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1. Stealing God's Thunder: Benjamin Franklin's Lightning Rod and the Invention of America by Philip Dray | |
Paperback: 304
Pages
(2005-12-27)
list price: US$14.95 -- used & new: US$7.70 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0812968107 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (10)
Ben
Patents and Franklin
Benjamin Franklin, the scientist
A Patent Lawyer Speaks
Ben Franklin's Favorite Invention, the Armonica. |
2. Methods of Advanced Calculus 1ST Edition by Philip Franklin | |
Hardcover:
Pages
(1944-01-01)
Asin: B000QA82EA Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
3. The White Night of St. Petersburg by Prince Michael of Greece, Franklin Philip | |
Hardcover: 320
Pages
(2004-08-31)
list price: US$24.00 -- used & new: US$4.94 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0871139227 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (3)
Great piece of history
Not what I expected
So-So writing /interesting book, though |
4. Benjamin Franklin (Real People) by Philip Abraham | |
Paperback: 24
Pages
(2002-03)
list price: US$4.95 -- used & new: US$2.06 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0516236016 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description |
5. The Exemplary Presidency: Franklin D. Roosevelt and the American Political Tradition by Philip Abbott | |
Paperback: 233
Pages
(1990-04)
list price: US$24.95 -- used & new: US$22.00 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0870237098 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description |
6. Napoleon and the Invasion of Britain by Alexandra Franklin, Mark Philip | |
Paperback: 132
Pages
(2005-03-15)
list price: US$30.00 -- used & new: US$22.69 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 1851240810 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description |
7. Differential Equations For Electrical Engineers by Philip Franklin | |
Hardcover:
Pages
(1947)
Asin: B0010VT5Q8 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
8. Functions of Complex Variables by Philip Franklin | |
Hardcover:
Pages
(1963)
Asin: B000LVLZN4 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
9. An introduction to Fourier methods and the Laplace transformation by Philip Franklin | |
Paperback: 289
Pages
(1958)
Asin: B0006AVLC0 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
10. The four color problem by Philip Franklin | |
Unknown Binding:
Pages
(1936)
Asin: B00086VTGK Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
11. Fourier methods by Philip Franklin | |
Unknown Binding: 289
Pages
(1949)
Asin: B0006AS7KO Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
12. A Treatise on Advanced Calculus by Philip Franklin | |
Paperback:
Pages
(1964)
Asin: B000L3XUS0 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
13. Political Philosophy (Three Volume Set) by Luc Ferry | |
Hardcover:
Pages
(1992)
Asin: B0042ZK94G Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description |
14. Differential and Integral Calculus by Philip Franklin | |
Paperback: 641
Pages
(1970-06)
Isbn: 0486625206 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
15. War Without End: The View From Abroad by Bruno Tertrais, Franklin Philip | |
Hardcover: 148
Pages
(2005-04-21)
list price: US$21.95 -- used & new: US$0.60 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 1565849639 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Is the war in Iraq the beginning of a war without end? As the country seeks to decipher the White House conversations that led to war, Bruno Tertrais, one of Europe's leading defense analysts and former RAND Corporation fellow, takes us on a deeper investigation of American global strategy and its long-term consequences. War Without End offers a comprehensive examination of the ideas and policies that may have led us into a century of combat. An international authority on nuclear nonproliferation, Bruno Tertrais is uniquely able to look at American political and military thinking since World War II and to trace the ideology that has created the present impasse, including the most thoroughgoing account available of the neoconservative players and ideas that guided the Bush administration into Iraq. Far from being a "war for oil," War Without End demonstrates that the Iraq invasion is part of a global strategy whose negative consequences are already apparent. Have we unleashed forces, here and abroad, that will trap future generations? These are the questions raised by this brilliant and disturbing book. Customer Reviews (6)
War Without End
Much appreciated by graduate US foreign policy class
A must read
A great book
"War Without End" |
16. The Science of Illusions by Jacques Ninio | |
Paperback: 344
Pages
(2001-04-19)
list price: US$27.95 -- used & new: US$13.89 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0801437709 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Customer Reviews (6)
nice job
The Illusion of Always Being Right Ninio's discussion is focused mostly on optical illusions, with brief excursions into the auditory and tactile realms and a brave if short chapter on stage magic in which he shares his experience of catching a magician on television by slowing down a videotape, and thus exposing the loading of a bird done by quickness.But the popular cliché that "the hand is quicker than the eye" is also (professional magicians know) a form of distraction on the plane of explanation: only a very small minority of tricks are accomplished by quickness, the vast majority being the result of the distraction which magicians call "misdirection."And there are other illusion-steeped topics Ninio doesn't discuss: linear time (which Einstein called a persistent illusion), evolutionary epistemology (e.g., might not the truth ultimately be inimical to survival?), death, consciousness, the metaphoricity of "literal" language (e.g., "concrete"), free will (is it real?), and so on.In Hindu mythology the world is a game, lila, veil, or maya, of phenomena. Ninio's narrowness allows him to go into detail about specific common misperceptions of geometrical figures, natural and urban landscapes