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This report was produced by the CSIS Nuclear Consensus Working
Group (NCWG) to assist the Obama administration in forging, during
its second term, an enduring consensus about the U.S. nuclear
posture. The report includes (1) seven individual statements from
nuclear thinkers and practitioners across the "broad middle" of the
spectrum of opinion on the role and value of U.S. nuclear weapons,
the U.S. nuclear posture needed for this defined role, and a
political strategy for sustaining the recommended posture; (2) a
consensus statement signed by eight members of the NCWG; (3) A
description of the process used by the NCWG to forge the signed
statement, which includes the lessons learned from the facilitation
process; and (4) A case study covering 2008-2012, which provides
both a chronology of past attempts to broker consensus about the
U.S. nuclear posture and the working group's assessment of the
lessons learned.
A remarkably simple and yet profoundly deep narrative, this
translation is an introduction to the remote world of the
19th-century Altai: a mountainous region of southern Siberia
possessing unique flora and fauna and peaks rising to nearly 15,000
feet. Native Altai tribesman Mikhail Chelvalkov vividly describes
the physical beauty of the region while chronicling many of the
encounters that took place throughout his life as the population
transformed from competing nomadic pagan tribes to a settled and
harmonious Orthodox Christian culture. One of the first native
disciples of the Russian Orthodox missionary priest Makarii
Glukharev--who was made a saint in AD 2000--Chelvalkov's testament
provides invaluable insights for students of Christian mission,
ethnography, geography, and botany.
With the world and the human race facing serious problems ranging
from global warming, environmental despoliation, terrorism, war and
a major economic downturn, many writers are trying to goad mankind
into action. The author argues they 'are written in an evangelical
or rhetorical way, as though society can somehow be swayed into
adopting some new or improved consciousness'. His aim is to 'open
some eyes' so that responsible action may follow. To do this, he
draws on his own experience, both as a chemist working as a patent
agent, and as having undergone two years of analysis at the Jung
Institute in Zurich. From this came the realization that, as Jung
put it, for 'the whole to change, the individual must change
himself'. It is too easy to make politicians, scientists and big
business the scapegoats for the failings of the world. As
Schumacher, author of "Small is Beautiful", wrote, the problems
'lie too deep in the heart and soul of every one of us. It is there
that the main work of reform has to be done'. In a quest for
understanding, the author, like Jung, turned to the ancient Chinese
philosophy of Taoism and began to appreciate the significance of
symbols as a subtle way of conveying understanding. Contemplating
'The Diamond Body', a Self symbol described in Richard Wilhelm's
"The Secret of the Golden Flower", led him, as a chemist, to
recognize the important nature of the tetrahedron, both as the
simplest form of solid with four corners and faces and its
crystalline expression in the Chinese Self symbol of the Diamond
Body. He also realized the huge symbolic importance of the
quaternity represented by the four valences of carbon in the
structure of all living matter. 'The diamond and the star', writes
the author, 'are such wonderful symbols that I have tried to
observe them in a variety of contexts, so that their magic may
stimulate the imagination'.
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
A dragon with no wings sets out to meet Merlin who helps him to fly
again. Zabaduk and Sammy are kidnapped. They escape, helped by
Merlin, eagles and dolphins.
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!
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Gemisto (Paperback)
John Warden
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R404
R366
Discovery Miles 3 660
Save R38 (9%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The story is about a young man growing up in a world at war,
seeking, through philosophy or through love, to get free from the
darkness of his past. It takes place in C15 Greece (and Italy). It
describes the struggles of Southern Greece to remain free from both
Turkish and Western control. The story is told by John Asan
Zaccaria, son of the erstwhile Baron of Arcadia, who has spent his
childhood and early teens in prison with his father. He tells of
his role in the resistance, in the diplomatic dealings with the
Turks and Venetians, the final collapse of Byzantine rule, his
escape from Greece to Italy, the continued fighting between
Venetians and Turks, and the final desperate attempts of Greek
freedom fighters. A dominant figure in the story, though in fact he
dies before the action starts, is Gemisto Pletho, philosopher and
patriot. The narrator becomes a member of the 'Plethonista'
community in the mountains of Southern Greece. The story culminates
in the death of Zaccaria's partner Nigella at the hands of zealots
within the community and the collapse of the community. in which he
was brought up, and his struggles to relate to the people and
events of the world outside him. An aspect of this is his search
for a philosophy of life, which becomes a conflict between the
'clear light' of Gemisto's rational system and the more opaque
world of suffering and emotion which the narrator has himself
experienced. He discovers how 'reason' can turn to dogmatism, and
dogmatism to fundamentalism.
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