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Eye-opening essays by Buddhist, Hindus, Jews, Muslims provide
insights to how Christianity is viewed in their communities--and
why.
In this new edition of the standard undergraduate textbook on
electricity and magnetism, David Griffiths provides expanded
discussions on topics such as the nature of field lines, the
crystal ambiguity, eddy currents, and the Thomson kink model. Ideal
for junior and senior undergraduate students from physics and
electrical engineering, the book now includes many new examples and
problems, including numerical applications (in Mathematica) to
reflect the increasing importance of computational techniques in
contemporary physics. Many figures have been redrawn, while updated
references to recent research articles not only emphasize that new
discoveries are constantly made in this field, but also help to
expand readers' understanding of the topic and of its importance in
current physics research.
What social conditions and intellectual practices are necessary in
order for religious cultures to flourish? Paul Griffiths finds the
answer in "religious reading" --- the kind of reading in which a
religious believer allows his mind to be furnished and his heart
instructed by a sacred text, understood in the light of an
authoritative tradition. He favorably contrasts the practices and
pedagogies of traditional religious cultures with those of our own
fragmented and secularized culture and insists that religious
reading should be preserved.
Drawing on a wealth of primary and secondary sources, this book
explores how far imperial culture penetrated Antipodean city
institutions. It argues that far from imperial saturation, the city
'Down Under' was remarkably untouched by the Empire. Only at
certain times, such as during imperial crises, were citizens
alerted to their place as imperial citizens, but in times of peace,
operationalising a sense of this identity was far more difficult.
Through an exploration of imperial loyalty leagues, school culture,
ideas of imperial federation, youth organisations, the daily and
weekly press and popular culture of the city, the book notes that
there was an instrumental approach to Empire on the part of the
Antipodean working class. Imperial ceremonies and traditions failed
to embed themselves and by the inter-war years internationalism
more generally challenged imperial values. The roots of imperial
decline are found in the inter war years as various aspects of
British imperial culture lost their grip. Indeed, many had
struggled to implant themselves in the first place.
Phosphate Fibers is a singular detailed account of the discovery,
chemistry, synthesis, properties, manufacture, toxicology, and uses
of calcium and sodium calcium polyphosphate fibers. Author Edward
J. Griffith-the inventor and developer of this safe, biodegradable
material-takes a multidisciplinary approach to this subject,
considering the social, legal, medical, and industrial issues
surrounding the use of asbestos and other mineral fibers. This
compelling study is a beneficial resource to both readers
interested in mineral fibers as well as those who want to
understand the complexities of bringing new substances into the
modern marketplace.
Blaise Pascal (1623-1662) is known in the English-speaking world
principally for the wager (an argument that it is rational to do
what will affect belief in God and irrational not to), and, more
generally, for the Pensees, a collection of philosophical and
theological fragments of unusual emotional and intellectual
intensity collected and published after his death. He thought and
wrote, however, about much more than this: mathematics; physics;
grace, freedom, and predestination; the nature of the church; the
Christian life; what it is to write and read; the order of things;
the nature and purpose of human life; and more. He was among the
polymaths of the seventeenth century, and among the principal
apologists of his time for the Catholic faith, against both its
Protestant opponents and its secular critics. Why Read Pascal?
engages all the major topics of Pascal's theological and
philosophical writing. It provides discussion of Pascal's literary
style, his linked understandings of knowledge and of the various
orders of things, his anthropology (with special attention to his
presentation of affliction, death, and boredom), his politics, and
his understanding of the relation between Christianity and Judaism.
Pascal emerges as a literary stylist of a high order, a witty and
polemical writer (never have the Jesuits been more thoroughly
eviscerated), and, perhaps above all else, as someone concerned to
show to Christianity's cultured despisers that the fabric of their
own lives implies the truth of Christianity if only they can be
brought to look at what their lives are like. Why Read Pascal? is
the first book in English in a generation to engage all the
principal themes in Pascal's theology and philosophy. The book
takes Pascal seriously as an interlocutor and as a contributor of
continuing relevance to Catholic thought; but it also offers
criticisms of some among the positions he takes, showing, in doing
so, how lively his writing remains for us now.
Sidney Coleman (1937-2007) earned his doctorate at Caltech under
Murray Gell-Mann. Before completing his thesis, he was hired by
Harvard and remained there his entire career. A celebrated particle
theorist, he is perhaps best known for his brilliant lectures,
given at Harvard and in a series of summer school courses at Erice,
Sicily. Three times in the 1960s he taught a graduate course on
Special and General Relativity; this book is based on lecture notes
taken by three of his students and compiled by the Editors.
