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book and displayed
Reproduced from the book of Jean Baptiste Perrin, Les Atomes, three tracings of the motion of colloidal particles of radius 0. 53 µm, as seen under the microscope, are displayed.
Academic Alice Echols, in her 1989 book Daring To Be Bad: Radical Feminism in America, 1967 – 1975, argued that radical feminist Valerie Solanas, best known for her attempted murder of Andy Warhol in 1968, displayed an extreme level of misandry compared to other radical feminists of the time in her tract, The SCUM Manifesto.
In the book, he presents an analogy about how the individual neurons of the brain coordinate to create a unified sense of a coherent mind by comparing it to the social organization displayed in a colony of ants.
In 2006 the book was displayed in “ Joan Miró, Illustrated Books ” at the Vero Beach Museum of Art.
The first book of much consequence which he published was Die Einheit des Staats und der Kirche mit Rücksicht auf die Deutsche Reichsverfassung ( 1797 ), a work on the relations of church and state, with special reference to the constitution of the empire, which displayed the writer's power of analysis and his skill in making a complicated set of facts appear to be deductions from a few principles.
* Stamp album, a book in which a collection of postage stamps may be stored and displayed
* Sticker album, a book in which a collection of stickers may be stored and displayed
The book is a gold mine of mid – twentieth century Wilmette history, including a reference to a Woolworth ’ s store once located in the Eden ’ s Plaza shopping center — as well as a prominent Encyclopædia Britannica sign once displayed on Wilmette Avenue.
The New York Times noted that in the book Hawke displayed " a novelist's innate gifts ... a sharp eye, a fluid storytelling voice and the imagination to create complicated individuals ", but was " weaker at narrative tricks that can be taught ".
Richardson picked up on two areas relating to the characters of the book, saying that Goldfinger " is the most preposterous specimen yet displayed in Mr. Fleming's museum of super fiends ", whilst, referring to the novel's central character, observed that " the real trouble with Bond, from a literary point of view, is that he is becoming more and more synthetic and zombie-ish.
Around 1910, Spare illustrated The Starlit Mire, a book of epigrams written by two doctors, James Betram and F. Russell, in which his illustrations once more displayed his interest in the abnormal and the grotesque.
From November 14, 1975 to September 6, 1976 Hopkins portrait was displayed at the National Portrait Gallery in an exhibit on the democratization of America based on Boorstin's book.
A quotation from Areopagitica – " A good book is the precious lifeblood of a master spirit, embalmed and treasured up on purpose to a life beyond life " – is still prominently displayed over the entrance to the renovated Main Reading Room of the New York Public Library.
However, she also displayed anti-Semitic views in the notebooks for her book Tribute to Freud.
He also appeared as a guest in the animated talk show Space Ghost Coast to Coast in an episode titled " Batmantis ," where he displayed his book.
Their most successful book to date, What Not to Wear, was published in 2002 which displayed striking chapters such as " Big Tits ", " No Tits " and " Big Bum " with fashion advice for each category.
The purchase " involved a formal partnership between the Library, Durham University and Durham Cathedral and an agreement that the book will be displayed to the public equally in London and the North East.
There has been some suggestion that the author was originally of Jewish extraction, who in 1492 had to convert to Catholicism to avoid being expelled from Spain ; it could be used to explain the animosity towards the Catholic Church displayed in the book.
Lomborg highlights a repeated theme of Ehrlich's from the early 1970s — a coming age of material scarcity, most prominently displayed in his 1974 book The End of Affluence in which he predicted widespread shortages of vital materials by the mid-1980s along with acute food shortages.
The book collections are displayed in regularly changing exhibitions.
Above all, the book concerns the knowledge of God the Creator, but " as it is in the creation of man that the divine perfections are best displayed ", there is also an examination of what can be known about humankind.
Music sequencing software Steinberg Cubase has " Real Book " as a choice in Page Mode Setting, meaning that the key signature would be displayed only once at the top of the page in the notated sheet music, as is the style in the fake book.
In 2006 the book was displayed in “ Joan Miró, Illustrated Books ” at the Vero Beach Museum of Art.
