thinking by
Freud, Jung, and Hillman.
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