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It's the nineteenth century. As America prepares for civil war,
five men living within ninety miles of one another will change the
course of history. The invention and refinement of the repeating
firearm-the precursor to today's automatic weapons-means life in
America and beyond will never be the same again. In this riveting
work of narrative history, veteran reporter John Bainbridge, Jr.
vividly brings to life the five charismatic and idiosyncratic men
at the heart of the story: the huckster and hard-living Samuel
Colt; the cunning former shirt-maker Oliver Winchester; the
constant tinkerer Horace Smith; the resilient and innovative
businessman Daniel Wesson; and the skinny abolitionist Christopher
Spencer. As the men competed ferociously, each trying to corner the
market for repeating weapons, invention and necessity collided in a
perfect storm: America was crashing violently towards furious
sectarianism, irrevocable tensions, and, of course, bloodthirsty
war. Though capable of firing many times without reloading,
astonishingly, the new guns faced a government backlash for using
too much ammunition. Sold directly to soldiers, sometimes just as
they were walking into battle, they quickly became coveted
possessions, both during the Civil War and in the conquering of the
West-and thus America's romance with personal firearms was born.
Wide-ranging and vividly told, this is a gripping story of
tenacity, conviction, innovation, and pure heartless greed.
It is arguable that one of the most serious obstacles to a proper appreciation of Barth's magnum opus is an inadequate grasp of the fact that the Church Dogmatics is a work of moral theology as well as of systematics. A failure to take this point seriously often lies behind critiques of Barth's theology generally, when he is accused of being abstracted from the world of human history and action. By reinterpreting Barth's work as an ethical dogmatics, Webster shows that such readings are all too often abortive from the beginning.
Asynchronous System-on-Chip Interconnect describes the use of an
entirely asynchronous system-bus for the modular construction of
integrated circuits. Industry is just awakening to the benefits of
asynchronous design in avoiding the problems of clock-skew and
multiple clock-domains, an din parallel with this is coming to
grips with Intellectual Property (IP) based design flows which
emphasise the need for a flexible interconnect strategy. In this
book, John Bainbridge investigates the design of an asynchronous
on-chip interconnect, looking at all the stages of the design from
the choice of wiring layout, through asynchronous signalling
protocols to the higher level problems involved in supporting split
transactions. The MARBLE bus (the first asynchronous SoC bus) used
in a commercial demonstrator chip containing a mixture of
asynchronous and synchronous macrocells is used as a concrete
example throughout the book.
Approximately 150 photographs from the Francis Frith Collection of
the county spanning over 100 years. With extended captions and full
introduction.
John Webster provides a major scholarly analysis of the final
sections of the Church Dogmatics. He focuses on the theme of human
agency in Barth's late ethics and doctrine of baptism, placing the
discussion in the context of an interpretation of the Dogmatics as
an intrinsically ethical dogmatics. The first two chapters survey
the themes of agency, covenant and human reality in the Dogmatics
as a whole; later chapters give a thorough analysis of Church
Dogmatics IV/4 and the posthumously published text The Christian
Life. A final chapter examines the significance of Barth's work for
contemporary accounts of moral selfhood. The book is important not
only for a detailed analysis of a neglected part of Barth's oeuvre,
but also because it casts into question much of what has hitherto
been written about Barth's ethical dogmatics.
This book is the first introduction in any language to the work of
Eberhard Jungel, who increasingly is recognised as one of the
leading contemporary Protestant German theologians. It furnishes a
comprehensive survey of his work as New Testament scholar,
systematic theologian and philosopher, focusing particularly on his
discussions of theological and religious language, the role of
Christology, the doctrines of God and man, and questions of natural
theology. Some initial evaluations of Jungel's theology are offered
in the light of other current traditions of theology and
philosophy, both English and German.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
A fast-paced, definitive, and breathtakingly suspenseful account of
an extraordinary historical event-the attempted assassination of
President Harry Truman in 1950 by two Puerto Rican Nationalists and
the bloody shoot-out in the streets of Washington, DC, that saved
the president's life. Written by Pulitzer Prize-winner and New York
Times bestselling novelist Stephen Hunter, and John Bainbridge,
Jr., an experienced journalist and lawyer, American Gunfight is at
once a groundbreaking work of meticulous historical research and
the vivid and dramatically told story of an act of terrorism that
almost succeeded. They have pieced together, at last, the story of
the conspiracy that nearly doomed the president and how a few good
men-ordinary guys who were willing to risk their lives in the line
of duty-stopped it. It begins on November 1, 1950, an unseasonably
hot afternoon in the sleepy capital. At 2:00 P.M. in his temporary
residence at Blair House, the president of the United States takes
a nap. At 2:20 P.M., two men approach Blair House from different
directions. Oscar Collazo, a respected metal polisher and family
man, and Griselio Torresola, an unemployed salesman, don't look
dangerous, not in their new suits and hats, not in their calm,
purposeful demeanor, not in their slow, unexcited approach. What
the three White House policemen and one Secret Service agent cannot
guess is that under each man's coat is a 9mm automatic pistol and
in each head, a dream of assassin's glory. At point-blank range,
Collazo and then Torresola draw and fire and move toward the
president of the United States. Hunter and Bainbridge tell the
story of that November day with narrative power and careful
attention to detail. They are the first to report on the inner
workings of this conspiracy; they examine the forces that led the
perpetrators to conceive the plot. The authors also tell the story
of the men themselves, from their youth and the worlds in which
they grew up to the women they loved and who loved them to the
moment the gunfire erupted. Their telling commemorates heroism-the
quiet commitment to duty that in some moments of crisis sees some
people through an ordeal, even at the expense of their lives.
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