Writing before Li's book was published, Byron and Pack offered other possible diagnoses based on symptoms Kang seems to have displayed, including manic-depressive psychosis and temporal lobe epilepsy.

book and vigorous
And the evidence that he does, indeed, stand there derives quite simply from the vigorous interest with which rather casual readers have responded to that book for the past century or so.
The review recommended the book for " readers who enjoy vigorous writing ", who " will be glad to be rubbed the wrong way by Spengler's harsh aphorisms " and his pessimistic predictions.
The book leaves something to be desired on the score of morality, but the stories never lack point and are models of simple, direct narration in the vigorous and picturesque French of the 16th century.
His next book, the Traité des systèmes, is a vigorous criticism of those modern systems which are based upon abstract principles or upon unsound hypotheses.
McFee wrote, " In this book, with all its crudity of conception, its ruthless purloinings of technical tricks and its pathetic striving after philosophic profundity, there is the promise of a new and vigorous personality in fiction.
During the New York printing strike of 1963, when The New York Times had ceased publication, the founders of The Review seized the opportunity to establish a vigorous book review.
" Robinson wrote in his review of Bishop's book that Bishop's historical commentary is " more vigorous than accurate ".
*" A Roman Catholic writer, Mr. Michael J. F. McCarthy, in a book on “ Priests and People in Ireland ,” makes a vigorous and uncompromising attack on the Roman Catholic hierarchy in Ireland.
The book also contains a vigorous defense of minarchist right-libertarianism against more extreme views, such as anarcho-capitalism ( in which there is no state and individuals must contract with private companies for all social services ).
Fletcher's book is distinguished by its encyclopedic treatment of the technique and equipment of wilderness travel, as well as by what critics and readers have praised as its rousing humor and elegant, vigorous prose.
Clarke's book is identified as distinctively English not only because of its style but also because of its themes of " vigorous common sense ", " firm ethical fiber ", " serene reason and self-confidence ", which are drawn from its Augustan literary roots.
In his book The Myth of the Robber Barons, Folsom distinguishes between political entrepreneurs who ran inefficient businesses supported by government favors, and market entrepreneurs who succeeded by providing better and lower-cost products or services, usually while facing vigorous competition.
It received overwhelmingly positive reviews from New York Magazine (" richly dramatic, hugely entertaining "), Entertainment Weekly (" vigorous, purposeful prose and a killer knack for building suspense "), the Los Angeles Times (" two terrific books in one: a riveting thriller ... and a Shakespearean tragedy "), and The Washington Post (" hard to put down ... reads like a thriller "), among other places, and the book prompted Hunter S. Thompson to say Mnookin was " one of the best and brightest journalists of this ominous, post-American century .".
Although Griswold was not a specialist in foreign affairs, his 1938 book on Far Eastern policy was an elegantly written and vigorous survey which for many years was the most influential work in the field.
As a pendant to his 1960 monograph, he published Jefferson and Civil Liberties: The Darker Side in 1963 ; this book offered a vigorous critique of Thomas Jefferson for holding narrower views of freedom of speech and press than has long been believed.
While high-profile “ history wars ” have taken place over public exhibits and interpretations of history in many places in recent years ( for example, Australia ’ s ongoing debate over the history of colonisation and indigenous peoples, the furor over Jack Granatstein ’ s 1998 book “ Who Killed Canadian History ?”, or the 1994 controversy over the National Museum of American History's planned exhibit on the Enola Gay bomber ), public historians tend to welcome these as opportunities to participate in vigorous public discussions over the meanings of the past, debating how people arrive at those meanings.

book and scientific
This slim book, while giving the reader only a fleeting glimpse of the scientific mind confronting the universe, has the appeal that informed conversation always has.
In the reworked version of the book in 1955, Philip Hershkovitz and Hartley Jackson led him to drop Thos both as an available scientific term and as a viable subgenus of Canis.
In his later years as a writer and scientist, Sagan would often draw on his childhood memories to illustrate scientific points, as he did in his book, Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors.
Peter Wright, in his book Spycatcher, claimed that in 1967 Mountbatten attended a private meeting with press baron and MI5 agent Cecil King, and the Government's chief scientific adviser, Solly Zuckerman.
