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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Daniels", sorted by average review score:

Able Seaman and Lifeboatman, Book 2
Published in Paperback by Marine Educational Textbooks (December, 1991)
Authors: Richard A. Block, Thomas F. Zee, and Daniel W. Hall
Average review score:

Read it and you'll pass!
If you want to test for your A.B. ticket, buy and read both of these books (1&2). They are the best I've seen or heard about. Some old sailors told me about them, I used them and passed.


Abortion: Understanding Differences
Published in Hardcover by Plenum Pub Corp (October, 1984)
Authors: Daniel Callahan and Sidney Cornelia Callahan
Average review score:

The definitive abortion primer
Daniel and Sidney Callahan, along with their contributors, have, way
back in the 1980s presented us with the definitive work in all the
abortion debate. If you would understand what the abortion debate is
all about, this book, along with The Facts of Life, by Harold Morowitz
and James Trefil and my book, There is a Bomb in Gilead, are basically
all that you need to read. Understanding Differences is a group of 12
essays, 10 of which are written from either a Pro-Life or a Pro-Choice
perspective -five on either side with the first two written from no
particular political view point. Each of the Pro-Choice or Pro-Life
essays is critiqued at its end by an author from the opposite
perspective and the editors, Daniel and Sidney Callahan writing the
last two essays and critiqueing each others. Daniel Callahan is a
medical ethicist writing from an essential Pro-Choice perspective and
Sidney is a clinical Psychologist writing from a religiously Pro-Life
perspective. They are a married couple who had six children, one of
whom they tragically lost a few years ago. Daniel was born and raised
Catholic and Sidney converted as a young adult. The book is the best
exploration of the differing positions informing the abortion debate
that I have ever read, and as I have been consumed by the issue for
almost twenty years, and was trained in ob/gyn in the uears
immediately preceding the Roe v. Wade era, I believe that I know as
much about the various aspects of the abortion debate as any person
alive. (...)

You need to get it and read it if
you are really interested in the subject and desire to be adequately
informed to debate the issue intelligently from either side, with
yourself or others. You really owe it to yourself to get and read it.
wfh





Access to Higher Education in Germany and California
Published in Paperback by Peter Lang Publishing (November, 2001)
Author: Daniel J. Guhr
Average review score:

Buy this book!
Daniel Guhr has done an outstanding job of making a difficult subject interesting in this eminently readable new book. Access to higher education is a critical issue, and the conclusions drawn by Dr. Guhr are important for anyone interested in social policy -- indeed, in the future of this and other countries -- to understand. This book is a must-read for a wide range of people. Do yourself a favor: pick it up, read it, and start thinking about who has access to higher education, why, and what that means for our future.


Acquianted Strangers
Published in Paperback by PublishAmerica, Inc. (December, 2001)
Authors: Daniel Diadiw Depetro, Lisa M. Depetro, and Daniel Diadiw
Average review score:

Great book of poetry
I really enjoyed this book. It was given to me as a gift, and I enjoyed every word. If you like poetry about real relationships, then you will too.


The Adaptive Design of the Human Psyche: Psychoanalysis, Evolutionary Biology, and the Therapeutic Process
Published in Hardcover by Guilford Press (25 September, 1992)
Authors: Malcolm Slavin and Daniel Kriegman
Average review score:

