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Everyone suffers and pays the price for abuse directly or
indirectly, but the degree to which we respond is largely
determined by our knowledge of the abuse-creating stimuli (real or
abstract) and how to break the circle.
Were you abused as a child? Are you being abused and you do not
know it? Are you perpetuating an abuse without knowing you are? Are
you being swept along with the pleasure-mad throng of an abusive
environmental influence and think it normal?
Are you bound in an abuse in your quest for freedom? Do you
consistently rationalize your error even when conscience tells you
that you are wrong? Do you appropriate abuse to inanimate objects
or other people without a reference to self?
Who pays the price for the abuse that occurred years back, and
why has the price for an abusive thought, a seemingly innocent act,
become so heavy a burden to bear? Are your actions, positive or
negative, creating definite objective stimuli those little feet
behind you are sure to follow? How do you deal with that thing that
takes over for you when you do not want to repeat this abuse?
The answer to these questions and many others are the
information contained in this material aimed at helping you
demystify abuse. It is my ultimate desire that this book ends all
your search and research for compulsive abuse and abusive
stimulants.
The authors attempt to construct a logical analysis of human actions by focusing on actions based on choice. By looking at the so-called "stit" sentence (i.e. so-and-so is "seeing to it that"), which they take as a fundamental idiom in the way we discuss action, they provide formal semantics for "stit" in terms of a time continuum whereby a given action is true if an agent had made a certain choice at an earlier point within the process.
In spite of a powerful tradition, more than two thousand years old,
that in a valid argument the premises must be relevant to the
conclusion, twentieth-century logicians neglected the concept of
relevance until the publication of Volume I of this monumental
work. Since that time relevance logic has achieved an important
place in the field of philosophy: Volume II of Entailment brings to
a conclusion a powerful and authoritative presentation of the
subject by most of the top people working in the area. Originally
the aim of Volume II was simply to cover certain topics not treated
in the first volume--quantification, for example--or to extend the
coverage of certain topics, such as semantics. However, because of
the technical progress that has occurred since the publication of
the first volume, Volume II now includes other material. The book
contains the work of Alasdair Urquhart, who has shown that the
principal sentential systems of relevance logic are undecidable,
and of Kit Fine, who has demonstrated that, although the
first-order systems are incomplete with respect to the conjectured
constant domain semantics, they are still complete with respect to
a semantics based on "arbitrary objects." Also presented is
important work by the other contributing authors, who are Daniel
Cohen, Steven Giambrone, Dorothy L. Grover, Anil Gupta, Glen
Helman, Errol P. Martin, Michael A. McRobbie, and Stuart Shapiro.
Robert G. Wolf's bibliography of 3000 items is a valuable addition
to the volume. Originally published in 1992. The Princeton Legacy
Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make
available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished
backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the
original texts of these important books while presenting them in
durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton
Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly
heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton
University Press since its founding in 1905.
This monograph presents the first detailed exposition of the formal
theory of Branching Space-Times. The theory presented here by Nuel
Belnap, Thomas Muller, and Tomasz Placek describes how real
possibilities can play out in our spatio-temporal world. In our
world, some things that are really possible in Cleveland are not
really possible in San Francisco; other things were really possible
in 1988 but are not really possible in 2021. The authors develop a
rigorous, relativity-friendly theory of indeterminism as a local
and modal concept, demonstrating that our world contains events
with alternative possible outcomes. The book is divided into two
parts. The first contains the exposition of the theory, including
detailed proofs. The second contains three applications of
Branching Space-Times in metaphysics and philosophy of science,
focusing on the use of Branching Space-Times to represent pertinent
forms of indeterminism in each area. Some specific applications
include a formal analysis of modal correlations and of causation
and a rigorous theory of objective single-case probabilities,
intended to represent degrees of possibility. The authors link
their theory to current physics, investigating how local and modal
indeterminism relates to issues in the foundations of physics,
particularly in quantum non-locality and spatio-temporal
relativity. They also relate the theory to philosophy of time,
showing how it may be used to explicate the dynamic concept of the
past, present, and future based on local indeterminism. The
Branching Space-Times theory has been in development over the past
25 years. This volume provides a much needed first systematic and
comprehensive book-length exposition of both the theory and its
applications. This is an open access title available under the
terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license. It is free to
read at Oxford Scholarship Online and offered as a free PDF
download from OUP and selected open access locations.
In spite of a powerful tradition, more than two thousand years old,
that in a valid argument the premises must be relevant to the
conclusion, twentieth-century logicians neglected the concept of
relevance until the publication of Volume I of this monumental
work. Since that time relevance logic has achieved an important
place in the field of philosophy: Volume II of Entailment brings to
a conclusion a powerful and authoritative presentation of the
subject by most of the top people working in the area. Originally
the aim of Volume II was simply to cover certain topics not treated
in the first volume--quantification, for example--or to extend the
coverage of certain topics, such as semantics. However, because of
the technical progress that has occurred since the publication of
the first volume, Volume II now includes other material. The book
contains the work of Alasdair Urquhart, who has shown that the
principal sentential systems of relevance logic are undecidable,
and of Kit Fine, who has demonstrated that, although the
first-order systems are incomplete with respect to the conjectured
constant domain semantics, they are still complete with respect to
a semantics based on "arbitrary objects." Also presented is
important work by the other contributing authors, who are Daniel
Cohen, Steven Giambrone, Dorothy L. Grover, Anil Gupta, Glen
Helman, Errol P. Martin, Michael A. McRobbie, and Stuart Shapiro.
Robert G. Wolf's bibliography of 3000 items is a valuable addition
to the volume. Originally published in 1992. The Princeton Legacy
Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make
available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished
backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the
original texts of these important books while presenting them in
durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton
Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly
heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton
University Press since its founding in 1905.
"The myth of Charles Manson is not likely to survive the impact of
his own words," Nuel Emmons writes in the introduction to Manson In
His Own Words, the shocking true confessions that lay bare the life
and mind of the cult leader and notorious criminal. His story
provides an enormous amount of new information about his life and
how it led to the Tate-LaBianca murders, and reminds us of the
complexity of the human condition. Born in the middle of the Great
Depression to an unmarried fifteen-year-old, Manson lived through a
succession of changing homes and substitute parents, until his
mother finally asked the state authorities to assume his care when
he was twelve. Regimented and often brutalized in juvenile homes,
Manson became immersed in a life of petty theft, pimping, jail
terms, and court appearances that culminated in seven years of
prison. Released in 1967, he suddenly found himself in the world of
hippies and flower children, a world that not only accepted him,
but even glorified his anti-establishment values. It was a
combination that led, for reasons only Charles Manson can fully
explain, to tragedy. Manson's story, distilled from seven years of
interviews and examinations of his correspondence, provides
sobering insight into the making of a criminal mind, and a
fascinating picture of the last years of the sixties. No one who
wants to understand that time, and the man who helped to bring it
to a horrifying conclusion, can miss reading this book.
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