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Contemporary feminists face the labor of moving beyond the dominant
paradigms of knowledge and communication that drive corporate
globalization. "Dialogue and Difference," a new collection edited
by Marguerite Waller and Sylvia Marcos, provides students with
groundbreaking essays by an international group of feminist
scholars and activists who stress the need to put different
approaches to reality and to scholarship into relation in order to
build coalitions across the usual North/South, East/West divides.
Modeling ways to weave these connections, the authors take
difference, rather than isomorphic similarity, to be the basis for
effective anti-imperial feminist theory and practice. These
dialogues among women's movements bridge profound differences in
historical, economic, and political circumstance, language,
culture, and fundamental "cosmovision." Such differences are
welcomed by contributors as practical resources, rather than as
obstacles, in feminist challenges to corporate globalization.
"Dialogue and Difference" is an essential collection for professors
and students interested in globalization, development, gender
studies, and activism.
Contemporary feminists face the labor of moving beyond the dominant
paradigms of knowledge and communication that drive corporate
globalization. "Dialogue and Difference," a new collection edited
by Marguerite Waller and Sylvia Marcos, provides students with
groundbreaking essays by an international group of feminist
scholars and activists who stress the need to put different
approaches to reality and to scholarship into relation in order to
build coalitions across the usual North/South, East/West divides.
Modeling ways to weave these connections, the authors take
difference, rather than isomorphic similarity, to be the basis for
effective anti-imperial feminist theory and practice. These
dialogues among women's movements bridge profound differences in
historical, economic, and political circumstance, language,
culture, and fundamental "cosmovision." Such differences are
welcomed by contributors as practical resources, rather than as
obstacles, in feminist challenges to corporate globalization.
"Dialogue and Difference" is an essential collection for professors
and students interested in globalization, development, gender
studies, and activism.
Primates communicate with each other using a wide range of signals:
olfactory signals to mark territories, screams to recruit help
while fighting, gestures to request food and facial expressions to
initiate play. Primate Communication brings together research on
all forms of interchange and discusses what we know about primate
communication via vocal, gestural, facial, olfactory and integrated
multimodal signals in relation to a number of central topics. It
explores the morphological, neural and cognitive foundations of
primate communication through discussion of cutting-edge research.
By considering signals from multiple modalities and taking a
unified multimodal approach, the authors offer a uniquely holistic
overview of primate communication, discussing what we know, what we
don't know and what we may currently misunderstand about
communication across these different forms. It is essential reading
for researchers interested in primate behaviour, communication and
cognition, as well as students of primatology, psychology,
anthropology and cognitive sciences.
Primates communicate with each other using a wide range of signals:
olfactory signals to mark territories, screams to recruit help
while fighting, gestures to request food and facial expressions to
initiate play. Primate Communication brings together research on
all forms of interchange and discusses what we know about primate
communication via vocal, gestural, facial, olfactory and integrated
multimodal signals in relation to a number of central topics. It
explores the morphological, neural and cognitive foundations of
primate communication through discussion of cutting-edge research.
By considering signals from multiple modalities and taking a
unified multimodal approach, the authors offer a uniquely holistic
overview of primate communication, discussing what we know, what we
don't know and what we may currently misunderstand about
communication across these different forms. It is essential reading
for researchers interested in primate behaviour, communication and
cognition, as well as students of primatology, psychology,
anthropology and cognitive sciences.
Are you an Indigo? Is a new age philosophy which helps in
identifying what an Indigo truly is and how you are able to
identify them. This book will help serve you to understand what
being an Indigo means, in how it applies and affects you, your
loved ones and how they just may be an Indigo themselves. Find and
identify the difference between Group Thinkers and Free Thinkers.
Learn how feelings play an important role and how to deal with
them. Discover and find that perfect life, love, and success in
business you want to have. So unleash the power within and overcome
the fear to Discover Your Authentic Self.
Composite OverWrapped Pressure Vessels (COPVs) are currently
accepted by NASA based on design and qualification requirements and
generally not verified by NDE for the following reasons: (1)
Manufactures and end users generally do not have experience and
validated quantitative methods of detecting flaws and defects of
concern (1-a) If detected, the flaws are not adequately quantified
and it is unclear how they may contribute to degradation in
mechanical response (1-b) Carbon-epoxy COPVs also extremely
sensitive to impact damage and impacts may be below the visible
detection threshold (2) If damage is detected, this generally
results in rejection since the effect on mechanical response is
generally not known (3) NDE response has not generally been fully
characterized, probability of detection (POD) established, and
processes validated for evaluation of vessel condition as
manufactured and delivered.
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
This book provides an intuitive insight into the heart of Zen
through a translation of Seng-Ts'an's poem, Hsin Hsin Ming. Reading
through the pages you will become familiar with the basic
principles of Zen with an interesting collection of perspectives
from Quantum Physics to more traditional views of Taoism. These
different thoughts are brought together to serve the reader a
rewarding experience. Hsin Hsin Ming by Seng-Ts'an is the Zen Poem
that is often referred to as the poem of nothing. While very short,
it is the fusion of Lao Tzu's Taoism and Buddha's Buddhism into
what is known as Zen. It is like a waterfall that you listen to. It
says nothing but speaks the unknown to those who can hear it.
