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It is imperative for every growing Christian to study the Bible. Volume one of this new series will enrich both the believer’s knowledge and life with its survey of the Old Testament.
Chapters conclude with projects, questions and exploration activities that not only test readers’ grasp of the materials but also provide opportunity for more detailed and intensive study.
This well-executed work does much to acquaint people with the Old Testament’s major divisions and its amazing unity as a whole–all of which can lead to a deeper faith.
Good and Schultz demonstrate how the careful identification and
management of technologies provide significant advantages that for
many managers and firms far outweigh the disadvantages imposed
through the invention of these technologies. As part of this
exploration, the strategic, organizational, and managerial impacts
of technology are explored in a variety of venues. The book
discusses such topics as the roots and directions of technology,
how technology will change organizational teamwork, its influence
on internal and external (e.g., supplier and customer)
relationships, opportunities provided technological entrepreneurs,
and the influence of technology on marketing, employees, customer
partnerships, information systems, and resource strategies.
To demonstrate the practical application and to bring in
real-life scenarios, a host of business applications are
introduced. As a result, this book provides managers a strategic
roadmap to using technology for a competitive advantage, while
remaining free from the entanglement of specific technologies.
The idea of editing this book was born in the winter of 1988/1989.
Christian Endler was organizing the workshop 'Wasser und
Information' (water and information) in Austria [1], and Jurgen
Schulte was working on a publication of his results on atomic
cluster stabilities and long-range electromagnetic interaction in
atomic clusters. It was Franz Moser from the Technical University
of Graz who brought these two together. After a talk that Moser had
given in Bremen, Schulte explained to hirn his ideas about clusters
and long range interaction, and his concern about reliable theories
and experiments in research on ultra high dilutions (UHD) and
homoeopathy. He was suggested to be a speaker at the Austrian
workshop. Reviewing the contributions of this workshop and the
current literature on UHD and homoeopathy, especially the PhD
thesis by Giesela King [2] and the excellent survey by Marco
Righetti [3], we decided to work on a book in order to critically
encou rage more scientists to work and publish in this field with a
high scientific standard. What we had in mind was a useful
contribution to the goal to lift research on UHD and homoeo pathy
to an internationally acceptable scientific standard, to encourage
international scien tists to work in this area and to establish UHD
and homoeopathy in academic science. Delayed by our individual
academic careers in our specific fields, and delayed by lack of
funds it took us about four years to finish this book.
INTRODUCTION The present volume unites contributions by the leading
figure of the Vienna Circle and by two of his closest assoCiates,
contributions that deal with an area of thought represented,
indeed, in this Collection but certainly not the central one in the
common picture ofthe Circle's activities. It is no accident that an
interest in ethics and the philosophy of action was particularly
marked in what Neurath was apt to call the right wing of the
Circle. For them, as for Wittgenstein (the respected
mentorofSchlickandWaismanninparticular), theadvancetobehoped for in
philosophy consisted not solely in freeing natural science from a
confused sense of dependence on speculative metaphysics but also in
seeingthatotherareasoflanguageandaction hadto bethoughtaboutin
theirownterms, whichwereneitherthoseofnaturalsciencenorthoseof
philosophy as traditionally conceived. The scepticismofSchlick
about theprogrammeofUnifiedSciencewaswellknown: EinheizwissenschaJt
he called it, as it might be 'boozified science'. And in sober
truth the programme sometimes masked a left-wing set of values
taken (surely illogically) for granted, though the membersofthe
Circle entertained a wide range ofpolitical views. Schlick's own
contribution to the present volume is a section from
thenotesforoneofhisfinal lectureseries, forsightofwhich wewarmly
thanktheonlysurvivingcontributortoourvolume, DrJosephSchachter:
Schlick'sgrandsonDra. M. H. vandeVeldehaskindlyconsentedtotheir
publication. This section poses the problem we have outlined: there
are questionsandaneedforclarificationinethics, butthesenomoredemand
a metaphysical solution than does a similar situation in
epistemology. Here, as in his earlier Problems of Ethics, l Schlick
sets his face against thewholeprocess, mostobviousin Kant,
ofmakingtheconceptofvalue absolute. One might say that for Schlick
there is no unhypothetical imperative.
