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He always wondered what war would be like. "So This is War": a
collage of emotions and events featuring the triumphs, defeats,
hardships, humor, discomforts, and boredom of war as the author's
Cavalry Squadron journeys around Iraq in an attempt to fight an
invisible enemy, find a peace, and build a country. Combat has
eluded the author since his initial enlistment in the Army during
the Cold War in 1985. After leaving the service and living a cushy
life as a finance executive in Arizona, Captain Olson returned to
active duty following the attack on America on 9/11 and soon found
himself fighting in Iraq with the legendary 3rd Armored Cavalry
Regiment. Follow the adventures and thoughts of this Intelligence
Officer as he endures a year of the triumphs, defeats, hardships,
humor, discomforts, and boredom of war while his Cavalry Squadron
moves through Kuwait to the Triangle of Death south of Baghdad and
on to Northwest Iraq to tame the volatile city of Tal Afar and
secure the vast and porous Syrian border from invading Jihadists.
As Captain Olson soon learns, his visions of a glamorous,
dangerous, and exhilarating war are quickly crushed as the officers
and soldiers in the unit do their best to find and fight an
invisible enemy, rebuild a once-great Iraqi Army, and attempt to
gain the trust and cooperation of the Shia, Sunni, and Kurdish
populace who are largely against the U.S. occupation. He always
wondered what war would be like. So This is War.
Are we made entirely of matter, like sticks and stones? Or do we
have a soul—a nonphysical entity—where our mental lives take
place? The authors Eric T. Olson and Aaron Segal begin this
accessible and wide-ranging debate by looking at the
often-overlooked question of whether we appear in ordinary
experience to be material things. Olson then argues that the
dependence of our mental lives on the condition of our brains—the
fact that general anesthesia causes complete unconsciousness, for
instance—is best explained by saying that our mental lives are
physical activities in our brains rather than nonphysical
activities in the soul. Segal objects that this view is
incompatible with two obvious and important facts about ourselves:
that there is only one of you rather than trillions of almost
identical beings now thinking your thoughts, and that we exist and
remain conscious for more than an instant. These facts, he claims,
are presupposed in our practical and moral judgments—but they
require us to be immaterial things. Olson is forced to concede that
there is no easy and uncontroversial answer to these objections but
doubts whether taking us to be immaterial would be any help. The
debate takes in large philosophical questions extending well beyond
dualism and materialism. The book features clear statements of each
argument, responses to counter-arguments, in-text definitions, a
glossary of key terms, and section summaries. Scholars and students
alike will find it easy to follow the debate and learn the key
concepts from metaphysics, philosophy of mind, and other areas
necessary to understand each position. Key Features Is the only
introductory book devoted to the debate between substance dualism
and materialism Discusses both traditional and novel arguments for
each position Debates important but infrequently discussed
questions, including: do we appear, in ordinary experience, to be
material? should materialism be the default view? is there a good
probabilistic argument for materialism? Written in a lively and
accessible style Uses only a limited number of technical terms and
defines all of them in the glossary
Are we made entirely of matter, like sticks and stones? Or do we
have a soul—a nonphysical entity—where our mental lives take
place? The authors Eric T. Olson and Aaron Segal begin this
accessible and wide-ranging debate by looking at the
often-overlooked question of whether we appear in ordinary
experience to be material things. Olson then argues that the
dependence of our mental lives on the condition of our brains—the
fact that general anesthesia causes complete unconsciousness, for
instance—is best explained by saying that our mental lives are
physical activities in our brains rather than nonphysical
activities in the soul. Segal objects that this view is
incompatible with two obvious and important facts about ourselves:
that there is only one of you rather than trillions of almost
identical beings now thinking your thoughts, and that we exist and
remain conscious for more than an instant. These facts, he claims,
are presupposed in our practical and moral judgments—but they
require us to be immaterial things. Olson is forced to concede that
there is no easy and uncontroversial answer to these objections but
doubts whether taking us to be immaterial would be any help. The
debate takes in large philosophical questions extending well beyond
dualism and materialism. The book features clear statements of each
argument, responses to counter-arguments, in-text definitions, a
glossary of key terms, and section summaries. Scholars and students
alike will find it easy to follow the debate and learn the key
concepts from metaphysics, philosophy of mind, and other areas
necessary to understand each position. Key Features Is the only
introductory book devoted to the debate between substance dualism
and materialism Discusses both traditional and novel arguments for
each position Debates important but infrequently discussed
questions, including: do we appear, in ordinary experience, to be
material? should materialism be the default view? is there a good
probabilistic argument for materialism? Written in a lively and
accessible style Uses only a limited number of technical terms and
defines all of them in the glossary
The book of Numbers is the story of the people of Israel in the
wilderness as they departed from slavery in Egypt to the freedom of
the promised land of Canaan. It contains a variety of materials
relating to this transition from the old generation of Israel to
the new, including stories and laws, census lists, instructions for
worship, reports of military battles, and accounts of legal
disputes. Numbers chronicles a community faced with many competing
interests, groups, and issues, endeavoring to define itself and its
mission in the world. Dennis Olson offers readers a comprehensive
interpretation of this often overlooked book. He provides a
thoroughly contemporary reading of Numbers that enlightens the
modern church as it navigates the contemporary wilderness of
pluralism, competing voices, and shifting foundations in the
journey toward the twenty-first century.
