List price: $15.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $8.72
Buy one from zShops for: $17.34
Used price: $10.39
Buy one from zShops for: $9.87
Any student of history can see that our generation is ripe for the greedy picking. And as long as the general people are pacified and slowly boiled they will not take the time to even consider counting the cost of manly independence. We are stunned by the absolute present, and a few days perhaps, into the future. We do not have the time to search things out like "Defending Civil Resistance Under International Law". Why bother anyway, when it will only ruin our reputations and agendas?
Let me tell you that a real citizen of any country has his heart set on the highest interests and not merely those of the fleeting surface. If there are any real men today who are independent, honest, and thorough, then they will consider all of the implications or effects of their actions; and if they have any wisdom they will consider the foundations of the times. Boyl seems to be such a courageous fellow who is willing to call America back to dignity and maturity. His rare post as Instructor of International Law prepares him to consider our times and sphere objectively. And as people so caught up with the present, and so dependent upon 'authorities,' we should give our undivided attention to such a man when he calls us to be accountable for forsaking all the counsel of our fathers and all the wisdom of the ages. We won't listen until we see for ourselves! Until the very things happen to us that were warned in this book.
This book will not only give you facts about how you have been duped by just accepting popular opinion, but if it is considered will help you to begin to understand some of the real responsibilities of government and the people. There are many contributions in this book, but the most important is its magnetic call for independent, honest, and thorough heroes to rebuild the fallen walls.
Used price: $1.25
Collectible price: $6.87
The scope of the work is broader than it first appears to be. Francis, a well-known expert in manufacturing, describes product creation processes and methodologies equally useful for manufactured products and for service "products".
The book is rich in checklists on important topics, such as metrics of R&D performance, computing your leadership quotient, and motivating workers. He ends each chapter with a section called "Ideas for Action". These are tips on what to do to move from his printed page to action in the reader's organization. They are very useful.
The most important message of the book is that successful product creation cannot be left to the R&D department; it requires the joint efforts of every organizational function. People from other departments who affect product creation will find this book very valuable, as will the R&D people themselves.
Part one of the book focuses on the period from 1469 to 1516, which Kamen calls "The Catholic Kings." It is a time period that is often looked upon as Spain's golden age. The marriage of Ferdinand and Isabella united the kingdoms of Argon and Castile. Both kingdoms evolved in different ways which created potential sources of conflict. It was to Isabella and Ferdinand's credit that their major focus remained the pacification of Spain. Kamen investigates their pacification efforts through seven venues: hermandades, aristocracy, the municipalities, the Military Orders, the councils of state, justice and the Cortes. One of the contributing factors to conflict cited by Kamen throughout this period and all succeeding reigns was the crown's need to raise money. In spite of the wealth that came in from the America's, the Spanish treasury was always in need of money. Kamen, in effect, built as case for self-perpetuating conflict -conflict needs armies that needed money that created more conflict as the crown tried to raise it.
The kings that followed Isabella/Ferdinand set different agendas. Charles V and his descendants committed themselves to Castile and their center of government. They financed their activities by tapping four major sources: Argon, Castile, the church and the Americas. However, the Americas never became the cash cow that the kings and councilors had hoped because the trade business was dominated by foreigners with Spain functioning only as a conduit. Consequently, the government periodically declared bankruptcy to cancel its debts.
Religion was one of the other strands Kamen uses to develop his society in conflict themes. Phillip II, an extremely religious monarch, instituted the Inquisition. This required a nationalized church and its purpose was to reconvert the general population back to Catholicism. It coincided with the expelling of all the Moriscos which in itself created demographic problems and a lower tax base with its corresponding economic consequences.
Kamen continues with the economic, religious and political conflict themes through the reign of Philip V who finally unifies the country and ends the power of the old aristocracy. The empire also came to an end. The book concludes with Kamen arguing that the debate over the future is as uncertain today as it was in 1714.
The book is an outstanding portrait of Spain during the empire days. Although it had a colonial empire during this period and was recognized as a world power, Kamen's thorough analysis reveals the weakness inherent in all phases of society. It was truly a society in conflict.
