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This book is about science. Specifically building a science of
economics, grounded in understanding of what is beneath the surface
of economics using business activities and figures as a case.
Economics should be, as a science, concerned with formulating
theories of ideas and reality that produce descriptions of how to
understand phenomenon and create experiences, hypotheses generation
and data which need to be proven or dis-proven through testing and
further analyses.
The world is entering the Third Industrial Revolution, an era of
remarkable progress in science and technology that will require a
global shift away from reliance on fossil-fuel and carbon-based
energy. This book explains how America can lead the effort to
reverse global warming and become the world leader in global energy
innovation. America is trailing other parts of the developed world
in terms of its development of-and commitment to-renewable energy.
In Europe and Asia, sustainable communities, smart green grids, and
emerging environmentally sound technologies are becoming common.
The United States must move beyond the lethargy and defeatism of
the 9/11 era, rediscover its ability to lead in technological
inventiveness, and revitalize its economy via the creation of green
jobs and sustainable, carbon-neutral communities. Because the lives
of America's children and grandchildren are at stake, America must
act quickly. Global Energy Innovation: Why America Must Lead
explains why the emerging Third Industrial Revolution will become
the largest social and economic megatrend of the post-modern era.
With its comprehensive, up-to-date examination of renewable energy
systems and related green technologies, this book represents a
call-to-action that will benefit any reader, regardless of their
status as a lay person, scholar, or scientist. Describes numerous
examples of Europe and Asia's emerging activities in the Third
Industrial Revolution, as well as the EU and Asia's historical and
current activities in climate change mitigation, renewable energy
technologies, and economic models to promote the green revolution
Covers new technologies across the globe, ranging from single-hut
solar energy generation for African villages to industrial-scale
wind farms in Mongolia Includes materials from the United Nations
and information from scientific studies on climate change, global
population growth, and environmental degradation Offers directions
for the creation of successful public policies and sustainability
strategies on a community level, from colleges and universities to
towns and cities Details the benefits that the United States could
enjoy in this new era of energy innovation
An introduction to the medieval cathedral, those churches that are
regarded as the greatest achievements of medieval architecture.
Details their social history, who built them, how they were built,
and why. Forty photos and maps help to guide the reader through a
narrated tour of these awe-inspiring churches. When we think of
cathedrals, we usually envision the great Gothic Buildings of 12th-
and 13th-century Europe. But other than being a large church, a
cathedral is neither a specific building type nor specifically
medieval. What a makes a large church a cathedral is the presence
of a single item of furniture: the chair (in Latin: cathedra) or
throne that is the symbol of the ecclesiastical and spiritual
authority of a bishop. This book is an introduction to the medieval
cathedral, those churches that are usually regarded as among the
greatest achievements of medieval architecture. While cathedrals
were often the most prominent urban structure in many European
cities, their construction was never a civic responsibility, but
remained the responsibility of the clergy in charge of the day to
day activities and services. Beginning with an overview of the
social history of cathedrals, Clark examines such topics as
patrons, builders and artists, and planning and construction; and
provides an in-depth examination of the French Cathedral at
Reims—a seminal building with significant technological advances,
important sculptural programs, a surviving bishop's palace, and
other structures. The volume concludes with a series of
illustrations, a selection of original texts, and a selected
bibliography for further study. A full index is also provided.
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