Changes and additions to the new edition of this classic textbook
include a new chapter on symmetries, new problems and examples,
improved explanations, more numerical problems to be worked on a
computer, new applications to solid state physics, and consolidated
treatment of time-dependent potentials.
As Africa's strategic importance has increased over the past decade
and a half, United States security cooperation with the continent
has expanded. The most visible dimension of this increased
engagement was the establishment of the U.S. Military Command for
Africa (AFRICOM). Some critics are skeptical of AFRICOM's purpose
and see the militarization of U.S. Africa policy while others
question its effectiveness. Recognizing the link between
development and security, AFRICOM represents a departure from the
traditional organization of military commands because of its
holistic approach and the involvement of the Department of State as
well as other U.S. government stakeholders. Nevertheless, AFRICOM's
effort to combine security and development faces formidable
conceptual and operational challenges in trying to ensure both
American and African security interests. The human security
perspective's emphasis on issues that go beyond traditional
state-centered security to include protecting individuals from
threats of hunger, disease, crime, environmental degradation, and
political repression as well as focusing on social and economic
justice is an important component of security policy. At the same
time, the threat of violent extremism heavily influences U.S.
security cooperation with Africa. In this examination of the
context of U.S.-African security relations, Robert J. Griffiths
outlines the nature of the African state, traces the contours of
African conflict, surveys the post-independence history of U.S.
involvement on the continent, and discusses policy organization and
implementation and the impact of U.S. experiences in Iraq and
Afghanistan on the U.S.-Africa security relationship. Africa's
continuing geostrategic significance, the influence of China and
other emerging markets in the region, and America's other global
engagements, especially in light of U.S. fiscal realities,
demonstrate the complexity of U.S.-African security cooperation.
This well-known undergraduate electrodynamics textbook is now
available in a more affordable printing from Cambridge University
Press. The Fourth Edition provides a rigorous, yet clear and
accessible treatment of the fundamentals of electromagnetic theory
and offers a sound platform for explorations of related
applications (AC circuits, antennas, transmission lines, plasmas,
optics and more). Written keeping in mind the conceptual hurdles
typically faced by undergraduate students, this textbook
illustrates the theoretical steps with well-chosen examples and
careful illustrations. It balances text and equations, allowing the
physics to shine through without compromising the rigour of the
math, and includes numerous problems, varying from straightforward
to elaborate, so that students can be assigned some problems to
build their confidence and others to stretch their minds. A
Solutions Manual is available to instructors teaching from the
book; access can be requested from the resources section at
www.cambridge.org/electrodynamics.
This text gives an overview of the main landslide field sites. It
covers aspects of recent landslide research at the University of
Wollongong.
Topics: An overview of the main landslide field sites in the 9th
ICFL; Aspects of recent landslide research at the University of
Wollongong; Infiltration of rainwater and slope failure; Landslide
hazards and highway engineering in Central and Northern Jordan; El
NiAo 1997-98: Direct costs of damaging landslides in the San
Francisco Bay region; Mass movement features in the vincinity of
the town Sorbas, South-east Spain; The movements and the
countermeasures of the Choja Landslide; Interest in landslide
hazard information - Parallels between Kingston, Jamaica and the
San Francisco Bay region, USA; Slide activity in quick clay related
to pore water pressure and weather parameters; Old and recent
landslides of Barranco de Tirajana basin, Gran Canaria, Spain.
This is the first book in a western language to treat these
doctrines about Budda from a philosophical and thoroughly critical
viewpoint.
In this outdoors mystery, special agent Sam Rivers investigates the
unexplained-and very unlikely-cougar attack that killed a wealthy
business owner. The sighting of a cougar in the Minnesota River
Valley, outside the Twin Cities, is incredibly rare. A deadly
cougar attack on a human in this area is about as likely as getting
struck by lightning-twice. Yet when wealthy business owner Jack
McGregor is found dead, the physical evidence seems
incontrovertible. Sheriff Rusty Benson brings in Sam Rivers, a US
Fish & Wildlife (USFW) special agent and a wildlife biologist,
to examine the scene and sign off on his conclusions. But Sam's
experiences have given him a penchant for understanding predators,
and he has more questions than answers. Details begin to surface
that challenge law enforcement's open-and-shut case. To find
justice, Sam must take matters into his own hands. He enlists the
help of reporter Diane Talbott and his wolf-dog, Gray, who's in
training to become a working dog for the USFW. Gray's nose leads
the investigation in unexpected directions. The more rocks Sam
turns over, the more motives for murdering McGregor seem to slither
out. With no help or support from local law enforcement, Sam and
his team are all that stand between justice and those who might
otherwise get away with murder. Sam's knowledge of backcountry,
cougars, and the criminal mind will be put to the test, as he tries
to solve the case-and stay alive. In Cougar Claw, natural history
writer Cary J. Griffith brings back Sam Rivers, the predator's
predator, and pens a puzzling mystery filled with suspense and
intrigue.
