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A JOURNEY THROUGH HELL AND BACK
A poingnant testament to the human will to survive.
A frightening, moving and important storyI highly recommend this book. It's an amazing story!


Dewey is extremely talented!The only thing that bothers me about this book is that the animals are sculpted in solid colored clays and then painted to achieve their realistic looks. I would much rather sculpt using different colors of clay on the surface instead of paint.
Overall, this is an exciting book to have in my collection. The deer and the frog are among my favorite projects. In addition, Dewey gives very easy instructions (and photos!) on making armatures and piecing together a complex sculpture.
I read somewhere that Katherine is coming out with a book on making fantasy figures... I can't wait for that one!
If you think sculpting is difficult, try this one
You're studying with a master in this bookMaking Miniature Dolls With Polymer Clay : How to Create and Dress Period Dolls in 1/12 Scale by Sue Heaser
The Polymer Clay Techniques Book by Sue Heaser
How to Make Clay Characters by Maureen Carlson
Family and Friends in Polymer Clay by Maureen Carlson


Cute cookbook, and very good!
Yummy
great

Education in a DemocracyJohn Dewey's thesis primarily comes out of his experience with progressive schools. Progressive education is based on the idea of freedom whereas traditional education is autocratic in nature. Having analyzed both traditional and progressive education Dewey found that neither was satisfactory and thus both were inadequate in this endeavor. Dewey's main contention and cornerstone of belief is that without experience infused into education there can be no education. America is a nation based upon democracy where supreme power is vested in the people collectively and administered by them. There is no autocracy in America or room for it. America is a land of freedom and free thought. Dewey foresaw an America that will bring in all sources of experience that will offer a true learning situation both historically and socially and that will be both ordered or structured and yet be dynamic. The democracy of America provides all the elements for John Dewey's thesis to come to fruition.
Dewey saw a necessity of introducing an order of new concepts (progressivism) leading to new practices. However Dewey observed it difficult to develop a new philosophy of education because the moment traditions are departed from it makes the management of education all the more difficult and challenging. Dewey observed that because of this there would be a return to the old ways, the simpler ways - the fundamental or traditional ways. Dewey observed that mankind's thinking is traditionally set in terms of extreme opposites. Dewey found that this same thinking applied to educational philosophies as well. In theory educational systems are steadfast in their thinking and deployment but in reality their practices are compelled to compromise. Education is formulated from outside forces but undergoes development from internal forces. However, these internal forces work within the framework of standards and traditional rules that initially instituted the educational system, thus all following actions aimed to an educational end are held to a moral benchmark.
Educational philosophy, which professes to be based on the idea of freedom (progressivism), may become dogmatic as the traditional education it reacted against. Alone a progressive educational theory may become rigid, unmoving and dictatorial as the traditional theory and practice is perceived. Dewey found that tradition does not permit freedom. Tradition limited freedom and did not promote intellectual and moral development of the student. From a sociological point of view we prefer democratic and humane arrangements to those that are autocratic and harsh. Thus tradition can further be characterized by harshness, harshness imposed upon the learner. Dewey found that progressivism permits freedom, the freedom of the learner yet, freedom has a purpose and a moral structure characterized by self-control. Freedom gives the ability to control personal impulse and thus provides an environment for the educational process.
Pertaining to subject matter of facts and ideas Dewey found that these are bound up in the past. Variably Dewey found that issues of the present and future are thus not easily dealt with. Dewey's dilemma or philosophical challenge was how to connect achievements of the past with issues of the present and future. In a broad educational sense one must know where one came from in order to tell where one is and where one has the direction to go. Dewey found that progressivism rejects the past as a means to the future. However, tradition is still needed to tackle the needs of progressivism. If the one gives up the ways of the past the same problems stills confronts one in the present and future. Thus tradition can not be ignored. As Alfred Whitehead saw it the only use of knowledge of the past is to equip us for the present. The present contains all that there is. Tradition is a form of experience and can not be ignored.
Experience and education are not synonymous terms. It is very possible for experience to promote erroneous or defective education. Experience must be evaluated for its ability to enhance education. Dewey states that America needs a theory of experience that works and directs the selection and organization of approved educational methods. This theory must ultimately discriminate between experiences that are worthwhile and those that are not. There must be discrimination between education and miseducation. You can get experience in one direction and equally important open up peripheral experiences. Education as growth and maturity should be an ever-present process. Education is the business of continuous improvement. There is growth and satisfaction.
All subject matter is drawn from life's experiences. Take experience, in order to be educative it must lead out into expanding world of subject matter, subject matter of facts of information of ideas. It must be viewed as a continuous process to be successful. Experience is the means and goal of education. Given an idea you then prove it, but that means proving its worth. You prove its worth through experience. This is good for society and beneficial because of the peripheral benefits of experience. The experience is the actual life experience of the learner. There is only one subject matter for education: life. Bring these experiences freely into the classroom to promote education.
A Useful Book --- But, Read On
Still a Landmark Book on Education

A Feel Good Book!
Most influential book of my life
This imaginative and colorful story is a children's classic.