This issue lay at the heart of Paul's conflict with the Jerusalem apostles (Gal. 2:1-10), the following incident at Antioch (Gal. 2:11-14), and the subsequent controversy in Galatia (Gal. 3:1-5, 5:2-6). Paul, like many of the Christians he once persecuted, believed that Gentiles did not need to submit to proselyte conversion in order to engage with Jews in indiscriminate (eucharist) table-fellowship. James, Peter, and John initially agreed to this (Gal. 2:7-9), despite conservative hard-liners in the Christian movement (Gal. 2:4) who fought such blasphemy tooth and nail. Paul's victory over these hard-liners left them steaming with the desire for revenge, and as soon as he and Peter left for Antioch, they put pressure on James to revoke the decision. Esler thinks they were successful, since Peter stopped eating with Gentiles as soon as "the circumcision faction" (Gal. 2:12) arrived at Antioch to break the sore news.
Now confronting a new crisis, Paul recounts these earlier conflicts and proceeds to mount a full-fledged attack on the Jewish law in order to keep rival Christian missionaries at bay and away from influencing his Gentile converts in Galatia. He derides the Torah as a "curse" leading to transgression and sin, and as something which is diametrically opposed to faith and the Spirit. Against scholars like James Dunn, Esler contends that Gal. 5:14 ("the whole law is summed up in the commandment 'love your neighbor as yourself'") in no way implies that an ethical part of the law remains relevant for Christian living, but rather that Christians have access "to the best which the law could provide" by a completely different route -- the Spirit. And the reference to "the law of Christ" in Gal. 6:2 represents the apostle's "most daring inversion and final nail hammered into his argument that the law of Moses is now entirely irrelevant".
This commentary explains Paul's most hostile letter using models of Mediterranean social values and sectarian rhetoric, and it's probably the best available book on Galatians. But Esler's arguments will be fiercely disputed by Mark Nanos, whose equally compelling work on Galatians presents a non-sectarian and "Jewish-friendly" Paul, who got along well with the other apostles -- and who did not, in fact, oppose the law! Debate between Esler and Nanos only promises to get more exciting, and their arguments will stand or fall according to how one answers the question of Paul's independence from the apostolic community and sectarianism from mainline Judaism. Both represent the best that scholarship currently has to offer.
Used price: $5.99
Collectible price: $15.85
Buy one from zShops for: $7.18
So forget about those other little biopics like THE LAST EMPEROR, AMADEUS, ELIZABETH, and others! PHILIP, KING OF SPAIN will be an Academy Award-winning, Best Picture epic film made by yours truly - Kristoffer Infante! It will be a companion to my other Oscar-winning Best Picture, PRISONER OF WAR - written, directed, produced, and starring me - and TRIANGLE, another Oscar-winning Best Picture!
I will be faithful to the man and the myth, and destroy all that negativity that has dogged Philip in the last 400 years! Philip will be loved and appreciated again!
Count on it!
List price: $19.98 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $12.91
Buy one from zShops for: $13.89
Encourage ... to not only carry this book, but its predecessor too.
The story is of a woman, Scheherazade, who marries a king. The king's custom is to spend one night with a woman and execute her in the morning. To avoid this, Scheherazade tells him a tale, but leaves part of it unfinished, thus gaining the king's interest and insuring her survival for another day so she can finish the tale. Being clever, she never finishes it, but keeps it continuously going, until the king finally spares her life.
The stories presented here, though often somewhat crude, have great moral lessons to be learned. The serve as a sort of moral reminder as to how a good person should act.
When Richard Burton translated the Nights, he collected as many manuscripts as possible and pieced together the tales. Many had been created centuries earlier, and were often told during gatherings among friends. Burton, through his unparalelled knack for translation, managed to capture all the magic and mystery that are the Arabian Nights.
Besides the delightful stories and good lessons to be learned, the Nights serve another purpose--they provide an intimate look at the culture of the time. By examining their legends, one can gain a basic understanding of how Arabic culture functions. There is as much to be learned about the people who tell these stories as there is from the stories themselves.
I read this book for historical and cultural value, and found it to be abundant in both. Besides that, though, I encountered a mesmerizing set of tales which will be entertaining to any audience, even (after some revision and editing) children.
Used price: $6.50
Collectible price: $10.59
The "Working Papers" (a separate workbook) makes doing the assigned problems easy by providing a ready-made template for each problem. If you've had to draw your own T-accounts or your own journal in a notebook before, you will definitely appreciate this.
This text serves as a good introduction to the skills necessary to master financial accounting.
Used price: $1.06
Buy one from zShops for: $1.75