The appetite for knowledge - wanting to know things - is very
strong in humans. Some will sacrifice all other goods (sex, power,
food, life itself) for it. But this is not a simple appetite, and
this book treats some of its complications, deformations, beauties,
and intensities. Christian thinkers have traditionally
distinguished between good and bad forms of the appetite for
knowledge, calling the good 'studiousness' and the bad 'curiosity'.
The former is aimed at joyful contemplation of what can be known as
gift given; the latter seeks ownership and control of what can be
known as property for the taking. Paul J. Griffiths' ""Intellectual
Appetite"" offers an extended study of the difference between the
two, with special attention to the question of ownership: What is
it like to think of yourself as the owner of what you know, and how
might it be different to think of what you know as a gift given
you? How these questions are answered has a deep impact on a number
of issues in contemporary educational and legal theory. Most
fundamentally, there is the question of what it means to know
something at all. On that, this book offers an account of knowledge
in terms of intimacy: to know something (a mathematical formula, a
past event, another human being, the lineaments of a galaxy) is to
become intimate with it according to its kind. There are also
important and currently pressing ancillary questions; for example,
that of what plagiarism is and how it should be addressed.
Plagiarism is often understood in part as theft of intellectual
property, and since it is essential to the argument of this book
that seeking knowledge ought not to be understood as seeking
ownership, the book offers a theological defense of plagiarism.
In this brilliant theological essay, Paul J. Griffiths takes the
reader through all the stages of regret. To various degrees, all
human beings experience regret. In this concise theological
grammar, Paul J. Griffiths analyzes this attitude toward the past
and distinguishes its various kinds. He examines attitudes
encapsulated in the phrase, "I would it were otherwise," including
regret, contrition, remorse, compunction, lament, and repentance.
By using literature (especially poetry) and Christian theology,
Griffiths shows both what is good about regret and what can be
destructive about it. Griffiths argues that on the one hand regret
can take the form of remorse-an agony produced by obsessive and
ceaseless examination of the errors, sins, and omissions of the
past. This kind of regret accomplishes nothing and produces only
pain. On the other hand, when regret is coupled with contrition and
genuine sorrow for past errors, it has the capacity both to
transfigure the past-which is never merely past-and to open the
future. Moreover, in thinking about the phenomenon of regret in the
context of Christian theology, Griffiths focuses especially on the
notion of the LORD's regret. Is it even reasonable to claim that
the LORD regrets? Griffiths shows not only that it is but also that
the LORD's regret should structure how we regret as human beings.
Griffiths investigates the work of Henry James, Emily Dickinson,
Tomas Transtroemer, Paul Celan, Jane Austen, George Herbert, and
Robert Frost to show how regret is not a negative feature of human
life but rather is essential for human flourishing and ultimately
is to be patterned on the LORD's regret. Regret: A Theology will be
of interest to scholars and students of philosophy, theology, and
literature, as well as to literate readers who want to understand
the phenomenon of regret more deeply.
In this outdoors thriller, the investigation of a bizarre wolf
attack leads to evidence of murder, conspiracy, and shocking family
secrets. A decades-old promise haunts Sam Rivers, but the wildlife
biologist refuses to return home-not with his abusive and estranged
father still there. Rivers left the family farm some 20 years ago.
He found solace in nature and built a respected career as a special
agent for the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service. His experiences
have given him a penchant for understanding predators-a skill he'll
need, now, more than ever. After his father's mysterious death,
Rivers is lured back to his hometown of Defiance, in northern
Minnesota, to fulfill his mother's dying wish. But all is not as it
seems. Rivers breaks into his childhood home during a howling
winter storm and discovers something sinister. His suspicions are
heightened after a bizarre wolf attack on local livestock. The
events lead the special agent to a series of clues that could
change everything he knows-or thinks he knows-about the town, his
family, and himself. With the help of alluring reporter Diane
Talbott, Rivers must unravel the wolf kill and learn what really
happened to his father-a man Rivers has hated for most of his life.