Become like a temple to hear the what isn't being said. This is to
know the meaning of this poem. The central message of the Hsin Hsin
Ming is to point directly to the mind by giving up judgments and
opinions so you can see the Oneness and the Nothingness of what
reality really is. The poem professes the need to live life with
equanimity, to practice living in a state of non-duality while in
this dualistic world. It is a guide to the path of Enlightenment.
It isn't about trying to attain anything, rather it is about losing
false views and perceptions. To remove all that the ego so desires
to cling to. The path to enlightenment is the realization that
there is nothing to find, nowhere to go, nothing to achieve. There
is no need to search for God for God has been within you always.
God, itself is your true self, your true being. It is nothing more
than waking up from the dream. "Upon returning home on a cold
winter night, I begin my evening by building a fire in the
fireplace to chase away the chill. Once I have gathered the logs
and placed them so, I start the fire. At the birth of the flames
starting to flicker among the logs, it is in that moment I know
that I am releasing all the memories that have been stored up in
that tree. I know that I am releasing the sunshine that gave warmth
to that tree, that tree from whence the firewood came. I know that
I am releasing the clouds that gave it shade, the rain that
quenched its thirst, the soil from which it received its
nourishment, and all those enjoyments that the tree experienced so
joyfully, like those memories of the autumn breeze caressing its
leaves and the still of the moonlight on a winter night while that
tree stood stoic in deep contemplation. And in the knowing of
giving shelter in the spring and being a refuge to the song birds
and the animals that called it home. Yes, while I witness the
flickering of those flames, I see all of this and more, for the log
in the fire is more than what it seems. It is at once an explosion
of all its life's experiences and joys, and a reminder of what we
leave behind, for this log has shown me, how even I, am connected
to it all."
A treatise and interpretation of Lao Tzu's Tao Te Ching by Dennis M
Waller. The Tao is an ancient philosophy of living in the natural
world. It shows the way of how to get back to being your Authentic
Self, your Spiritual Self. The Tao has the power to help you
reclaim your life from the temporal ego identity that is
imprisoning you. With the Tao you can discover your Authentic
Identity by getting back to the being-ness and oneness of living in
the Divine Consciousness. Through discovering these truths we can
become the creators of the universe instead of the passive
observers we have been. We can learn to live life in the infinity
of the now verses living in the clutches of the Ego. The Tao shows
us how to grow detached from the ego identity by becoming in direct
contact with our true intent and motives that was meant for us.
When we do, we begin to see ourselves as we truly are. It is being
authentic that we become reconnected to the divine source. What is
the Way of the Tao? It is the way things are in their own natural
progression of life and death. The way of intelligent design as
shown in nature, this is the way of the Tao. It is the way without
dogmas, formalities or religion. To live in the Tao is to live in
peace and harmony. The Tao gives you the knowledge of being one
with the higher realm of divine consciousness and to experience the
innerconnectiveness to all living things. It is to have the
awareness of being in this world while knowing that you are not
part of it because you are more than all of this. You are one and
10,000 things at the same moment. You are the song that the bird
sings, the breeze blowing through the trees, the fish swimming in a
brook, the warmth of the sun shining from above, the coolness of
the earth below your feet, you are life and death, all at once and
not at all. There is no separation in the Divine Oneness. The Tao
contains the power to liberate you from the ego-imposed prison of
the dualistic world. Living in the Tao can bring a deep inner peace
and a reconnection to the divine source. The wisdom of the Tao is
in a practical sense, a way to live life with the clarity of
knowing the universal truth. When you are living in the Tao, you
will see resistance and opposition fade away. Conflict and stress
will become distant memories. The issues of life become irrelevant
or will simply disappear once you start living your authentic self
with the Tao. The Tao shows how to transcend all those
insurmountable obstacles that the ego has created. There is another
level of existence that is the real, true, genuine substance of who
you are. This is the authentic self. The authentic self is the real
you that can be found at your absolute core. It is the part of you
not defined by your job, function, nationality, religion, race or
role in life. It is the composite of all your skills, talents and
wisdom. It is all of the things that are uniquely yours and need
expression, rather than what you believe you are supposed to be and
do. The choice we need to make is whether to trust in our own
nature, to be of a pure heart and mind or to live in a world where
we are trying to control everything. We have seen that going
against our nature provides no comfort or satisfaction for our
souls. For authentic satisfaction, for true peace, we must learn to
realize who we are and where we came from. The truth is all around
us. You can hear the voice of god in the laughter of children at
play and in the songs of the birds. You can see God in all his
glory throughout all of nature. It is all around us to see and
experience. Remember you are part of this universe and here to
experience it. Be your Authentic Self and be one with it all. To
live in the Tao and live your purpose is to live life to the
fullest.
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