|
Showing 1 - 25 of
31 matches in All Departments
The "Nations" are the "seventy nations": a metaphor which, in the
Talmudic idiom, designates the whole of humanity surrounding
Israel. In this major collection of essays, Levinas considers
Judaism's uncertain relationship to European culture since the
Enlightenment, problems of distance and integration. It also
includes essays on Franz Rosenzweig and Moses Mendelssohn, and a
discussion of central importance to Jewish philosophy in the
context of general philosophy. This work brings to the fore the
vital encounter between philosophy and Judaism, a hallmark of
Levinas's thought.
Designed to supplement existing organic textbooks, Hybrid
Retrosynthesis presents a relatively simple approach to solving
synthesis problems, using a small library of basic reactions along
with the computer searching capabilities of Reaxys and SciFinder.
This clear, concise guide reviews the essential skills needed for
organic synthesis and retrosynthesis, expanding reader knowledge of
the foundational principles of these techniques, whilst supporting
their use via practical methodologies. Perfect for both graduate
and post-graduate students, Hybrid Retrosynthesis provides new
applied skills and tools to help during their organic synthesis
courses and future careers, whilst simultaneously acting as useful
resource for those setting tutorial and group problems, and as a
helpful go-to guide for organic chemists involved in either
industry or academia.
To the horrors of war and genocide in the twentieth century
there were witnesses, among them Hermann Cohen, Emmanuel Levinas,
Ernst Bloch, Leo Strauss, Franz Rosenzweig, Gershom Scholem, Walter
Benjamin, Martin Buber, and Hans Jonas. All defined themselves as
Jews and philosophers. Their intellectual concerns and worldviews
often in conflict, they nevertheless engaged in fruitful
conversation: through the dialogue between Zionist activism and
heterodox forms of Marxism, in the rediscovery of hidden traditions
of Jewish history, at the intersection of ethics and metaphysics.
They shared a common hope for a better, messianic future and a deep
interest in and reliance on the cultural sources of the Jewish
tradition.
In this magisterial work, Pierre Bouretz explores the thought of
these great Jewish philosophers, taking a long view of the tenuous
survival of German-Jewish metaphysical, religious, and social
thought during the crises and catastrophes of the twentieth
century. With deep passion and sound scholarship, Bouretz
demonstrates the universal significance of this struggle in
understanding the present human condition. The substantial and
established influence of the book's subjects only serves to confirm
this theory.
Profoundly learned and amply documented, "Witnesses for the
Future" explains how these important philosophers came to
understand the promise of a Messiah. Its significant bearing on a
number of fields--including religious studies, literary criticism,
philosophy of history, political theory, and Jewish
studies--encourages scholars to rethink and reassess the
intellectual developments of the past 100 years.
"There is a continuing demand for up to date organic &
bio-organic chemistry undergraduate textbooks. This well planned
text builds upon a successful existing work and adds content
relevant to biomolecules and biological activity". -Professor
Philip Page, Emeritus Professor, School of Chemistry University of
East Anglia, UK "Introduces the key concepts of organic chemistry
in a succinct and clear way". -Andre Cobb, KCL, UK Reactions in
biochemistry can be explained by an understanding of fundamental
organic chemistry principles and reactions. This paradigm is
extended to biochemical principles and to myriad biomolecules.
Biochemistry: An Organic Chemistry Approach provides a framework
for understanding various topics of biochemistry, including the
chemical behavior of biomolecules, enzyme activity, and more. It
goes beyond mere memorization. Using several techniques to develop
a relational understanding, including homework, this text helps
students fully grasp and better correlate the essential organic
chemistry concepts with those concepts at the root of biochemistry.
The goal is to better understand the fundamental principles of
biochemistry. Features: Presents a review chapter of fundamental
organic chemistry principles and reactions. Presents and explains
the fundamental principles of biochemistry using principles and
common reactions of organic chemistry. Discusses enzymes, proteins,
fatty acids, lipids, vitamins, hormones, nucleic acids and other
biomolecules by comparing and contrasting them with the organic
chemistry reactions that constitute the foundation of these classes
of biomolecules. Discusses the organic synthesis and reactions of
amino acids, carbohydrates, nucleic acids and other biomolecules.
"There is a continuing demand for up to date organic &
bio-organic chemistry undergraduate textbooks. This well planned
text builds upon a successful existing work and adds content
relevant to biomolecules and biological activity". -Professor
Philip Page, Emeritus Professor, School of Chemistry University of
East Anglia, UK "Introduces the key concepts of organic chemistry
in a succinct and clear way". -Andre Cobb, KCL, UK Reactions in
biochemistry can be explained by an understanding of fundamental
organic chemistry principles and reactions. This paradigm is
extended to biochemical principles and to myriad biomolecules.
