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Marian Hobson's work has made a seminal contribution to our
understanding of the European Enlightenment, and of Diderot and
Rousseau in particular. This book presents her most important
articles in a single volume, translated into English for the first
time. Hobson's distinctive approach is to take a given text or
problematique and position it within its intellectual, historical
and polemical context. From close analysis of the underlying
conceptual structures of literary texts, she offers a unique
insight into the vibrant networks of people and ideas at work
throughout Europe, and across disciplinary boundaries as diverse as
literature and mathematics, medicine and music. In their
translations of Hobson's essays, Kate Tunstall and Caroline Warman
present the primary sources in both the original eighteenth-century
French and modern English, making the detail of these debates
accessible to everyone, from the specialist to the student,
whatever their academic discipline or interest.
The keywords of the Enlightenment-freedom, tolerance, rights,
equality-are today heard everywhere, and they are used to endorse a
wide range of positions, some of which are in perfect
contradiction. While Orwell's 1984 claims that there is one phrase
in the English language that resists translation into Newspeak,
namely the opening lines of that key Enlightenment text, the
Declaration of Independence: 'We hold these truths to be
self-evident, that all men are created equal...', we also find the
Wall Street Journal saying of the Iraq War that the US was
'fighting for the very notion of the Enlightenment'. It seems we
are no longer sure whether these truths are self-evident nor quite
what they might mean today. Based on the critically acclaimed
Oxford Amnesty Lectures series, this book brings together a number
of major international figures to debate the history of freedom,
tolerance, equality, and to explore the complex legacy of the
Enlightenment for human rights. The lectures are published here
with responses from other leading figures in the field.
This book tells the fascinating story of the fulfillment of the
very first prophecy in the Bible.
I will put enmity between you and the woman, And between your
seed and her Seed;He shall bruise your head, And you shall bruise
His heel" (Genesis 3:15 NKJV).
Eve, the mother of the human family, had rebelled against God in
the Garden of Eden and brought sin into the world. This Messianic
prophecy promised that Eve's Seed would one day bring salvation to
the world. From that time forward, everything that happened in the
Bible pointed straight to the fulfillment of this prophecy. It's
the main story line of the Bible.
The Seed of the Woman, "the Story of an Ancient Prophecy
Fulfilled" is Jim Tunstall's winsome account of how that narrative
developed; ultimately resulting in the birth of Jesus Christ.
Mary's baby and Eve's Seed is now the Savior of the world.
"Outsourcing and Management "shows how the next generation of
executives will employ outsourcing, systematic thinking,
disciplined management, and effective use of technology to redefine
organizational structure and drive performance to new levels. Too
many executives still fail to grasp how the organizational whole
becomes greater than the sum of its individual parts. Layers of
bureaucracy, dysfunctional behavior, and simple inertia continue to
impose a drag on organizational performance at all levels.
"Outsourcing and Management "identifies and defines important new
economy organizational dysfunctions -- the Moving-Target Theory of
Management, Internal Monopoly, the Bozo-CEO, and the
Stream-of-Consciousness Manager -- all of which are destined for
the scrapheap.
When actors perform Shakespeare, what do they do with their bodies?
How do they display to the spectator what is hidden in the
imagination? This is a history of Shakespearean performance as seen
through the actor's body. Tunstall draws upon social, cognitive and
moral psychology to reveal how performers from Sarah Siddons to Ian
McKellen have used the language of gesture to reflect the minds of
their characters and shape the reactions of their audiences. This
book is rich in examples, including detailed analysis of recent
performances and interviews with key figures from the worlds of
both acting and gesture studies. Truly interdisciplinary, this
provocative and original contribution will appeal to anyone
interested in Shakespeare, theatre history, psychology or body
language.
The UK housing system has been described as being in 'crisis', but
suddenly in 2020 homes were on the COVID-19 frontline, used for
shielding, isolating and care. Most were used by more people, for
more hours, for more activities. Many households were cut off from
normal services and contacts, and many lost the means to pay for
their homes. Millions of infections occurred at home, and
inequalities in household type, housing space, cost and tenure
contributed to the unequal impact of the pandemic. This book brings
together a wealth of data, individual testimony and analysis, in
one convenient resource for students, scholars and practitioners.
Blindness and Enlightenment presents a reading and translation of
Diderots Letter on the Blind for Use by the Sighted (the first
translation into English since the eighteenth-century). Diderot was
the founder and editor of the Encyclopdie, a novelist, a
philosopher and an active proponent of democratic ideals. His
Letter on the Blind is essential reading for anyone interested in
Enlightenment philosophy or eighteenth-century literature. By
discussing the blind, Diderot undercuts a central assumption of the
Enlightenment, present in the very term itself in its reference to
light, namely that moral and philosophical insight was dependent on
seeing.