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Heaven and Philosophy (Hardcover)
Simon Cushing; Contributions by Michael Bauwens, Helen L. Daly, Cruz Davis, Jean-Baptiste Guillon, …
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R2,705
Discovery Miles 27 050
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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This volume is a collection of essays analyzing different issues
concerning the nature, possibility, and desirability of heaven as
understood by the Abrahamic faiths of Judaism, Christianity. and
Islam. Topics include whether or not it is possible that a mortal
could, upon bodily death, become an inhabitant of heaven without
loss of identity, where exactly heaven might be located, whether or
not everyone should be saved, or if there might be alternative
destinations (including some less fiery versions of Hell). Chapter
authors include believers and skeptics, well-known philosophers,
and new voices. While some chapters are more challenging than
others, all are written in a style that should be accessible to any
interested reader.
A playbook on product-led strategy for software product teams
There's a common strategy used by the fastest growing and most
successful businesses of our time. These companies are building
their entire customer experience around their digital products,
delivering software that is simple, intuitive and delightful, and
that anticipates and exceeds the evolving needs of users.
Product-led organizations make their products the vehicle for
acquiring and retaining customers, driving growth, and influencing
organizational priorities. They represent the future of business in
a digital-first world. This book is meant to help you transform
your company into a product-led organization, helping to drive
growth for your business and advance your own career. It provides:
A holistic view of the quantitative and qualitative insights teams
need to make better decisions and shape better product experiences.
A guide to setting goals for product success and measuring progress
toward meeting them. A playbook for incorporating sales and
marketing activities, service and support, as well as onboarding
and education into the product Strategies for soliciting,
organizing and prioritizing feedback from customers and other
stakeholders; and how to use those inputs to create an effective
product roadmap The Product-Led Organization: Drive Growth By
Putting Product at the Center of Your Customer Experience was
written by the co-founder and CEO of Pendo--a SaaS company and
innovator in building software for digital product teams. The book
reflects the author's passion and dedication for sharing what it
takes to build great products.
"Using Communication Theory was a rarity in bridging the gap
between ideas and practice. It was itself a model of good
communication and in its second, revised edition, it is still a
most reliable and accessible guide to the lessons that
communication theory and research offer to practitioners,
especially in planning for change." - Denis McQuail, Professor
Emeritus, University of Amsterdam "Using Communication Theory has
become a classic in the education of communication. It is the
comprehensive and self-evident source for theories and models,
forming the base for the study of professions requiring
communication planning." - Larsake Larsson, OErebro University What
does theory have to do with the practice of communication?
Communication planning is used daily by thousands of people: public
relations practitioners, technical writers, information
campaigners, advertising professionals, organization consultants,
educators, health communicators and more. Without a solid
understanding of communication theory, practitioners have
difficulty getting their messages heard. The second edition of this
best-selling textbook has been updated with the student firmly in
mind. With new learning features that directly engage with the
practical side of theory, students will: Practice what they learn
with activities and exercises. Apply their own experiences to
theory through prompts to reflection. Consolidate their learning
with highlighted definitions and lists of key terms. Take it
further with boxed excerpts from classic texts. Showing how
theories relate directly to the planning and experience of
effective communication, Using Communication Theory - 2nd Edition
provides indispensable insights into the practical nature of
communication theory. In today's landscape of communication
overload, this book remains an essential, authoritative guide for
both students and practitioners.
From the time of Locke, discussions of personal identity have often
ignored the question of our basic metaphysical nature: whether we
human people are biological organisms, spatial or temporal parts of
organisms, bundles of perceptions, or what have you. The result of
this neglect has been centuries of wild proposals and clashing
intuitions.
What Are We? is the first general study of this important
question. It beings by explaining what the question means and how
it differs from others, such as questions of personal identity and
the mind-body problem. It then examines in some depth the main
possible accounts of our metaphysical nature, detailing both their
theoretical virtues and the often grave difficulties they
face.