Essential to understanding pragmatism and instrumentalism.Dewy has a bone to pick with traditional philosophy. Not only has it lost track with real, as opposed to academic, problems (anyone walking down the street can tell us this) but it never really was that good at depicting real questions and descriptions anyway. Take comcepts like Plato's ideal forms and Kant's a priori. Neither of these are teneble in any realm of experience; rather, they were a misguided quest to explain the permanance and stability of the world.
Dewey's book is an attempt to pull the carpet out from under their feet; science and inquiry using its methods shows us that the world changes and if anything, stability is something that is felt by us - not inherent in the world. Thus a prioris, ideal forms, seperation of the noumenal and phenouminal amongst other current 'problems' in philosophy - all based on the idea of permanant/transitory dichotomy - are not only wearing thin, but are fast showing to be irrelevant. From this, he builds the groundwork of a philosophy in between rationalism and empiricism. Taking from rationalism an admiration and recognition of reason's power to direct action and combining it with empiricims fascination with experience, Dewey creates a philosophy that puts the spotlight not on one or the other, but on both as leading to and taking from eachother.
The first chapter are a philosophical survey of how philosophy went wrong; particularly in Ancient Greek and early Christian philosophy (both having a love affair with absolutes outside of experience). The second chapter focuses on the mistakes when philosophers, like Francis Bacon, widened the chasm between the real and experiential and the ideal and rational.
From here, Dewey proceeds piece by piece to show what was wrong and how to fix it by making clear tht scienctific inquiry (the equal interaction between subject and object) leaves no room for absolutes, forms or a prioris (or at least, not in any pragmatically useful sense). By extension, things like formal rules of logic above experience, non-experimentalism in moral or political theory and psychology that includes the individual without an equal part of the social; all of these become little more than unfounded but continually persisting glorifications.
For the reader interested in Dewey, naturalism, instrumentalism or the implications of pragmatism, this is a great introduction. From here, I suggest Dewey's "The Quest for Certainty" followed by "Experience and Nature", topped off with "Human Nature and Conduct".
A must for any student in philosophyThis often-overlooked book is the perfect antidote to the image of the philosopher as an out-of-touch abstract intellectual,
An important criticism of western philosophical traditions.Some readers may find Dewey's prose awkward and occasionally difficult, but for those interested in a history of philosophy which is more than a chronological recounting of philosophical systems, "Reconstruction" is well worth the effort.


Magnificent Overview of the "Empty Quarter"
Captures the beauty of the sagebrush desert
The Sagebrush Ocean : A Natural History of the Great BasinMy next trip to the Great Basin in Oregon will be more fulfilling and educational as much of my ignorance about this special area has been dispelled.
To date this is the best money I have spent on a book about the Great Basin.


Grim defeat in the AmericasThe language is a bit rougher than is the salty talk customary in sea stories by genuine British authors. I wonder if Lambdin chose "Lewrie" as his hero's name because it resembles lurid and lewd, which Alan is, although he's not a scoundrel as well. This is a physically bigger book than the other Lambdin pb's I've read, thanks to the customarily expansive McBooks Press edition (i.e., larger type and better paper than the stubby Fawcett Crest/Ballantine editions).
I loved the first book, why is the second out of print?
Lewrie in the Field not the SaddleIn The King's Coat Lambdin introduced young Alan Lewrie as a classic wastrel and the reader follows his progression to a competent midshipman. The book is an eclectic mix of ribald adventures and gory battle scenes. The French Admiral follows in the same vein with the same sense of anarchy until the Battle of Chesapeake Bay when the story becomes darker. Lewrie et al end up at Yorktown before Washington begins his assault. At Yorktown we get the sense of a bloody guerilla war that is filled with atrocities from both sides and the sense of hopelessness of the British cause.
In Lambdin's notes he mentions that the atrocities committed by Banastre Tarleton were well known and documented and he has assumed that atrocities committed by revolutionaries were prevalent. Actually he didn't need to assume that as such atrocities were documented and led to Loyalists immigrating to Canada. Combine examples of man's inhumanity to man with the futility of a lost cause and the darkness of The French Admiral is understandable. There is also a Kafkaesque element to it, as Admiral DeGrasse of the title never enters the action.
The fall of Yorktown should surely strike parallels for contemporary American readers who would remember the fall of Bataan or Saigon or British readers who would remember Singapore. Unlike Dunkirk very few escaped. Fortunately for the reader Lewrie's adventures don't end there. We know his escapades will continue through several more books. Perhaps this will be the darkest entry of the series.


Antarctic Antics
Fun for kids of all ages
CharmingThe art work was as well done as the writing. I recommend it to anyone who is sly enough to teach through laughter and rhyme.


Awesome! Fantastic..I know Dr. Matsen personally and have seen with my own eyes the remarkable good work he has been doing for humanity.
He is an undiscovered jewel! This book is worth its weight in gold!!
Thank you.I learnt alot.
changed our lives