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Fantastic! Inspirational to a deep connection to the heart
Thank you for helping me find my reality.
Absolutely First Class!

A "must-have" for the serious and not so serious Mac hack.
A great Macintosh book for all levels of users
As good as it gets!

A blessing
A Life Changing BookI recommend this book to anyone interested in living a happy, conscious, magic life.
Mandatory Reading

Non-Violent Peace in the 21st CenturyIn the post cold war era, the battling forces of conflict - war and negotiation - peace have changed. From 1945 to 1990, the United States/Soviet Union standoff shaped public policy. The absence of the super power conflict has created a void and the opportunity for regional controversies has emerged. The essence of Mary King's theme is to utilize the people-based non-violent practices of Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr. as the major new forces for peace and conciliation.
Mary King's whole background and international experience makes her a unique voice. She cut her teeth in the 1960's in Mississippi, active in America's civil rights batles, working with Julian Bond and Martin Luther King, Jr. From there she has been one of the world's leading spokespersons and activists working on the international scene on behalf of women's rights, civil rights and peace. Her first book on civil rights in Mississippi won the Robert F. Kennedy Award for Journalism.
Pictures of the Future
Important volume on important topicI have written a regular column on global issues for 'The Christian Science Monitor' for nearly a decade now. In the past couple of years, I have also been blessed by the opportunity to work as a writer with an extremely inspiring group of Nobel Peace laureates, including the Dalai Lama, Archbishop Tutu, Rigoberta Menchu Tum, and others. (Based on that work, I wrote a book called "The Moral Architecture of World Peace: Nobel Laureates Discuss our Global Future".) It was significant that nearly all the laureates I worked with mentioned both Gandhi and Dr. MLK--who was also himself a Nobel Peace Laureate--as prime inspirations in their own work and thinking. So I was looking for one reference book that I could use myself, and to which I could refer readers, that would provide a broad overview of the thinking of those two men. I was delighted to find it in Mary King's book, which ideally should be placed as a source-book in every high-school and community library in the country!


An Excellent Case Study for Giving someone more rope
You have to read this!
Star Power

A view of History from the Medieval KitchensShe starts by imagining a day in the life of the Peasant Bodo, in the time of Charlemagne. From her study of primarily economic documents from the Middle Ages of this time, she not only extrapolates but truly brings to life Bodo and his wife Ermentrude. From there, she goes on to the better documented life of Marco Polo, and also describes how he served as an inspiration for Columbus. Madam Eglentyne is next. Here, Power humorously details the inner workings of a gossipy nunnery and how Eglentyne would have gone about her life as an aristocratic women of God. She next details the life of a middle class Parisian housewife by studying the contents of the Menagier's Wife and validating many of it's points by citing other documents. She concludes by detailing the lives of the two Thomases; Betson and Paycocke of Coggeshall. Both are merchants and provide a chance for Power to really show off her grasp of medieval economics as well as an ability to compile disparate correspondences into a story of a life. This is a rare scholarly work that truly entertains while being read. One of the best books I've ever read.
History at its best, up close and personal.
The real taste of real lifeDr Jacques COULARDEAU