Biochemistry: An Organic Chemistry Approach provides a framework
for understanding various topics of biochemistry, including the
chemical behavior of biomolecules, enzyme activity, and more. It
goes beyond mere memorization. Using several techniques to develop
a relational understanding, including homework, this text helps
students fully grasp and better correlate the essential organic
chemistry concepts with those concepts at the root of biochemistry.
The goal is to better understand the fundamental principles of
biochemistry. Features: Presents a review chapter of fundamental
organic chemistry principles and reactions. Presents and explains
the fundamental principles of biochemistry using principles and
common reactions of organic chemistry. Discusses enzymes, proteins,
fatty acids, lipids, vitamins, hormones, nucleic acids and other
biomolecules by comparing and contrasting them with the organic
chemistry reactions that constitute the foundation of these classes
of biomolecules. Discusses the organic synthesis and reactions of
amino acids, carbohydrates, nucleic acids and other biomolecules.
A Q&A Approach to Organic Chemistry is a book of leading
questions that begins with atomic orbitals and bonding. All
critical topics are covered, including bonding, nomenclature,
stereochemistry, conformations, acids and bases, oxidations,
reductions, substitution, elimination, acyl addition, acyl
substitution, enolate anion reactions, the Diels-Alder reaction and
sigmatropic rearrangements, aromatic chemistry, spectroscopy, amino
acids and proteins, and carbohydrates and nucleosides. All major
reactions are covered. Each chapter includes end-of-chapter
homework questions with the answer keys in an Appendix at the end
of the book. This book is envisioned to be a supplementary guide to
be used with virtually any available undergraduate organic
chemistry textbook. This book allows for a "self-guided" approach
that is useful as one studies for a coursework exam or as one
reviews organic chemistry for postgraduate exams. Key Features:
Allows a "self-guided tour" of organic chemistry Discusses all
important areas and fundamental reactions of organic chemistry
Classroom tested Useful as a study guide that will supplement most
organic chemistry textbooks Assists one in study for coursework
exams or allows one to review organic chemistry for postgraduate
exams Includes 21 chapters of leading questions that covers all
major topics and major reactions of organic chemistry
Based on the premise that many, if not most, reactions in organic
chemistry can be explained by variations of fundamental acid-base
concepts, Organic Chemistry: An Acid-Base Approach provides a
framework for understanding the subject that goes beyond mere
memorization. Using several techniques to develop a relational
understanding, it helps students fully grasp the essential concepts
at the root of organic chemistry. This new edition was rewritten
largely with the feedback of students in mind and is also based on
the author's classroom experiences using the previous editions.
Highlights of the Third Edition Include: Extensively revised
chapters that improve the presentation of material. Features the
contributions of more than 65 scientists, highlighting the
diversity in organic chemistry. Features the current work of over
30 organic chemists, highlighting the diversity in organic
chemistry. Many new reactions are featured that are important in
modern organic chemistry. Video lectures are provided in a .mov
format, accessible online as a 'built-in' ancillary for the book.
The homework is available online, gratis to all users. The third
edition of Organic Chemistry: An Acid-Base Approach constitutes a
significant improvement upon a unique introductory technique to
organic chemistry. The reactions and mechanisms it covers are the
most fundamental concepts in organic chemistry that are applied to
industry, biological chemistry, biochemistry, molecular biology,
and pharmacy. Using an illustrated conceptual approach rather than
presenting sets of principles and theories to memorize, it gives
students a more concrete understanding of the material.
|
Citizenship Across the Curriculum (Paperback)
Michael B. Smith, Rebecca S Nowacek, Jeffrey L Bernstein; Foreword by Pat Hutchings, Mary Taylor Huber; Contributions by …
|
R606
Discovery Miles 6 060
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
Citizenship Across the Curriculum advocates the teaching of
civic engagement at the college level, in a wide range of
disciplines and courses. Using "writing across the curriculum"
programs as a model, the contributors propose a similar approach to
civic education. In case studies drawn from political science and
history as well as mathematics, the natural sciences, rhetoric, and
communication studies, the contributors provide models for
incorporating civic learning and evaluating pedagogical
effectiveness. By encouraging faculty to gather evidence and
reflect on their teaching practice and their students learning,
this volume contributes to the growing field of the scholarship of
teaching and learning."