Since their introduction in 2017, transformers have quickly become
the dominant architecture for achieving state-of-the-art results on
a variety of natural language processing tasks. If you're a data
scientist or coder, this practical book -now revised in full color-
shows you how to train and scale these large models using Hugging
Face Transformers, a Python-based deep learning library.
Transformers have been used to write realistic news stories,
improve Google Search queries, and even create chatbots that tell
corny jokes. In this guide, authors Lewis Tunstall, Leandro von
Werra, and Thomas Wolf, among the creators of Hugging Face
Transformers, use a hands-on approach to teach you how transformers
work and how to integrate them in your applications. You'll quickly
learn a variety of tasks they can help you solve. Build, debug, and
optimize transformer models for core NLP tasks, such as text
classification, named entity recognition, and question answering
Learn how transformers can be used for cross-lingual transfer
learning Apply transformers in real-world scenarios where labeled
data is scarce Make transformer models efficient for deployment
using techniques such as distillation, pruning, and quantization
Train transformers from scratch and learn how to scale to multiple
GPUs and distributed environments
Managing the Building Design Process explains the designer's role
in the creation of new buildings from the development of the plan
through to completion. One key case study is used throughout the
book so that the reader can clearly follow the process leading to
the creation of a new building. This new edition expands on the
first edition including sections on CAD and sustainability;
incorporating updates to legislation and adding new illustrations
as well as discussion points and useful references at the end of
every chapter. Gavin Tunstall is an architect and a lecturer in the
School of Architecture, Design and the Built Environment at
Nottingham Trent University, UK.
The UK housing system has been described as being in 'crisis', but
suddenly in 2020 homes were on the COVID-19 frontline, used for
shielding, isolating and care. Most were used by more people, for
more hours, for more activities. Many households were cut off from
normal services and contacts, and many lost the means to pay for
their homes. Millions of infections occurred at home, and
inequalities in household type, housing space, cost and tenure
contributed to the unequal impact of the pandemic. This book brings
together a wealth of data, individual testimony and analysis, in
one convenient resource for students, scholars and practitioners.
It has become clear that the U.S. media are no longer increasingly
their grip throughout the globe: Asia and the Arab/Moslem world is
virtually saturated with their own national media output.
Tunstallproduces a well-written, provocative snapshot at global
media today. His point of view is relentlessly global: he considers
the role of the media in the collapse of the Soviet Union, the
ascendanceof the Brazillian and Mexican soap opera, the increasing
strength of "Bollywood" - the national cinema output of india- as
well as the relative decline in influence of US media .
Importantly, Tunstall focuses on both the nation state and the
geographical and cultural region as crucial levels in today's mass
media. Both the United States and the US mass media have now lost
their previous moral leadership. Lone American control of the world
news flow has ceased. today, rather than Global media, we see a
world media system comprised of inter-locking
national-regional-cultural systems. Tunstall's assessment is a
wake-up call for insular American media consumers.
Managing the Building Design Process explains the designer 's role
in the creation of new buildings from the development of the plan
through to completion. One key case study is used throughout the
book so that the reader can clearly follow the process leading to
the creation of a new building.This new edition expands on the
first edition including sections on CAD and sustainability;
incorporating updates to legislation and adding new illustrations
as well as discussion points and useful references at the end of
every chapter.Gavin Tunstall is an architect and a lecturer in the
School of Architecture, Design and the Built Environment at
Nottingham Trent University, UK.
Lyndon Johnson was often blamed for abandoning Kennedy's vision of
development and progress in Latin America in favor of his own
domestic concerns: anti-communism and economic stability. Johnson,
along with his fellow Texan and chief adviser on inter-American
affairs Thomas C. Mann, nonetheless offered a vision for American
engagement with the developing world even as congressional funding
and public enthusiasm for such programs waned and Johnson's
presidency collapsed under the weight of the Vietnam War. This book
explores Lyndon Johnson's Latin American policy, from his key
advisers to development programs and military interventions, to
establish a new perspective on the impact of a complex and
controversial president on a tumultuous period in the history of
the Western Hemisphere. Demonstrating that much of the negative
coverage of their efforts emerged from disgruntled Kennedy
loyalists, Tunstall Allcock argues that Johnson and Mann were both
New Dealers who possessed a keen desire to operate as good
neighbors and support Latin American development and regional
integration while dealing with domestic pressure from both right
and left. Based on extensive primary research in multiple archives,
this much-needed book provides a crucial exploration of how
inter-American relations transitioned from the enthusiasm and
excitement of the Kennedy years to the neglect and frustration of
the Nixon presidency.
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