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117 matches in All Departments
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
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Torn (Hardcover)
James Owens
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R978
Discovery Miles 9 780
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Forest (DVD)
Natalie Dormer, Taylor Kinney, Yukiyoshi Ozawa, Eoin Macken, Rina Takasaki, …
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R47
Discovery Miles 470
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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Supernatural horror - and directorial debut from Jason Zada - set
in the legendary Aokigahara Forest, a real-life place at the base
of Mount Fuji in Japan where people go to end their lives. A young
American woman Sara (Natalie Dormer) comes to the forest in search
of her sister who has gone missing. In spite of everyone's warnings
not to stray from the path she enters the forest in search of her
sister, only to be soon confronted by the tortured souls of the
dead who prey on those they encounter.
One of the most dramatic changes to women's lives in the twentieth
century was the advent of safe childbirth, reducing the maternal
mortality rate from 1 in 400 births to 1 in 10,000 in just 80
years. The impetus behind this change was the Confidential
Enquiries into Maternal Death (CEMD), now the world's longest
running self-audit of a healthcare service. Here, leading authors
in the CEMD tell the story of the pioneering clinicians behind the
push for improvements, who received little recognition for their
work despite its far-reaching consequences. One by one, the leading
causes of maternal death were identified and resolved, from sepsis
to safe abortions and more recently psychiatric illness and social
and ethnic disparities in healthcare. Global maternal mortality is
still too high; this valuable book shows how significant advances
in maternal healthcare are possible when clinicians, politicians
and the public work together.
The Confederate States adopted their Permanent Constitution on
March 11, 1861. The original document consisted of five vellum
sheest pasted together to form a scroll over twelve feet long. The
original document, along with many other documents of the
Confederacy, was found at a train station in 1865 by a war-time
correspondent, Felix DeFontaine. In 1883, he sold the manuscript to
Mrs. George Wymberley Jones DeRenne. In 1939, the DeRenne family
sold the document to the University of Georgia, where it now
resides.
In January 1979, Robert Edwards and Patrick Steptoe delivered a
lecture detailing the ten-year clinical and scientific research
programme that led to the birth of Louise Brown, the first baby
born utilising IVF. This thoroughly-researched book provides both a
full annotated transcript of the lecture as well as recorded
reminiscences from those who attended, detailing the contemporary
understandings of the event. An essay on the lecture's historical
context adds fresh insight into the biographies of Edwards and
Steptoe and highlights sources from print and broadcast media that
have received scant attention in earlier publications. Current and
future implications of the advances in IVF since the first
procedure are also explored, examining future medical and
scientific possibilities as well as ethical issues that may arise.
A foreword by Louise Brown herself places this remarkable leap of
science in a personal context, one that so many families have since
experienced themselves.
A special gift book this Christmas From young princess to
internationally revered head of state, Queen Elizabeth has always
fascinated and intrigued. This fully updated second edition
celebrates and remembers the glorious reign of Britain's
longest-serving and much cherished monarch. Drawn from nearly a
century of detailed and fascinating reporting by The Times,
discover insights and memories of the extraordinary period of
social change that was our nation's second Elizabethan age.
Featuring Queen Elizabeth's obituary, as published in The Times
Reflections of a nation in mourning, with images from the state
funeral A collection of essays and articles written by leading
royal historians, including Ben Macintyre, Hugo Vickers, Valentine
Low and Professor Kate Williams Full-colour images from The Times
archives
An accessible compilation of news-breaking stories from The Times.
As one of Britain's leading newspapers for more than 200 years The
Times has covered every major world events as they happened. This
book profiles the ones that have had the most impact on the world
today from the fall of the Berlin Wall to stepping onto the Moon.
News-breaking stories as told from The Times with commentary
setting each event in context. Historian and editor, James Owens,
has scoured The Times archive to bring front pages from the days
after world changing events along with insightful articles
published at the time. The global events covered include; *
Assassination of JFK * Release from prison of Nelson Mandela *
Armistice Day: First World War ends * VE Day: Second World War ends
* First telephone call in 1876 * European revolutions of 1848 *
Suez canal opens in 1869 * First personal computer 1977
"Unparalleled in British medical history James Owen Drife charted
his reactions to the medical world in which he worked and published
them, initially in World Medicine and then the British Medical
Journal (BMJ). This book is sometimes painfully frank, at other
times disturbing or very funny but always entertaining. It provides
an important insight on the life and times of a doctor working in
the NHS."
"Weatherall probes an epochal shift in financial strategizing with
lucidity, explaining how it occurred and what it means for modern
finance."--Peter Galison, author of "Einstein's Clocks, Poincare's
Maps"
After the economic meltdown of 2008, many pundits placed the blame
on "complex financial instruments" and the physicists and
mathematicians who dreamed them up. But how is it that physicists
came to drive Wall Street? And were their ideas really the cause of
the collapse?
In "The Physics of Wall Street," the physicist James Weatherall
answers both of these questions. He tells the story of how
physicists first moved to finance, bringing science to bear on some
of the thorniest problems in economics, from bubbles to options
pricing. The problem isn't simply that economic models have
limitations and can break down under certain conditions, but that
at the time of the meltdown those models were in the hands of
people who either didn't understand their purpose or didn't care.
It was a catastrophic misuse of science. However, Weatherall argues
that the solution is not to give up on the models but to make them
better. Both persuasive and accessible, "The Physics of Wall
Street" is riveting history that will change how we think about our
economic future.
The social dynamics of "alternative facts": why what you believe
depends on who you know Why should we care about having true
beliefs? And why do demonstrably false beliefs persist and spread
despite bad, even fatal, consequences for the people who hold them?
Philosophers of science Cailin O'Connor and James Weatherall argue
that social factors, rather than individual psychology, are what's
essential to understanding the spread and persistence of false
beliefs. It might seem that there's an obvious reason that true
beliefs matter: false beliefs will hurt you. But if that's right,
then why is it (apparently) irrelevant to many people whether they
believe true things or not? The Misinformation Age, written for a
political era riven by "fake news," "alternative facts," and
disputes over the validity of everything from climate change to the
size of inauguration crowds, shows convincingly that what you
believe depends on who you know. If social forces explain the
persistence of false belief, we must understand how those forces
work in order to fight misinformation effectively.
Labour and the Caucus provides a new, innovative pre-history of the
Labour party. In the two decades following the Second Reform Act
there was a sustained and concerted campaign for working-class
parliamentary representation from a range of labour organisations
to an extent that was hitherto unseen in British political history.
The franchise revolution of 1867 and the controversial introduction
of more sophisticated forms of electoral machinery, which became
known as the 'caucus', raised serious questions not only for a
labour movement seeking to secure political representation but also
for a Liberal party that had to respond to the pressures of mass
politics. Through a close examination of the interactions between
labour and the 'caucus' from the 1868 general election to Keir
Hardie's independent labour candidature in 1888, this book provides
a comprehensive and multi-layered picture of the troubled
relationship between working-class radicals and organised
Liberalism. The electoral strategy of labour candidates, the links
between urban and rural radicalism, the impact of the National
Liberal Federation, the influence of American and Irish politics on
the labour movement, the revival of socialism, and the contested
identity of a 'Labour party' are all examined from fresh
perspectives. In doing so, this book challenges the existing
teleological assumptions about the rise of independent labour, and
explores the questions that remain about how working-class radicals
and Liberals shared and negotiated power, and how this relationship
changed over time.
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