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Around Geneseo (Hardcover)
William R. Cook, Daniel J Schultz
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R719
R638
Discovery Miles 6 380
Save R81 (11%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Jurgen Schulte and Christian Endler met in 1990 at an international
conference on the Structure of Water held in the Lecture Halls of
the University of Graz (Austria). Disappointed by the lack of a
systematic strategy of research into the physics of homoeopathy
Jurgen Schulte started to work on the establishment of
scientifically acceptable research standards in physics of
homoeopathy and encouraged academic researchers to establish a
coordinated and focused research strategy. In 1994, with the help
of major representatives of the international research community,
they edited one of the fIrst academic interdisciplinary books on
Ultra High Dilution and homoeopathy that underwent a rigorous
scientific international referee process before publishing. Due to
the dedicated help of the prominent referees (BD Josephson, Nobel
Laureate, Cavendish Lab. , Cambridge; M Bastide, Fac de Pharmacy,
University Montpellier; RG Jahn, Aerospace Science, Princeton
University), the book 1994 was quickly considered a mile stone and
turning point for the scientific approach of research into Ultra
High Dilution and homoeopathy. Since then the academic research
community has grown considerably and many international conferences
have been held. Today, research into homoeopathy is to be accepted
by the European Union as part of the academic sciences, worthy to
be funded at European Union level; an effort that took many years
of research coordination and research strategy development.
Excerpts of the Research Strategy of the European Committee for
Homoeopathy (ECH) have been included in this book.
Sticks, Stones, and Broken Bones: Neolithic Violence in a European
Perspective presents an up-to-date overview of the evidence for
violent injuries on human skeletons of the Neolithic period in
Europe, ranging from 6700 to 2000 BC. Unlike other lines of
evidence - weapons, fortifications, and imagery - the human
skeleton preserves the actual marks of past violent encounters. The
papers in this volume are written by the experts undertaking the
archaeological analysis, and present evidence from eleven European
countries which provide, for the first time, the basis for a
comparative approach between different regions and periods.
Difficulties and ambiguities in interpreting the evidence are also
discussed, although many of the cases are clearly the outcome of
conflict. Injuries often show healing, but others can be seen as
the cause of death. In many parts of Europe, women and children
appear to have been the victims of violence as often as adult men.
The volume not only presents an excellent starting point for a new
consideration of the prevalence and significance of violence in
Neolithic Europe, but provides an invaluable baseline for
comparisons with both earlier and later periods.
The assignment events, objects, state of beings, etc., to an
experiential category is a fundamental activity carried out by
human (and by other animals). So rudimentary are the processes
involved in categorizing that it is indeed impossible to imagine
conscious awareness to exist without the presence of categories. A
considerable body of writing exists on categories dating from the
times of Classical philosophy. Plato developed a categorical
ontology and Aristotle produced one of the earliest examples of a
complex understanding of basic ontologies. A number of other
categorially structured ontologies have been proposed including
those by Lowe, Westerhoff, Chisholm, etc. The book is an edited
collection of up to the moment essays that address critical aspects
on the understanding of categories and categorial systems. The
perspectives included in the book are drawn from philosophy,
psychology, theology, divinity, comparative cognition and facet
theory. The authors are all renowned experts in the area of their
writing. Topics addressed include both contemporary advances in the
understanding of perennial debates and latest thinking upon how
categories are employed to structure our experiences of the world
we live in. The book is distinct as being written by philosophers
and psychologists. The book is a collection of writings from
selected academics at the fore of debates and understandings of
categories in contemporary thought. The text provides a single
source for contemporary scholarship in categories. No single text
that brings together expositions of categorial experiences for
students and academics within the above listed disciplines.
This reference, now in its second edition, is a comprehensive guide
that focuses on the practical aspects of excavating and recovering
human remains, as well as any associated evidence, from crime
scenes. It highlights the protocols and techniques that are used to
successfully survey, map, recover, document, collect, and transport
evidence. New additions to the reference include discussion
questions and suggested readings, updated mapping and measuring
techniques, including a section on GIS and backpack differential
GPS systems, expanded information on botany, DNA, and soil, and
non-forensic burial contexts. Almost 200 illustrations are included
to help clarify concepts.
Walter J. Schultz illustrates the deficiencies of theories that purport to show that markets alone can provide the basis for efficiency. He argues that markets are not moral-free zones, and that achieving the economic common good does indeed require morality. He demonstrates that efficient outcomes of market interaction cannot be achieved without moral normative constraints and then goes on to specify a set of normative conditions that make these positive outcomes possible.
This reference, now in its second edition, is a comprehensive
guide that focuses on the practical aspects of excavating and
recovering human remains, as well as any associated evidence, from
crime scenes. It highlights the protocols and techniques that are
used to successfully survey, map, recover, document, collect, and
transport evidence. New additions to the reference include
discussion questions and suggested readings, updated mapping and
measuring techniques, including a section on GIS and backpack
differential GPS systems, expanded information on botany, DNA, and
soil, and non-forensic burial contexts. Almost 200 illustrations
are included to help clarify concepts.