For Student or Working EngineerUnlike many academics, the author appreciates both elegance of approach and practicality of implementation given available technology and devices. Thus, some topologies are included "for completeness", some are described as "widely used" in large-power industrial applications, and yet another might be described as having "an extensive literature" but few or no commercial products, etc. This will be a valuable up-to-the-minute reference for working power electronic engineers as well as students.
Excellent Book in Power Electronics and Motor DrivesReviewer: Prof. Cong Wang from China Univ. of Mining and Tech., Beijing, China
Prof. Bose, author of the book, is well-known in the world in the field of power electronics, and it is an honor to review his book. The book is a masterpiece contribution in power electronics and drives area. I was teaching his previous book "Power Electronics and AC Drives" (1986) for more than 10 years in my undergraduate and graduate classes. In 1999 our University published the Chinese Version of his another book "Power Electronics and Variable frequency Drives"(1996), I was one of the translators. I was delighted to see this updated, expanded and technologically enhanced book. It will now easily replace his previous book. It is difficult to imagine that anybody else other than Prof. Bose can write such an authoritative book. The writing style is superb, and difficult things have been expressed in clear language.
The book covers almost everything in power electronics and motor drives. It starts with power semiconductor devices, and then covers different classes of converters. The induction and synchronous motor drives (with control and estimation) have been discussed in detail. Finally, the special feature of the book is coverage on artificial intelligence applications in power electronics which have not been treated in any other book on power electronics. There is a separate Problems Manual of the book. I should recommend the book in undergraduate (Senior) and graduate courses in all universities.
Best book for modern power electronics and ac drivesPower electronics and variable frequency drives are multidisciplinary fields in electrical engineering. Therefore, a book that encompasses such comprehensive knowledge has to be written by an author who has a visionary engineering knowledge. Prof. Bose is a celebrity, he has been investigating and contributing for this field for more than 40 years and have been contributing widely with more than 150 papers, 21 U.S. patents, 6 books, tutorials and keynote addresses throughout the world. His comprehensive understanding of such field is unique; this book is really recommended if you want to learn what is modern power electronics and ac drives!


I READ THIS IN 2 SITTINGS; A POWERFUL, MEMORABLE ROMANCE!
I couldn't put this book down!!
It turned out to be a wonderful romance.

Gentle and More Helpful Than She'll Ever KnowThough it is tempting to take a star out of the rating because of a few punctuation and typographical errors throughout the book, I won't (someone at the editor's office should check page 163, though, it is missing a paragraph or two); this book is just too darned good to not give 5 stars.
Not only does she bring an open and creative mind to the work, and encourage her readers to do so as well, but Ms. Drayer also makes numerology fun. Throughout the text, she is gentle, and continually urges the reader to figure it out for themself; they are, after all, the final authority on the subject.
Good for both experienced numerologists, and the absolute beginner, put this book high on your "To Read" list if you are at all interested in learning numerology, or wanting a little breeze to set you sailing on the journey of self-discovery
A Gift to Yourself
Numerology: The Power In Numbers, A Right & Left Brain Appryears. This book is SIMPLY THE BEST for those who are just beginning their study of Numerology or long time practitioners as myself. With this Edition, I find the new diagrams and instructions helpful to my workshop students as they learn how
to chart their own life and those of family and friends. The
expanded information on the ATTAINMENT Number is inspired as
well as the expanded information on relationship comparisons.
If you are looking for spiritual insight as well as practical guidance for your every-day life, I highly recommend this book.