Covers the fundamentals of organic chemistry Includes a test
yourself section with answers and complete explanations at the end
of each chapter Provides bibliographies for further reading, as
well as numerous graphs, charts, and examples Discusses all
critical topics of organic chemistry including conformations, acids
and bases and more Presents renowned author's classroom experiences
<div>The culmination of de Certeau's lifelong engagement with
the human sciences, this volume is both an analysis of Christian
mysticism during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries and an
application of this influential scholar's transdisciplinary
historiography.</div>
More than two decades have passed since Chicago published the first
volume of this groundbreaking work in the Religion and
Postmodernism series. It quickly became influential across a wide
range of disciplines and helped to make the tools of
poststructuralist thought available to religious studies and
theology, especially in the areas of late medieval and early modern
mysticism. Though the second volume remained in fragments at the
time of his death, Michel de Certeau had the foresight to leave his
literary executor detailed instructions for its completion, which
formed the basis for the present work. Together, both volumes
solidify Certeau's place as a touchstone of twentieth-century
literature and philosophy, and continue his exploration of the
paradoxes of historiography; the construction of social reality
through practice, testimony, and belief; the theorization of speech
in angelology and glossolalia; and the interplay of prose and
poetry in discourses of the ineffable. This book will be of vital
interest to scholars in religious studies, theology, philosophy,
history, and literature.
This book is a profound and eagerly anticipated investigation into
what is left of a monotheistic religious spiritanotably, a
minimalist faith that is neither confessional nor credulous.
Articulating this faith as works and as an objectless hope, Nancy
deconstructs Christianity in search of the historical and
reflective conditions that provided its initial energy. Working
through Blanchot and Nietzsche, re-reading Heidegger and Derrida,
Nancy turns to the Epistle of Saint James rather than those of
Saint Paul, discerning in it the primitive essence of Christianity
as hope. The areligion that provided the exit from religion, a as
he terms Christianity, consists in the announcement of an end. It
is the announcement that counts, however, rather than any finality.
In this announcement there is a proximity to others and to what was
once called parousia. But parousia is no longer presence; it is no
longer the return of the Messiah. Rather, it is what is near us and
does not cease to open and to close, a presence deferred yet
imminent.In a demystified age where we are left with a vision of a
self-enclosed worldain which humans are no longer mortals facing an
immortal being, but entities whose lives are accompanied by the
time of their own declineaparousia stands as a question. Can we
venture the risk of a decentered perspective, such that the meaning
of the world can be found both inside and outside, within and
without our so-immanent world?The deconstruction of Christianity
that Nancy proposes is neither a game nor a strategy. It is an
invitation to imagine a strange faith that enacts the inadequation
of life to itself. Our lives overflow the self-contained boundaries
of their biological andsociological interpretations. Out of this
excess, wells up a fragile, overlooked meaning that is beyond both
confessionalism and humanism.
In At the Heart of Reason, Claude Romano boldly calls for a
reformulation of the phenomenological project. He contends that the
main concern of phenomenology, and its originality with respect to
other philosophical movements of the last century, such as logical
empiricism, the grammatical philosophy of Wittgenstein, and
varieties of neo-Kantianism, was to provide a ""new image of
Reason."" Against the common view, which restricts the range of
reason to logic and truth-theory alone, Romano advocates
"big-hearted rationality," including in it what is only ostensibly
its opposite, that is, sensibility, and locating in sensibility
itself the roots of the categorical forms of thought. Contrary to
what was claimed by the "linguistic turn," language is not a
self-enclosed domain; it cannot be conceived in its specificity
unless it is led back to its origin in the pre-predicative or
pre-linguistic structures of experience itself.
"A genuinely innovative contribution to philosophical accounts of
subjectivity and temporality. Romano develops what he calls an
'evential hermeneutics' that takes as its starting point the
life-changing events that upend our world. He studies the structure
of these events in terms of the genuine change and novelty that
they open up, distinguishing them from mere occurrences, which can
be explained as a subject realizing pre-existing possibilities.
Because such events introduce radically new possibilities by
transforming me and my world, Romano argues that they must be
understood as establishing a world rather than as happening in the
world."-Shane Mackinlay, Catholic Theological College, University
of Divinity, Melbourne
Invited to answer questions about his relationship to Judaism,
Jacques Derrida spoke through Franz Kafka: aAs for myself, I could
imagine another Abraham.aFrom the experience of a summons that
surprises us and prompts the query aWho, me?a Derrida explores the
movement between growing up Jewish, abecoming Jewish, a and aJewish
beinga or existence. His essay aThe Other Abrahama appears here in
English for the first time. We no longer confront aJudaisma but
ajudeity, a multiple Judaisms and Jewishnesses, manifold ways of
being and writing as a Jewain Derridaas case, as a French-speaking
Algerian deprived of, then restored to French nationality in the
1940s. What is it to be a Jew and a philosopher? How has the notion
of aJewish identitya been written into and across Jewish
literature, Jewish thought, and Jewish languages? Here
distinguished scholars address these questions, contrasting
Derridaas thought with philosophical predecessors such as
Rosenzweig, Levinas, Celan, and Scholem, and tracing confluences
between deconstruction and Kabbalah. Derridaas relationship to the
universalist aspirations in contemporary theology is also
discussed, and his late autobiographical writings are evaluated.
