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Chemistry in the World helps students become familiar with the ways
in which chemistry is relevant to society and everyday life on
personal, local, and global levels. The book presents chemical
concepts in the context of their social applications and focuses on
those most relevant to our common daily experiences and global
challenges. It provides students with an appreciation for the
applicability, visibility, and universality of chemistry, and an
understanding of the reciprocal relationship between the science of
chemistry and the organism of society. The fourth edition has been
reorganized into 13 chapters, which cover the composition of the
atmosphere, carbon-based life forms, chemistry of water, acids and
bases, pharmaceuticals and poisons, nuclear chemistry, and more. A
new chapter titled "A Swiftly Warming Planet" addresses the timely
issue of global warming and presents readers with the latest
research-based climate assessment from the Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change. This edition includes two new pedagogical
features, which explore interesting exceptions to general rules in
chemistry, as well as questions real students have asked and common
areas of confusion. Chemistry in the World is an excellent
comprehensive introduction to the subject, but more importantly,
the book teaches students that chemistry is more than the stuff of
science; it is the stuff of life.
Winner, 2018 Paul J. Foik Award for Best Book on Catholic History
in the American Southwest, presented by the Texas Catholic
Historical Society The remarkable history of the Santuario de
Chimayo, the church whose world-renowned healing powers have drawn
visitors to its steps for centuries. Nestled in a valley at the
feet of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains of New Mexico, the Santuario
de Chimayo has been called the most important Catholic pilgrimage
site in America. To experience the Santuario's miraculous healing
dirt, pilgrims and visitors first walk into the cool, adobe church,
proceeding up an aisle to the altar with its magnificent crucifix.
They then turn left to enter a low-slung room filled with cast-off
crutches, a statue of the Santo Nino de Atocha, and photos of
thousands of people who have been prayed for in the exact spot they
are standing. An adjacent room, stark by contrast, contains little
but a hole in the floor, known as the pocito. From this well in the
earth, the Santuario's half a million annual visitors gather
handfuls of holy dirt, celebrated for two hundred years for its
purported healing properties. The book tells the fascinating
stories of the Pueblo and Nuevomexicano Catholic origins of the
site and the building of the church, the eventual transfer of the
property to the Catholic Archdiocese of Santa Fe, and the modern
pilgrimage of believers alongside thousands of tourists. Drawing on
extensive archival research as well as fieldwork in Chimayo, Brett
Hendrickson examines the claims that various constituencies have
made on the Santuario, its stories, dirt, ritual life, commercial
value, and aesthetic character. The importance of the story of the
Santuario de Chimayo goes well beyond its sacred dirt, to
illuminate the role of Southwestern Hispanics and Catholics in
American religious history and identity. The healing powers and
marvel of the Santuario shine through the pages of Hendrickson's
book, allowing readers of all kinds to feel like they have stepped
inside an institution in American and religious history.
In Jesuit Polymath of Madrid D. Scott Hendrickson offers the first
English-language account of the life and work of Juan Eusebio
Nieremberg (1595-1658), a leading intellectual in Spain during the
turbulent decades of the mid-seventeenth century. Most remembered
as a prominent ascetic in the neo-Platonic tradition, Nieremberg
emerges here as a writer deeply indebted to the legacy of Ignatius
Loyola and his Spiritual Exercises. Hendrickson convincingly shows
how Nieremberg drew from his formation in the Jesuit order at the
time of its first centenary to engage the cultural and intellectual
currents of the Spanish Golden Age. As an author of some
seventy-five works, which represent several genres and were
translated throughout Europe and abroad, Nieremberg's literary
enterprise demands attention.
Seeds of Sin produce bad fruit filled with secrets. Secrets have a
way of finding their way to the surface. Post World War II finds a
farming family in the Yakima Valley of Washington State becoming
aware secrets cannot be held in check. Walter Mason has
never-ending problems of weather, Mexican migrant workers, the
impending death of his wife, and after 18 years, long held secrets
have risen to the surface. Secrets he thought would always be just
that, secrets. Like ripples of a wheat field in the wind, one
secret opens another. Secrets of adultery and adoption, lead to
suicide, murder and more. The ripple spreads wide, becoming a wave
that rocks residents of the peaceful farming valley 'Eat the apple
that falls in your garden.do not try to learn where it came from
and you will be content"
The 1898 war between the United States and Spain receives
relatively little attention in most American history texts, yet it
is an event of major importance. The United States emerged as the
world's greatest power in the 20th century. In many ways, the war
with Spain was a stepping stone from one era of American history to
the next, showing Americans that aggressive nationalism could be
fraught with danger, even as it was crowned with splendor. This
book includes an overview essay, five essays on specific aspects of
the war, and a conclusion. A biographical section features sketches
of Americans, Spaniards, Cubans, and Filipinos who played important
roles, showing the human element of the events. Fifteen primary
documents grant readers and researchers a direct view of the
elements that transpired and how they were reported. This book
provides everything students or general readers need to begin their
research into a watershed conflict in American history.
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