It is a case unlike any he's worked before. His knowledge of frigid
winters, wolves, and wilderness will be put to the test, as he
tries to solve the case-and stay alive. In Wolf Kill, natural
history writer Cary J. Griffith introduces readers to Sam Rivers,
the predator's predator, and weaves a masterful tale of danger and
suspense in the far north.
A sustained and systematic theological reflection on the idea that
being a Christian is, first and last, a matter of the flesh,
Christian Flesh shows us what being a Christian means for fleshly
existence. Depicting and analyzing what the Christian tradition has
to say about the flesh of Christians in relation to that of Christ,
the book shows that some kinds of fleshly activity conform well to
being a Christian, while others are in tension with it. But to lead
a Christian life is to be unconstrained by ordinary ethical norms.
Arguing that no particular case of fleshly activity is forbidden,
Paul J. Griffiths illustrates his message through extended case
studies of what it is for Christians to eat, to clothe themselves,
and to engage in physical intimacy.
Drawing on a wealth of primary and secondary sources, this book
explores how far imperial culture penetrated antipodean city
institutions. It argues that far from imperial saturation, the city
'Down Under' was remarkably untouched by the Empire.
Phosphate Fibers is a singular detailed account of the discovery,
chemistry, synthesis, properties, manufacture, toxicology, and uses
of calcium and sodium calcium polyphosphate fibers. Author Edward
J. Griffith-the inventor and developer of this safe, biodegradable
material-takes a multidisciplinary approach to this subject,
considering the social, legal, medical, and industrial issues
surrounding the use of asbestos and other mineral fibers. This
compelling study is a beneficial resource to both readers
interested in mineral fibers as well as those who want to
understand the complexities of bringing new substances into the
modern marketplace.
Stories from survivors of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area
Wilderness’s epochal weather disaster  On July 4, 1999, in
the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness (BWCAW), a bizarre
confluence of meteorological events resulted in the most damaging
blowdown in the region’s history. Originating over the Dakotas,
the midsummer windstorm developed amid unusually high heat and
water-saturated forests and moved steadily east, bearing down on
Fargo, North Dakota, and damaging land as it crossed the Minnesota
border. Gunflint Falling tells the story of this devastating storm
from the perspectives of those who were on the ground before,
during, and after the catastrophic event—from first-time visitors
to the north woods to returning paddlers to Forest Service Rangers.
 The pre-dawn forecasts from the National Weather Service in
Duluth for that Sunday of the holiday weekend predicted the day
would be “warm and humid. Partly sunny with a thirty percent
chance of thunderstorms.” But as the afternoon and evening
settled over the Boundary Waters, the first eyewitness accounts
began to tell a dramatic and terrifying story. Five friends camping
on Lake Polly watched in wonder as the sky turned green and the
winds began to whip. They scrambled to pull canoes on shore and
secure tarps when a tree snapped and struck one of them in the
head, rendering her unconscious. Three women enjoying their last
day of a camping trip near the end of the Gunflint Trail took
shelter in their tent as winds increased. Water drenched the nylon
walls as trees crashed around them, one flattening the tent and
pinning a woman beneath its weight. A family vacationing at their
cabin dodged falling trees and strained against straight-line winds
as they sprinted from the cabin to the safest place they knew: a
crawl space underneath it. They watched in awe as trees snapped and
toppled, their twisted root balls torn out of the water-logged
earth—as they prayed their cabin would hold.  By the time
the storm began to subside, falling trees had injured approximately
sixty people, and most needed to be medevacked to safety.
Amazingly, no one died. The historic storm laid down timber that
would later blaze in the Ham Lake fire of 2007, ultimately
reshaping the region’s forests in ways we have yet to fully
understand.
This new book is a substantially updated and expanded edition based
upon the successful and acclaimed Basic Environmental and
Engineering Geology by the late Professor Fred Bell. It
incorporates the changes that have occurred since and also
addresses some aspects of the discipline that have developed a much
higher profile over the past few decades. The book is underpinned
by two fundamental premises: that environmental and engineering
geology represents a single coherent discipline that has a broad
remit; and it is a vocational subject and not an academic pursuit,
that aims to provide the societal means for safe, economic, and
environmentally sustainable planning and development. The early
chapters underpin the discipline and deal with: geology and
geochemistry; geomorphology; engineering soils and rocks;
pedological soils; hydrology and hydrogeology. A thorough appraisal
of the various stages of site investigation is followed by nine
chapters on the application of environmental and engineering
geology. These chapters cover a broad range and draw on case
studies taken both from the authors own files and those published
elsewhere. In all examples the aim is to illustrate the way case
studies have improved our knowledge and developed the science of
environmental and engineering geology. The final chapter addresses
some of the new issues that environmental and engineering
geologists are now facing that were not considered in the first
edition, including climate change, renewable energy,
geoconservation, geoforensics, and modern military applications. In
addition, the requirement for skills that are beyond subject
knowledge required by practitioners are introduced, such as project
management, health & safety, and seeking professional
recognition. An extensive list of additional reading is provided
for each of the chapters in the book, allowing readers to explore
the rich literature that underpins this fascinating and important
subject.