Arguably the Greatest Non-Fiction Book Ever Written
Powerful analysis of the evolution of human civilizationIf you think that the story of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden is adequate for explaining the history of civilization, this book is not for you. If you think that everything is made crystal clear by the Marxian analysis of the "material conditions" of life, this book is not for you. If you believe that spirit-beings elsewhere in the universe are guiding us toward some wonderful end, this book is not for you. But if you think big, and are ready for a magnificent, breathtaking, and sobering view of humanity's course, based on best-science research into prehistory and panoramic interdisciplinary insights, you will come to cherish this book. I, for one, am glad that it has a poetic title, The Parable of the Tribes, and not just an academic title such as its subtitle, The Problem of Power in Social Evolution, because the sweep of the book includes but encompasses more than straight intellectual analysis. It tells the human story, our story, with all the poignant, tragic, and hopeful implications.
The stroke of genius that powers this book is Schmookler's insight into the broader applicability of Darwin's categories of "diversity" and "selection." In effect, Schmookler has shown that these are categories from the discipline of logic. Darwin's genius was to take these purely logical categories and show how they could be applied to, and did apply to, the natural world, resulting in biological evolution. Schmookler's genius is to free these categories from their usual ties with biology, and to show us how they have operated in human history as the fundamental underlying forces shaping our destiny, for good or ill.
Just one of the many themes in this book is that there is a commonsense view that human creativity is what accounts for the diversity in variations of forms of civilization, and that human choice accounts for which of these variations get selected. Hence the idea of simple progress. But we live in a disenchanted era that knows better. Schmookler reminds us that "For a story of improvement, the history of civilization makes rather dismal reading, and as the culmination of ten thousand years of progress the twentieth century is deeply disappointing." (p. 7) Similarly, the "invisible hand" of the free market, where human choice is supposed to reign sovereign, has led to only pockets of prosperity in the world (granted that some are big pockets), and even that prosperity is itself rent with stress. What is it that is systematically distorting our cultures, our civilizations, in directions that we are not deliberately choosing? If we don't gain comprehension of it, how can we ever alter it toward selection of more humane, more intelligent, more loving, more fun variations?
The "parable" is that once some human tribe becomes habitually aggressive toward other tribes, all others are eventually forced to adopt the "ways of power." "Eventually" can mean a long time, but the systematic distortion is there. The ways of power seep into every aspect of human life, from relations between men and women to harsh upbringing of children to weapons development to forms of economic exchange. It is part of the wondrousness of this book to make your way through section after section, discovering how yet another broad area of human life is illuminated by the quiet or not-so-quiet struggle for power.
In the end, it is a noble vision that is offered by The Parable of the Tribes. It simultaneously engenders compassion for the human race (trapped in the struggle for power), and clears away the confusion and the obfuscation that is part of the problem. The ability to see the human race in its last ten-thousand-year development has only recently become possible, and Schmookler has made it actual. His book gives me hope that we humans can understand our own long history and begin to shape our own destiny for good.
Thinking Cells, Invisible Blood, and the Super-OrganismGripping in its fascinating subject matter, Andrew Bard Schmookler's The Parable of the Tribes flows with the elegance of language rarely seen in writing today. This important work highlights the essence of human existence, that which makes the complicated and messy business of civilization work: Power. The evolution of biological systems discounts the idea that organisms are slowly giving way to more perfect descendents, and the same holds true for civilization. Civilization doesn't get "better," it gets "different" depending on the interface between power and the environment. Like the blood coursing through our bodies, power flows through each and every one of us, an invisible force between minds and souls. Tapped into this power, each man, woman and child since the beginning of human existence has contributed its share to the super-organism called civilization. Power drives the vast majority of our individual decision-making process. Individual freedom in the true sense of the concept never existed in the first place. We, it turns out, are less in control of our destinies than once thought. It is the constantly changing invisible nexus of power that determines how, when and why we respond the way we do to the world around us. It is important to know that power is a child of the merging of many intellects, and not some brutish club wielded against the weak, as is so often described in texts on politics and war. It is a unified human force that can be described on a relative scale of both good and bad, with shades in between. I can honestly say that few pieces of literature have moved me in a profoundly thought-provoking way like this work. After reading The Parable of the Tribes, human events both tragic and beautiful that characterize our civilization suddenly make sense. One begins to understand why and how wars are fought and peace is forged. The beauty of this work is that it describes in wonderful detail the bond we share with each other, that we are literally linked together to form a single, very impressive experience called civilization. Leaders would do well to read this book, and learn the true ways of power. Many believe that power is a thing sprouting from the few, and that some, indeed most do not have this supposed talent. The reality is that power is in all of us, like the current pulsing through our nerves, its dendritic connectors tapped into our fellows around us. Scmookler, it must be said, does not believe even remotely that we are puppets floating about in a river of power, forever subject to its unknowable flow. Schmookler's point is that while we may make decisions based on what we believe is best, it is power, manifesting itself in the millions of human interactions which occur every millisecond, that long ago set events in motion forcing you to make a decision in the first place. We, one realizes, are the power.