The book details the four roots of law ( Qur ' an, Sunnah, ijma, and qiyas ) while specifying that the primary Islamic texts ( the Qur ' an and the hadith ) be understood according to objective rules of interpretation derived from scientific study of the Arabic language.
In his book, Andreae shows an utopic island in which Christian theosophy and applied science ruled, and in which the spiritual fulfillment and intellectual activity constituted the primary goals of each individual, the scientific pursuits being the highest intellectual calling – linked to the achievement of spiritual perfection.
Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway named Singer in their book, Merchants of Doubt, as one of three contrarian physicists — along with Fred Seitz and Bill Nierenberg — who regularly injected themselves into the public debate about contentious scientific issues, positioning themselves as skeptics, their views gaining traction because the media gives them equal time out of a sense of fairness.
Agricola's dialogue Bermannus, sive de re metallica dialogus or a dialogue on metallurgy, ( 1530 ) the first attempt to reduce to scientific order the knowledge won by practical work, brought Agricola into notice ; it contained an approving letter from Erasmus at the beginning of the book.
Lester del Rey described it simply as " a bad book ," marked more by routine social commentary than by scientific insight or extrapolation.
Copernicus's book, De revolutionibus orbium coelestium ( On the Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres ), published just before his death in 1543, is often regarded as the starting point of modern astronomy and the defining epiphany that began the scientific revolution.
" This book influenced Einstein's regard for the importance of the observer in scientific measurements.
Ian Barbour in his book Issues in Science and Religion ( 1966 ), p. 133, cites Arthur Eddington's The Nature of the Physical World ( 1928 ) for a text that argues The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principles provides a scientific basis for " the defense of the idea of human freedom " and his Science and the Unseen World ( 1929 ) for support of philosophical idealism " the thesis that reality is basically mental ".
In their book Trust Us, We're Experts ( 2001 ), they write that industries have launched multi-million-dollar campaigns to position certain theories as " junk science " in the popular mind, often failing to employ the scientific method themselves.
Major influences were Friedrich Nietzsche, Oswald Spengler and, most importantly, Houston Stewart Chamberlain, the British-born German writer who was one of the founders of " scientific " anti-Semitism, and whose book The Foundations of the Nineteenth Century ( 1899 ) was one of the standard works of the extreme right in Germany.
In 1995 in the Journal of Black Studies, Zack Cernovsky wrote, " some of Rushton's references to scientific literature with respects to racial differences in sexual characteristics turned out to be references to a nonscientific semi-pornographic book and to an article in the Penthouse magazine's Forum.
In his most recent book, " The Vanishing Face of Gaia ", he rejects scientific modelling that disagrees with the scientific findings that sea levels are rising faster, and Arctic ice is melting faster, than the models predict and he suggests that we may already be beyond the tipping point of terrestrial climate into a permanently hot state.
Konrad Gessner wrote the first scientific description of a killer whale in his " Fish book " of 1558, based on examination of a dead stranded animal in the Bay of Greifswald that had attracted a great deal of local interest.
The first book to recognize the scientific potential of lucid dreams was Celia Green's 1968 study Lucid Dreams.
The first serious scientific attempt to establish the reality of monogenesis was that of Alfredo Trombetti, in his book L ' unità d ' origine del linguaggio, published in 1905 ( cf.
As he says in the introduction of his book " Genetic Epistemology " ( ISBN 978-0-393-00596-7 ): " What the genetic epistemology proposes is discovering the roots of the different varieties of knowledge, since its elementary forms, following to the next levels, including also the scientific knowledge.
An epistemological paradigm shift was called a " scientific revolution " by epistemologist and historian of science Thomas Kuhn in his book The Structure of Scientific Revolutions.
He has written more than 150 technical papers, book chapters, or popular articles on a diverse set of scientific, engineering, and legal topics.
In their 1988 book The IQ Controversy, the Media, and Public Policy, Mark Snyderman and Stanley Rothman claimed to document a liberal bias in the media coverage of scientific findings regarding IQ.
Moreover, the book served as an argument from scientists that the Science Wars were primarily fought by non-scientists who were pushing contentious claims about the dubiousness of scientific objectivity.

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