Psychoanalysis & Evolutionary Biology: Read it!
BOOK REVIEW The Adaptive Design of the Human Psyche: Psychoanalysis, Evolutionary Biology and the Therapeutic Process By Malcolm Slavin and Daniel Kriegman by Don Greif, Ph.D. The Adaptive Design of the Human Psyche: Psychoanalysis, Evolutionary Biology and the Therapeutic Process, by Malcolm Slavin and Daniel Kriegman, is a profound and creative work and an awesome accomplishment. The fact that it is brilliant is almost beside the point. For what Slavin and Kriegman have accomplished in this book is that they have come as close as anyone writing from a psychoanalytic point of view has ever come to capturing the essential nature of the human condition. They have provided a highly compelling and lucid description of human nature, in all of its complexity and paradoxicalness, that is inspiring and moving. It is also hard to read. But, and this is an understatement, it is well worth the effort. I can almost guarantee that you will be richly rewarded if you invest the time and energy necessary to understand what Slavin and Kriegman are saying. They use an adaptive theoretical framework, one which is largely based on contemporary evolutionary biology, as a vantage point from which to critically examine the basic premises about human nature which are contained within each of the two major psychoanalytic paradigms -- the classical and relational narrative traditions. Using an evolutionary framework, they elucidate the two narratives= respective assumptions about the nature of the human psyche and of the relational world, and they reveal the important truths about human nature and the psyche contained within each tradition. Through a process of examining and deconstructing important metaphors from both classical and relational traditions (repression, endogenous drives, and the true self) into their basic meanings, and then reconstructing those meanings into an evolutionary narrative, Slavin and Kriegman provide a new paradigm for psychoanalysis, one that synthesizes the essential truths contained in each narrative into a comprehensive framework or whole. The new evolutionary narrative which results appears to embrace, in a way that has not been achieved before, the inherently valid pieces of each narrative tradition. The evolutionary narrative which results from this synthesis depicts human beings, according to Slavin and Kriegman, "as innately individualistic and innately social; as endowed with inherently selfish, aggressively self-promoting aims, as well as an equally primary altruistic disposition toward those whose interests we share. We are, in short, never destined to attain the kind of highly autonomous individuality enshrined in the classical tradition, nor are we the "social animal" of the relational vision. We are essentially "semisocial" beings whose nature, or self-structure and motivational system, is inherently divided between eternally conflicting aims." (p. 281) Since Slavin and Kriegman use an evolutionary framework to evaluate the validity of the basic premises of the classical and relational models, one must wonder about the validity of evolutionary theory itself. It seems that evolutionary theory has widespread acceptance and credibility within the scientific world. It is perhaps close to having attained the same status as more familiar and broadly accepted scientific theories. In the November issue of Natural History the evolutionary biologist Jared Diamond stated the following: "As for the claim that evolution is an unproved theory, that's nonsense. Evolution is a fact, established with the same degree of confidence as our theory' of the round earth, our germ theory' of disease, and the atomic theory' of matter. Yes, there is lively debate about the particular evolutionary mechanisms that caused particular changes, but the existence of evolutionary change is not in doubt" (p. 19). For the purpose of evaluating Slavin and Kriegman's ideas, it is significant to note that evolutionary biological theory has a far different scientific status than psychoanalytic theory. As a scientific theory psychoanalysis has achieved little credibility in its first hundred years. It has achieved far more credibility as a method of treating psychological problems, and there its adherents consist mainly of its beneficiaries, that is, those who have gained personally from it, or from its offspring, psychoanalytic psychotherapy. It is contemporary evolutionary biological theory, largely through the work of Robert Trivers, that has vastly increased our understanding of the social environment. It is this theory that is most relevant to Slavin and Kriegman's work and to psychoanalysis, for it is understanding those forces that shape social evolution that has made it possible for Slavin and Kriegman to fulfill an aim that Freud sought but failed to achieve; mainly, to link the universal, underlying features of internal psychic structure to ancestral interpersonal experience. Slavin and Kriegman demonstrate that those psychodynamic features that comprise our "deep structure," such as the capacities for repression, regression, and transference, have evolved over the course of millions of years as adaptations to our environment, in particular to the unique and complex realities in our social or relational environment. The complex inner design of the human psyche has been shaped by the same forces that operate within the natural world to shape living organisms, mainly those that constitute natural selection. The basic universal features of the human psyche are a result of their having conferred an adaptive advantage on our ancestors; those humans who had these features were more successful at negotiating the complex relations dilemmas and paradoxes that faced them and were more successful, ultimately, at reproducing and surviving in that social environment. Robert Langs, in an article in the October 1993 issue of Contemporary Psychoanalysis, ("Psychoanalysis: Narrative Myth. or Narrative Science") criticizes Slavin and Kriegman for adopting a teleological position in their use of certain concepts. Referring to their conceptualization of repression as serving to safeguard aspects of an individual's "true self" so that they can be retrieved when relational conditions change, Langs states, "The ideas of a true self (all moments of selfhood are interactional in nature) and of the goal of self-actualization are teleological no matter how they are stated" (p. 580). It seems clear that Langs has not understood several central ideas in Slavin and Kriegman's book nor, it seems, has he understood evolutionary theory. Slavin and Kriegman see the existence of something like the "true self," some core, "endogenous" or independent source of motivation, not as an end in itself, but rather as a basic feature of the human psyche, part of its deep structural, adaptive design that has evolved over millions of years as a functional solution to a highly challenging and complex dilemma that has faced (and continues to face) the human child since the time of our prehuman ancestors, namely how to construct a self in a world where it is highly dependent for its identity on others whose interests not only overlap and converge but also necessarily diverge and, at times, conflict with its own. Slavin and Kriegman state, "Evolutionary theory suggests that even responsive, attuned, facilitative familial environments will inevitably be characterized by a highly ambiguous mixture of overlapping mutual interests, intrinsic conflict, and ongoing deception" (p. 121). Slavin and Kriegman believe that the "true self...may signify a dimension of our overall adaptive design...that seems to provide us with an absolutely critical source of information about our individual interests" (p. 176). In their view "a design element such as [the true self] became a critical, functional necessity for a species in which our s