and so on.But what might have happened if the narrator was not so trustworthy but unreliable, as in a novel, or if Ninio had attacked as illusions the egos of his readers with the same scientific thoroughness and creativity he musters in his analyses of optical illusions?I confess to being somewhat disappointed that multiple (and not always exquisitely translated) interpretations are given of minor (and sometimes, at least for me, not even visible) optical illusions when other possible illusions, grander and more foundational, such as those explored by neurology, were not even discussed. In an email from Ninio he blames this on trouble that occurred in transferring the artwork during translation. (Robert Frost defined poetry as that which gets lost in translation!) And yet this elucidates the nature of illusion itself.Perhaps we can get glimpses of the whole but the fact remains that each and all of us-even all of us together as a parallel processing technologically connected scientific society-is only a part of the system we observe.The well-known mysteries of quantum physics hingein part at least upon the necessity of reintroducing the observer who, for convenience's sake, had long before been removed (at least theoretically) from the system.Newer illusions, such as the mistaken apprehension of purpose, design, or life in thermodynamic systems, can also be understood as the result of the hidden operation of what has been observationally excluded.(So, too, the Monty Hall Paradox, if you know it, can be understood as an illusion of misplaced probabilities due to not accounting for information provided by the moderator assumed to be "outside" the frame of operation.) "The illusion of always having reason"-Ninio's opening fragment, interpreted literally if not figuratively, intimates our perfectly human inability to keep illusion caged to the stage of entertainment or science.If we do not have reason, we lose the very means to detect sensory illusions.The senses, if they do not always tell the truth, require thought-itself a kind of supersense-to make sense. For it is our reason, our ratiocination or rationality-neurologically identified with the more recently evolved prefrontal cortex-that is responsible for sorting out conflicting perceptual cues.There is one world but many perceptions of it, reflecting the manifold beings which inhabit it.And yet evolutionary expediency allows us, no forces us (unless we are mad or drugged) to conceive of this world as whole despite being formed from data fragments.For example, you only have eyes in front of our head yet your conception of the space around you is not marked by a huge gap corresponding to the back of your head.Incomplete beings, we are "Procrustean" in our perception: we cannot help but fill in the blanks.Such endemic Procrusteanism may be instinctive, as in much perception or, as with Ninio here, consciously scientific in its explication of how perception works.
Fascinating stuff about illusions of all kinds
You Can't Believe Your Eyes Ninio has indeed covered many sorts of illusions, including magic, but also such things we now take for granted as movies.It used to be that people shown a movie of a train coming at them would scurry out of its way, but we have seen enough movies by now to know that illusion for what it is.Ninio has concentrated on visual illusions because, of course, they can best be shown in a book.But also, as he points out, visual input is supreme, trusted more than other senses.People shown a film of someone saying "ga-ga" while the soundtrack says "ba-ba" will wind up hearing a hybrid "da-da" with their eyes open and "ba-ba" with their eyes closed.Everyone has had the experience of sitting in the old-style movie theater with one speaker behind the screen, and finding that the sound seemed to come from the location on the screen of whatever person or thing was shown making it.A ventriloquist, of course, easily makes visual cues of origin overcome auditory ones.The optical illusions here represent some of the old classics, as well as new ones, because new ones are being invented all the time.One of them was so strong that I believed there was a misprint when an explanation claimed that two parallelograms were the same size, so that I had to measure them, and even after that, I had to copy the page and cut the parallelograms out and compare them that way; they still do not look nearly equal.Other illusions here present obvious but invisible white shapes, or scintillating black spots that are not there, or even circuits that seem to have matter flowing around and around their printed images.This book is a wonderful funhouse.
Grids, afterimages, reference points and adaptation methods |
17. The Deaf Experience: Classics in Language and Education (Gallaudet Classics in Deaf Studies Series, Vol. 5) | |
Paperback: 232
Pages
(2006-01-15)
list price: US$29.95 -- used & new: US$27.42 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 1563682869 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (1)
This book could well be required reading for all teachers. |
18. Heidegger and Modernity by Luc Ferry, Alain Renaut | |
Hardcover: 136
Pages
(1991-04-01)
list price: US$22.50 -- used & new: US$140.64 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0226244628 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
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19. Political Philosophy 2: The System of Philosophies of History (Ferry, Luc//Political Philosophy) (Vol 2) by Luc Ferry | |
Hardcover: 200
Pages
(1992-04-15)
list price: US$42.00 -- used & new: US$33.27 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0226244725 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
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20. Political Philosophy 3: From the Rights of Man to the Republican Idea (Ferry, Luc//Political Philosophy) (v. 3) by Luc Ferry, Alain Renaut | |
Hardcover: 148
Pages
(1992-09-15)
list price: US$38.00 -- used & new: US$26.00 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0226244733 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
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