This multifaceted volume aims to open the question of Jewishness,
above all, to hold it open as a question, though not one of
practical or theoretical identity. As much a contestation of
identity as a profound reflection on what it means today to seek,
elude, and finally to wrestle with the significance of abeing-jew,
a Judeities invites us to revisit the human condition in the
twenty-first century.
Invited to answer questions about his relationship to Judaism,
Jacques Derrida spoke through Franz Kafka: aAs for myself, I could
imagine another Abraham.aFrom the experience of a summons that
surprises us and prompts the query aWho, me?a Derrida explores the
movement between growing up Jewish, abecoming Jewish, a and aJewish
beinga or existence. His essay aThe Other Abrahama appears here in
English for the first time. We no longer confront aJudaisma but
ajudeity, a multiple Judaisms and Jewishnesses, manifold ways of
being and writing as a Jewain Derridaas case, as a French-speaking
Algerian deprived of, then restored to French nationality in the
1940s. What is it to be a Jew and a philosopher? How has the notion
of aJewish identitya been written into and across Jewish
literature, Jewish thought, and Jewish languages? Here
distinguished scholars address these questions, contrasting
Derridaas thought with philosophical predecessors such as
Rosenzweig, Levinas, Celan, and Scholem, and tracing confluences
between deconstruction and Kabbalah. Derridaas relationship to the
universalist aspirations in contemporary theology is also
discussed, and his late autobiographical writings are evaluated.
This multifaceted volume aims to open the question of Jewishness,
above all, to hold it open as a question, though not one of
practical or theoretical identity. As much a contestation of
identity as a profound reflection on what it means today to seek,
elude, and finally to wrestle with the significance of abeing-jew,
a Judeities invites us to revisit the human condition in the
twenty-first century.
This practical coursebook introduces all the basics of semantics in
a simple, step-by-step fashion. Each unit includes short sections
of explanation with examples, followed by stimulating practice
exercises to complete in the book. Feedback and comment sections
follow each exercise to enable students to monitor their progress.
No previous background in semantics is assumed, as students begin
by discovering the value and fascination of the subject and then
move through all key topics in the field, including sense and
reference, simple logic, word meaning and interpersonal meaning.
New study guides and exercises have been added to the end of each
unit to help reinforce and test learning. A completely new unit on
non-literal language and metaphor, plus updates throughout the text
significantly expand the scope of the original edition to bring it
up-to-date with modern teaching of semantics for introductory
courses in linguistics as well as intermediate students.
“A genuinely innovative contribution to philosophical accounts of
subjectivity and temporality. Romano develops what he calls an
‘evential hermeneutics’ that takes as its starting point the
life-changing events that upend our world. He studies the structure
of these events in terms of the genuine change and novelty that
they open up, distinguishing them from mere occurrences, which can
be explained as a subject realizing pre-existing possibilities.
Because such events introduce radically new possibilities by
transforming me and my world, Romano argues that they must be
understood as establishing a world rather than as happening in the
world.”—Shane Mackinlay, Catholic Theological College,
University of Divinity, Melbourne
It is August 18, 1634. Father Urbain Grandier, convicted of sorcery
that led to the demonic possession of the Ursuline nuns of
provincial Loudun in France, confesses his sins on the porch of the
church of Saint-Pierre, then perishes in flames lit by his own
exorcists. A dramatic tale that has inspired many artistic
retellings, including a novel by Aldous Huxley and an incendiary
film by Ken Russell, the story of the possession at Loudun here
receives a compelling analysis from the renowned Jesuit historian
Michel de Certeau.
Interweaving substantial excerpts from primary historical documents
with fascinating commentary, de Certeau shows how the plague of
sorceries and possessions in France that climaxed in the events at
Loudun both revealed the deepest fears of a society in traumatic
flux and accelerated its transformation. In this tour de force of
psychological history, de Certeau brings to vivid life a people
torn between the decline of centralized religious authority and the
rise of science and reason, wracked by violent anxiety over what or
whom to believe.
At the time of his death in 1986, Michel de Certeau was a director
of studies at the ecole des hautes etudes en sciences sociales,
Paris. He was author of eighteen books in French, three of which
have appeared in English translation as "The Practice of Everyday
Life, " "The Writing of History, " and "The Mystic Fable, Volume 1,
" the last of which is published by The University of Chicago
Press.
"Brilliant and innovative. . . . "The Possession at Loudun" is de
Certeau's] most accessible book and one of his most
wonderful."--Stephen Greenblatt (from the Foreword)
|
You may like...
Donkerster
Annerle Barnard
Paperback
R240
R225
Discovery Miles 2 250
|