Adrenalynn: Weapon of War
Published in Paperback by Dark Horse Comics (31 December, 2001)
Authors: Tony Daniel and Martin Egeland
Average review score:

Engages the reader's total and rapt attention
Dark Horse Comics has established itself as a premier publisher of contemporary comics and graphic novels that sets the standard for art in the service of story telling. One of the latest and best examples of this is Tony Daniel and Martin Egeland's Adrenalynn: Weapon Of War. This is the story of a young crippled girl, Sabina Nikoli, who is plucked from a Russian orphanage, extensively operated upon to equip her with biomechanical prosthetics, and trained to be a cyborg assassin: codename "Adrenalynn". She is to be Russia's ultimate Cold War weapon. But with the collapse of the Soviet Union all she wants is to escape her "hunt and kill" assignments -- directed primarily at other Russian cyborgs who have "gone rogue". But the way to personal freedom is one of blood, violence, and heartbreak. Adrenalynn: Weapon Of War is a superb graphic novel that engages the reader's total and rapt attention from beginning to end.


Advanced Log Linear Models Using Sas
Published in Paperback by SAS Publishing (August, 2002)
Author: Daniel Zelterman
Average review score:

Another Zelterman classic!
Another Zelterman classic. It's amazing what he can do in SAS.


Advanced Medical Life Support: A Practical Approach to Adult Medical Emergencies
Published in Paperback by Prentice Hall (06 August, 2002)
Authors: Alice Dalton, Daniel Limmer, Alice L. Dalton, Howard Werman, and Joseph J. Mistovich
Average review score:

Finally a top quality AMLS Text
This is a very good book for paramedic students, probably too advanced for people who haven't recieved paramedic training. AMLS is a very important topic that tends to be overshadowed by trauma and cardiac. If you want pictures, this isn't the book for you and this probably isn't the career for you. This is a textbook that is laid out well and easy to read is a very user friendly format.

This book provides additional information about advanced medical life support that you woulnd't really get in a "paramedic" textbook. There is a chapter on hypoperfusion (shock) that is the best that I've seen in a book targeted towards paramedics.

This is too advanced for non-paramedics. There are other medical books desgined for BLS providers that would be better suited to firefighters, first responders, & first aid folks. This book is really designed for paramedic level providers in either a paramedic curriculum or continuing education.

This review was written about the 1st Edition. The newer title has replaced it. This book went from 1999-2002, pretty standard for emergency medical texts.


Advances in Interpenetrating Polymer Networks
Published in Paperback by Technomic Pub Co (May, 1990)
Authors: Daniel Klempner and Kurt C. Frisch
Average review score:

the best
I`m a student


Advances in Urethane Science and Technology
Published in Paperback by Technomic Pub Co (July, 1987)
Authors: Kurt C. Frisch and Daniel Klempner
Average review score:

Excellent Content
This book was a primary source of information for my thesis paper. It has excellent knowledge and uses great resources.

Thanks!


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