As Africa's strategic importance has increased over the past decade
and a half, United States security cooperation with the continent
has expanded. The most visible dimension of this increased
engagement was the establishment of the U.S. Military Command for
Africa (AFRICOM). Some critics are skeptical of AFRICOM's purpose
and see the militarization of U.S. Africa policy while others
question its effectiveness. Recognizing the link between
development and security, AFRICOM represents a departure from the
traditional organization of military commands because of its
holistic approach and the involvement of the Department of State as
well as other U.S. government stakeholders. Nevertheless, AFRICOM's
effort to combine security and development faces formidable
conceptual and operational challenges in trying to ensure both
American and African security interests. The human security
perspective's emphasis on issues that go beyond traditional
state-centered security to include protecting individuals from
threats of hunger, disease, crime, environmental degradation, and
political repression as well as focusing on social and economic
justice is an important component of security policy. At the same
time, the threat of violent extremism heavily influences U.S.
security cooperation with Africa. In this examination of the
context of U.S.-African security relations, Robert J. Griffiths
outlines the nature of the African state, traces the contours of
African conflict, surveys the post-independence history of U.S.
involvement on the continent, and discusses policy organization and
implementation and the impact of U.S. experiences in Iraq and
Afghanistan on the U.S.-Africa security relationship. Africa's
continuing geostrategic significance, the influence of China and
other emerging markets in the region, and America's other global
engagements, especially in light of U.S. fiscal realities,
demonstrate the complexity of U.S.-African security cooperation.
Two dead bodies and too many coincidences to ignore—in this
outdoors mystery, special agent Sam Rivers must stop a murderous
conspiracy. As a special agent for the US Fish & Wildlife
Service, Sam Rivers has researched and studied a variety of
animals. He’s visiting sixth graders at Hopkins Elementary to
share photographs of the Monarch butterfly—and he’s brought
along his drug-sniffing wolfdog, Gray, to give students a
demonstration of his partner’s remarkable skills. Gray finds a
sample drug packet, hidden by Sam, but that’s not all. The
wolfdog keeps following his nose, leading Sam to a utility room
where they discover the school’s janitor, dead. Local police
write it off as a drug overdose, but Sam is no stranger to crime
scenes. He suspects foul play. When Sam and Gray come upon a second
victim, the coincidences are too great to ignore. Sam starts
turning over rocks—and what slithers out is more insidious than
anyone could have foretold. Sam’s instincts tell him there’ll
be more deaths, but those instincts put him at odds with
conventional law enforcement. Armed with his knowledge of the
natural world and his wolfdog companion, Sam must uncover answers
to questions that few others believe exist. The Denver Post calls
Sam Rivers the “predator’s predator.” In Killing Monarchs,
natural history writer Cary J. Griffith brings back Sam for his
third mystery—a thrilling novel filled with action and suspense.
In The Practice of Catholic Theology: A Modest Proposal, Paul J.
Griffiths has written a how-to book for Catholic theologians that
will both instruct beginners and challenge long-time practitioners
to sharpen their understanding of their craY. He defines Catholic
theology as the practice of thinking, speaking, and writing about
the God of Christian confession; so understood, it's something that
anyone can learn to do. Personal sanctity is not required, but as
with any other practice, practitioners of this beautiful and
elevated thought-performance need to know some things and to
develop some skills in order to be able to perform it. This book
lays out, clearly and in detail, what the relevant body of
knowledge is and how to find access to it; it does that by
describing the "Catholic archive" in all its variety (scriptural,
conciliar, magisterial broadly and narrowly, liturgical,
canon-legal, speculative), and by analyzing the authoritative
weight of the various components of the archive. It shows the di
erence between dogmatical and speculative theology, both by example
and analysis. It also gives detailed instruction in the development
of the theologian's particular skills: argument, synthesis,
intellectual imagination, thought-experiment, exegesis, and so on.
And it describes, with particular recommendations, the essential
components of the theologian's working library, and how they ought
to be used.
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