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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.
Environmental Sustainability and Economy contains the latest
practical and theoretical concepts of sustainability science and
economic growth. It includes the latest research on sustainable
development, the impact of pollution due to economic activities,
energy policies and consumption influencing growth and environment,
waste management and recycling, circular economy, and climate
change impacts on both the environment and the economy. The 21st
century has seen the rise of complex and multi-dimensional pathways
between different aspects of sustainability. Due to globalization,
these relationships now work at varying spatiotemporal scales
resulting in global and regional dynamics. This book explores the
complex relationship between sustainable development and economic
growth, linking the environmental and social aspects with the
economic pillar of sustainable development. Utilizing global case
studies and interdisciplinary perspectives, Environmental
Sustainability and Economy provides a comprehensive account of
sustainable development and the economics of environmental
protection studies with a focus on the environmental, geographical,
economic, anthropogenic and social-ecological environment.
The book is about the post-relativity philosophy of time as
championed by Bertrand Russell and Einstein. It argues that The
Past, Present and Future notion of time is an illusion. The sun, as
daylight, is on constantly with no temporal past and future, except
in chemistry perhaps. Only the earth's revolutions bring temporary
days and nights. So the Bertrand Russell notion that under
relativity man constructs his time is logically unassailable (the
days, weeks, months and years are all human concepts.) Relativity
allows time to begin from anywhere. So the revolutionary view is
that there are or can be as many times as there are frames, or
planets---a world-changing idea but true because it is based on
objective, physical experiments, but generally ignored.
HARDBACK - A collection of essays on time by Samuel K. K. Blankson.
His basic argument is that units of time (such as the year and its
subdivisions down to the seconds and even the cesium units, etc.),
replicate to make us see time as passing by. Time travel is not
possible from his point of view and he goes on to reject the
Minkowski theory of space-time as a distortion of relativity and
physics as a whole.
This book presents the selected peer-reviewed proceedings of the
International Conference on Recent Trends and Innovations in Civil
Engineering (ICRTICE 2019). The volume focuses on latest research
and advances in the field of civil engineering and materials
science such as design and development of new environmental
materials, performance testing and verification of smart materials,
performance analysis and simulation of steel structures, design and
performance optimization of concrete structures, and building
materials analysis. The book also covers studies in geotechnical
engineering, hydraulic engineering, road and bridge engineering,
building services design, engineering management, water resource
engineering and renewable energy. The contents of this book will be
useful for students, researchers and professionals working in civil
engineering.
The advancement of security technologies has allowed information
systems to store more crucial and sensitive data. With these
advancements, organisations turn to physiological and behavioral
methods of identification in order to guard against unwanted
intrusion. Research Developments in Biometrics and Video Processing
Techniques investigates advanced techniques in user identification
and security, including retinal, facial, and finger print scans as
well as signature and voice authentication models. Through its
in-depth examination of computer vision applications and other
biometric security technologies, this reference volume will provide
researchers, engineers, developers, and students with insight into
the latest research on enhanced security systems design and
development.
Divorce can be brutal on your self-esteem, your psyche, and your
emotional well-being. It is a hard-hitting, tough experience in
which so much of your existence is tested and questioned. In "The
Gifts of My Divorce, " author K. K. Chappell examines her ten-year
relationship with her ex and narrates how she survived the first
year of the break-up."The Gifts of My Divorce" is a story about
growth and change, describing how Chappell and her son navigate
their way through the first year alone. It is the story of her
journey through the labyrinth of her split as she consciously
chooses the kind of life she wants to live. It's a story about her
role as the victim, as the survivor, and ultimately as the hero of
her own tale. In this memoir, Chappell discusses her transformative
journey into self and the gifts she discovered after her ex left.
This is a story about the human spirit and the potentials that
exist within us all; ultimately, it is a story about love.
Similar to the way in which computer vision and computer graphics
act as the dual fields that connect image processing in modern
computer science, the field of image processing can be considered a
crucial middle road between the vision and graphics fields.
Research Developments in Computer Vision and Image Processing:
Methodologies and Applications brings together various research
methodologies and trends in emerging areas of application of
computer vision and image processing. This book is useful for
students, researchers, scientists, and engineers interested in the
research developments of this rapidly growing field.
HARD BACK: In his 10th book on post-relativity philosophy of time,
the Ghanaian philosopher argues that all the theories we read about
time are useful only for constructing clocks to accord accurately
with the earth's regular motions and astronomical features. The
many bemusing technical terms employed (like duration between
events, sidereal time, solar time, nutation, equinox, earth's
rotation, the precession of the equinoxes etc.), were all invented
to account for fixed, general and absolute time, running all
through the cosmos and the same everywhere. This view of time,
however, was abolished by Einstein. He adds that everything we have
ever used to reckon time (including atomic time) amounts to mere
physical cycles, pulses or oscillations that we count as the units
of time---the years, for instance---but they are passing. He has
also uncovered Einstein's undoubted snub to 4-D geometry.
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