The book does not endorse any particular account of what we are,
but argues that the matter turns on more general issues in the
ontology of material things. If composition is universal--if any
material things whatever make up something bigger--then we are
temporal parts of organisms. If things never compose anything
bigger, so that there are only mereological simples, then we too
are simples--perhaps the immaterial substances of Descartes--or
else we do not exist at all (a view Olson takes very seriously).
The intermediate view that some things compose bigger things and
others do not leads almost inevitably to the conclusion that we are
organisms. So we can discover what we are by working out when
composition occurs.
Groundbreaking research based on a national database of over
200,000 churches shows that the overall United States population is
growing faster than the church. The director of the American Church
Research Project, Dave Olson, has worked to analyze church
attendance, showing that it is virtually unchanged from fifteen
years ago while our population has grown by fifty-two million
people. What does this mean for you, your church, and the future of
Christianity in North America? The American Church in Crisis offers
unprecedented access to data that helps you understand the state of
the church today. "We live in a world that is post-Christian,
postmodern, and multiethnic, whether we realize it or not," says
the author. This book not only gives a realistic picture that
confirms hunches and explodes myths, but it provides insight into
how the church must change to reach a new and changed world with
the hope of the gospel. Readers will find a richly textured mosaic
with optimistic and challenging stories. Charts, diagrams, and
worksheets provide church leaders and motivated church members with
a stimulating read that will provoke much discussion. Questions for
discussion accompany the chapters.
Volume XI of the High Speed Aerodynamics and Jet Propulsion series.
Edited by W.R. Hawthorne and W.T. Olson. This is a comprehensive
presentation of basic problems involved in the design of aircraft
gas turbines, including sections covering requirements and
processes, experimental techniques, fuel injection, flame
stabilization, mixing processes, fuels, combustion chamber
development, materials for gas turbine applications, turbine blade
vibration, and performance. Originally published in 1960. 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.
Volume XI of the High Speed Aerodynamics and Jet Propulsion series.
Edited by W.R. Hawthorne and W.T. Olson. This is a comprehensive
presentation of basic problems involved in the design of aircraft
gas turbines, including sections covering requirements and
processes, experimental techniques, fuel injection, flame
stabilization, mixing processes, fuels, combustion chamber
development, materials for gas turbine applications, turbine blade
vibration, and performance. Originally published in 1960. 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.
Dean Tolson was one of the top prep basketball players in the state
of Missouri his junior and senior years at Central High School in
Kansas City. So, when the colleges came running, he accepted a full
ride to the University of Arkansas. Despite being unable to read or
write, he went on to be one of the most prolific players to grace
the Razorbacks' campus. In 1974, Tolson was the first basketball
player to be drafted by both the NBA and the ABA, having been
selected by the Seattle Supersonics and the New York Nets,
respectively, ultimately playing for the legendary Bill Russell in
Seattle. Following his basketball career, Tolson made the
courageous decision to re-enroll at the University of Arkansas, and
repeated all four years, this time legitimately. At the age of
fifty-two, he returned to the university for three more years,
earning a master's degree and graduated magna cum laude. Tolson's
gripping story from his childhood in an orphanage to his academic
achievements is not only an indictment of a system that would just
"pass you along" from grade to grade as a hot basketball prospect
without any educational accountability, but also an inspiring story
of overcoming great odds to find success.
A growing sense of unease is beginning to affect more and more
Americans. Making sense of the world is becoming increasingly
difficult. Long held assumptions about the economy, our political
leadership, our culture, America's place in the world, and the
future in general are being challenged as never before. There is a
growing feeling that what looms just over the horizon is bad...very
bad. The Omega Confluence uses the lens of faith to reveal the
reasons for the uneasiness. By examining the historical trends that
explain how and why the American condition has undergone such a
radical deformation, the destiny of mankind is laid out with
stunning clarity. Relying on the inerrant accuracy of Biblical
prophecy, the Omega Confluence provides a roadmap of the future
demonstrating unequivocally that we are the generation of humanity
that will witness some of the most spectacular miracles in history,
including the Rapture. These miracles foreshadow a dark future for
those left behind. In the horrors to unfold, more than one half of
the world's population - including two thirds of the Jews - will
perish in the grotesque brutality of unrestrained evil, nuclear
wars, demonic genocide, famines, pestilences, and diseases that
will scour the earth from a maelstrom centered on Jerusalem. The
Omega Confluence is a clarion call to prepare for what lies ahead.
