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The question I have is ,if we are person destroyed ,( memories burned to dust) with the death of the brain, what in heavans name is experience, love, relationships and higher level human consciousness all about? It seems rather odd if there be a God or a Universal consciousness as Darling tries to prove throughout the book, that it could be absolutely without memory, purpose, direction, ability to integrate past,present, future.
How from a tabula rasa containing nothing spon creation of something? If this Universal mind has no intellect and no will and no memory of anything from where did everything in our World come from. Its like saying here is this "HOLY" cow without a memory, creates purposeless cow-flops which die and return to dust. The cow has no memory of their creation or their experience. The cow God just drops them off and lets enthropy take over, until they turn to dust.
I think and sense there is more to the story of reality than Darling has proposed, but I did enjoy his attempts to link quantum mysteries with mind and Zen philosophy.
I also think in certain places Darling draws conclusions about the mind from too biased and materialist grand stand.
For example, Sperry's split brain experiemnts are intriguing, but the idea of a single mind receiving input from two senory or computer hubs, the left and right brain cannot be ruled out.
If I receive two or more radio signals at once I too might behave as the split brain person ( one mind, trying to integrate different signals) What if one station tells me the cat is dead and the other the cat is alive. I might well in one moment say its dead and the other its alive. If God is intellectless, mindless and memory less (HE/SHE)
can be no better than a vast empty vessel. Why or how would such a vessel ever generate a World as full of personhood and experience as this?
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However I give it two thumbs up for content. This book helped me with disaster planning tremendously.
Bottom line this book is worth the money and deserves/needs a second edition.
Of the 281 pages in this book, 156 pages are devoted to the seven chapters comprising the "how to" and case study, with the remaining pages allocated to six highly valuable appendices.
Chapter 1, Effective Risk Analysis, starts the book by discussing risk analysis in general, including common approaches, and leads into the author's approach. The next chapter covers qualitative risk analysis, followed by a chapter on value analysis. By this point it's clear that the author's philosophy is to capture major risks, cost data and develop impact without getting bogged down in complex methods. I liked chapter 4, which discusses other qualitative methods, their strengths and weaknesses, which adds context to the heart of this book: Chapter 5, Facilitated Risk Analysis Process. In a nutshell, this approach involves all stakeholders and spreads the responsibility and accountability for identifying, analyzing and prioritizing risks. This is as it should be because security should be everyone's job, and the stakeholders (led by subject matter experts) are the best source of authority for making trade-offs and allocating resources to ensure the degree of security that consensus dictates. Since security is, in part, a function of trade-offs, the Facilitated Analysis Risk Process proposed by the author is an effective and essential process supporting security. Chapter 6 covers other uses of qualitative risk analysis, and is though-provoking and informative. The case study in chapter 7 ties together the preceding chapters and concludes the text on risk analysis.
The appendices are, in my opinion, invaluable. Like a previous reviewer I lament the fact that the tables and forms were not included in electronic format, but this is a minor quibble on my part. Appendix A is a comprehensive, 25-page questionnaire that covers every facet of security risks. Appendix B contains a reproduction of every form associated with the Facilitated Risk Analysis Process (Scope/Business Process Identification, Action Plan, Final Report, Controls List, Risk List and Controls/Risk Cross-Reference List). Business Impact Analysis forms are provided in Appendix C, and a sample report is provided in Appendix D. Threat definitions are provided in Appendix E, and three short papers authored by other experts giving other opinions of risk analysis are the subject of Appendix F.
Overall this is a highly focused book that should not be ignored by anyone who is responsible for security, business continuity or disaster recovery planning. Even if you are more apt to use quantitative methods instead of the qualitative methods proposed by the author, this book is still an important work on security risk analysis. The appendices alone are worth the price of the book.
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Information is presented in hundreds (even thousands?) of well-written entries explaining and describing topics as diverse as the role of extraterrestrials in science fiction to Cepheid Variable stars, from laundry lists of nearby star systems to biographies of prominent scientists. The length and breadth of the information presented is truly impressive.
All information is throughly cross-referenced, with more detailed references indicated by a dark arrow.
Entries are written with an interest in the search for extraterrestrial life, but the book is a fine general reference work for amateurs interested in all space sciences.
The only complaint I have is that I wish there were more detailed illustrations for some concepts; if half stars were available, I might rate this book 4-and-a-half for this, but it deserves better than a four, in my opinion.
All in all, an extremely valuable reference, as well as a fascinating read in and of itself if you are interested in space science.