INTRODUCTION The present volume unites contributions by the leading
figure of the Vienna Circle and by two of his closest assoCiates,
contributions that deal with an area of thought represented,
indeed, in this Collection but certainly not the central one in the
common picture ofthe Circle's activities. It is no accident that an
interest in ethics and the philosophy of action was particularly
marked in what Neurath was apt to call the right wing of the
Circle. For them, as for Wittgenstein (the respected
mentorofSchlickandWaismanninparticular), theadvancetobehoped for in
philosophy consisted not solely in freeing natural science from a
confused sense of dependence on speculative metaphysics but also in
seeingthatotherareasoflanguageandaction hadto bethoughtaboutin
theirownterms, whichwereneitherthoseofnaturalsciencenorthoseof
philosophy as traditionally conceived. The scepticismofSchlick
about theprogrammeofUnifiedSciencewaswellknown: EinheizwissenschaJt
he called it, as it might be 'boozified science'. And in sober
truth the programme sometimes masked a left-wing set of values
taken (surely illogically) for granted, though the membersofthe
Circle entertained a wide range ofpolitical views. Schlick's own
contribution to the present volume is a section from
thenotesforoneofhisfinal lectureseries, forsightofwhich wewarmly
thanktheonlysurvivingcontributortoourvolume, DrJosephSchachter:
Schlick'sgrandsonDra. M. H. vandeVeldehaskindlyconsentedtotheir
publication. This section poses the problem we have outlined: there
are questionsandaneedforclarificationinethics, butthesenomoredemand
a metaphysical solution than does a similar situation in
epistemology. Here, as in his earlier Problems of Ethics, l Schlick
sets his face against thewholeprocess, mostobviousin Kant,
ofmakingtheconceptofvalue absolute. One might say that for Schlick
there is no unhypothetical imperative.
Jurgen Schulte and Christian Endler met in 1990 at an international
conference on the Structure of Water held in the Lecture Halls of
the University of Graz (Austria). Disappointed by the lack of a
systematic strategy of research into the physics of homoeopathy
Jurgen Schulte started to work on the establishment of
scientifically acceptable research standards in physics of
homoeopathy and encouraged academic researchers to establish a
coordinated and focused research strategy. In 1994, with the help
of major representatives of the international research community,
they edited one of the fIrst academic interdisciplinary books on
Ultra High Dilution and homoeopathy that underwent a rigorous
scientific international referee process before publishing. Due to
the dedicated help of the prominent referees (BD Josephson, Nobel
Laureate, Cavendish Lab. , Cambridge; M Bastide, Fac de Pharmacy,
University Montpellier; RG Jahn, Aerospace Science, Princeton
University), the book 1994 was quickly considered a mile stone and
turning point for the scientific approach of research into Ultra
High Dilution and homoeopathy. Since then the academic research
community has grown considerably and many international conferences
have been held. Today, research into homoeopathy is to be accepted
by the European Union as part of the academic sciences, worthy to
be funded at European Union level; an effort that took many years
of research coordination and research strategy development.
Excerpts of the Research Strategy of the European Committee for
Homoeopathy (ECH) have been included in this book.
The idea of editing this book was born in the winter of 1988/1989.
Christian Endler was organizing the workshop 'Wasser und
Information' (water and information) in Austria [1], and Jurgen
Schulte was working on a publication of his results on atomic
cluster stabilities and long-range electromagnetic interaction in
atomic clusters. It was Franz Moser from the Technical University
of Graz who brought these two together. After a talk that Moser had
given in Bremen, Schulte explained to hirn his ideas about clusters
and long range interaction, and his concern about reliable theories
and experiments in research on ultra high dilutions (UHD) and
homoeopathy. He was suggested to be a speaker at the Austrian
workshop. Reviewing the contributions of this workshop and the
current literature on UHD and homoeopathy, especially the PhD
thesis by Giesela King [2] and the excellent survey by Marco
Righetti [3], we decided to work on a book in order to critically
encou rage more scientists to work and publish in this field with a
high scientific standard. What we had in mind was a useful
contribution to the goal to lift research on UHD and homoeo pathy
to an internationally acceptable scientific standard, to encourage
international scien tists to work in this area and to establish UHD
and homoeopathy in academic science. Delayed by our individual
academic careers in our specific fields, and delayed by lack of
funds it took us about four years to finish this book.
|
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