In clear, unambiguous terms it explains why such eclectic matters
as flying saucers and space aliens, China's policy on population
control, research into sexuality by Alfred Kinsey, Darwinian
evolution and America's inevitable decline and fall are
inextricably bound in God's elegant plan for mankind. More
importantly, the Omega Confluence explains what we need to do to
avoid the horrors yet to come.
Suspicion has not been studied in great depth; however, a
conceptual understanding of suspicion is no less important than
many of the other highly studied constructs related to healthy
working relationships. Information technology (IT) is one area
where suspicion study is lacking, and this research effort was a
study into the specific domain of IT suspicion. An extensive study
of the suspicion literature and the suspicion nomological net as
well as informal surveys of the general populous and subject matter
experts were used to create an IT suspicion conceptual definition
and measure. In order to test IT suspicion's relationships with
other more established constructs a survey was created. The final
pilot study consisted of two measures from suspicions nomological
net, locus of control and disposition to trust, a trait IT
suspicion measure, a manipulation exercise on a laptop computer
intended to induce suspicion, and finally a state suspicion
measure. Analysis indicated IT suspicion is a multi-dimensional
construct, with independent state and trait properties. It also has
separate dimensions within the state and trait components.
Comparisons between the components of the IT suspicion construct
and related measures indicated a negative correlation between state
suspicion and locus of control.
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Like Living Stones (Paperback)
Ray S Anderson; Introduction by Arnold T. Olson
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R504
R424
Discovery Miles 4 240
Save R80 (16%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
He always wondered what war would be like. "So This is War" a
collage of emotions and events featuring the triumphs, defeats,
hardships, humor, discomforts, and boredom of war as the author's
Cavalry Squadron journeys around Iraq in an attempt to fight an
invisible enemy, find a peace, and build a country. Combat has
eluded the author since his initial enlistment in the Army during
the Cold War in 1985. After leaving the service and living a cushy
life as a finance executive in Arizona, Captain Olson returned to
active duty following the attack on America on 9/11 and soon found
himself fighting in Iraq with the legendary 3rd Armored Cavalry
Regiment. Follow the adventures and thoughts of this Intelligence
Officer as he endures a year of the triumphs, defeats, hardships,
humor, discomforts, and boredom of war while his Cavalry Squadron
moves through Kuwait to the Triangle of Death south of Baghdad and
on to Northwest Iraq to tame the volatile city of Tal Afar and
secure the vast and porous Syrian border from invading Jihadists.
As Captain Olson soon learns, his visions of a glamorous,
dangerous, and exhilarating war are quickly crushed as the officers
and soldiers in the unit do their best to find and fight an
invisible enemy, rebuild a once-great Iraqi Army, and attempt to
gain the trust and cooperation of the Shia, Sunni, and Kurdish
populace who are largely against the U.S. occupation. He always
wondered what war would be like. So This is War.
"Using Communication Theory was a rarity in bridging the gap
between ideas and practice. It was itself a model of good
communication and in its second, revised edition, it is still a
most reliable and accessible guide to the lessons that
communication theory and research offer to practitioners,
especially in planning for change." - Denis McQuail, Professor
Emeritus, University of Amsterdam "Using Communication Theory has
become a classic in the education of communication. It is the
comprehensive and self-evident source for theories and models,
forming the base for the study of professions requiring
communication planning." - Larsake Larsson, OErebro University What
does theory have to do with the practice of communication?
Communication planning is used daily by thousands of people: public
relations practitioners, technical writers, information
campaigners, advertising professionals, organization consultants,
educators, health communicators and more. Without a solid
understanding of communication theory, practitioners have
difficulty getting their messages heard. The second edition of this
best-selling textbook has been updated with the student firmly in
mind. With new learning features that directly engage with the
practical side of theory, students will: Practice what they learn
with activities and exercises. Apply their own experiences to
theory through prompts to reflection. Consolidate their learning
with highlighted definitions and lists of key terms. Take it
further with boxed excerpts from classic texts. Showing how
theories relate directly to the planning and experience of
effective communication, Using Communication Theory - 2nd Edition
provides indispensable insights into the practical nature of
communication theory. In today's landscape of communication
overload, this book remains an essential, authoritative guide for
both students and practitioners.
Numbers chronicles a community faced with many competing interests,
groups, and issues, endeavoring to define itself and its mission in
the world. Dennis Olsen offers readers a comprehensive
interpretation of this often overlooked book. He provides a
thoroughly contemporary reading of Numbers that enlightens the
modern church as it navigates the contemporary wilderness of
pluralism, competing voices, and and shifting foundations.
|
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