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Ayn Rand wrote and lectured on economic concepts and topics. This
volume addresses the economic and business aspects of her writings.
The authors of this anthology are from a variety of fields and all
of them are enthusiastic supporters of her ideas.
Douglas B. Rasmussen and Douglas J. Den Uyl's recent book Norms of
Liberty: A Perfectionist Basis for Non-Perfectionist Politics (Penn
State University Press, 2005) is being received in philosophy and
political theory as an important and original defense of
liberalism. The book offers a neo-Aristotelian ethic of human
flourishing as a basis for a liberal conception of human rights.
One of the authors' central contentions is that a key problem for
any (liberal) political philosophy is how to establish a
political/legal order which in principle does not require that any
one person or group's well-being be given structured preference
over that of any other. This companion volume, an interpretive and
critical reader, features essays from both philosophers and
political scientists, as well as an omnibus reply by Rasmussen and
Den Uyl. Norms of Liberty makes challenging arguments about key
issues, which makes a multi-disciplinary reader a valuable asset
for both students and scholars. Reading Rasmussen and Den Uyl is
designed both to explicate the book's arguments and to explore
possible objections.
Heartache is par for the course. Fifteen years after her troubled
daughter Julie ran away from home, Beth Sawyer stumbles across a
newspaper photograph of an up-and-coming teen golfer, who not only
shares her last name, but also looks just like her daughter. Sky
Sawyer couldn't possibly be her granddaughter—or could she? With
her sort-of-functional life sinking into a full on mulligan—and
let's not get started on her soon-to-be-married ex-husband—Beth
meets Barry, a fellow golfer who she accidentally hits with her
golf ball and who might just be Mr. Right. When Sky Sawyer joins
her high school golf team, she hopes that the mother she thought
dead may still be alive and seek her out at the championship
tournament. But when she discovers that the man who raised her is
not her father and a woman claiming to be her long-lost grandmother
appears, her world falls apart. With Beth and Sky fighting to gain
what they both had lost, can they finally get a second chance at a
happily ever after?
Ayn Rand wrote and lectured on economic concepts and topics. This
volume addresses the economic and business aspects of her writings.
The authors of this anthology are from a variety of fields and all
of them are enthusiastic supporters of her ideas.
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The Guardian (Paperback)
Julie Leuzinger; William Kline
bundle available
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R341
Discovery Miles 3 410
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This novel, winner of the North Carolina Juvenile Literature Award,
tells the story of twelve-year-old Eleanor Hill, who longs for
adventures outside Atlantic Grove, her isolated North Carolina
fishing village. She knows that women in other places must do more
than hang laundry, tend gardens, and fry fish for dinner. In
Atlantic Grove, most girls see nothing more in their futures than
marriage to a fisherman and the meager existence that goes with it.
Eleanor longs to experience the fast-changing world beyond Atlantic
Grove -- she'd like to drive an automobile, see a picture show, and
most of all, attend high school. At last she has her chance.
Without her papa's permission, Eleanor leaves home to live with her
aunt and uncle in nearby New Bern. As she discovers the
satisfactions of higher education, Eleanor also attracts the
attentions of a handsome Italian immigrant boy and a prominent
doctor's son. While spending her teenage years in New Bern, Eleanor
begins to realize how valuable love and family are in her struggle
for self-reliance. Set against the exhilarating backdrop of 1910's
America, this engaging novel vividly portrays one girl's search for
identity and independence.
TWELVE-YEAR-OLD GRACIE IS always flying under the radar of her
overworked parents and outspoken siblings. But when she buys an old
journal at a yard sale, Gracie is stunned to realize that
everything she writes in the journal comes true--though sometimes
in unexpected ways.
At first Gracie uses the journal selfishly, controlling her
mother's BlackBerry and eliminating the dress code at school. But
then she starts to think about bigger issues: what about world
hunger? Global warming? World peace Unfortunately, before she can
make headway on any of those issues, the journal falls into the
wrong hands--and soon Gracie and her best friend/crush Dylan are
rushing around town trying to undo the damage! This fun, warm,
emotionally honest novel is both a fantastic adventure and a
testament to the power of writing to change the world.
"From the Hardcover edition."
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