The Elemental Changes Professor John FultonComposed in 2 B. C., as "The I Ching revised and enlarged," The Elemental Changes is a divination manual providing a clear method for distinguishing alternative courses of action. Structured in 81 tetragrams ( as opposed to the 64 hexagrams of the I Ching), the book offers much to the modern reader. Today in the West, The Elemental Changes is an essential tool for understanding the Tao as it operates in the Cosmos, in the minds of sages, and in sacred
This volume provides a new commercial perspective on contraception in modern Britain
and uniform
and the inadequately named set of norms that we call "political correctness
For a lawyer looking to take the next steps in their career
insights are presented to uncover ways of conceptualizing and practicing curriculum through processes that join persons together in dialogue and reflection
and the indigenous responses to them
are in fact profoundly linked to them
the freedom-as well as the problems-of living in the United States
They reveal a writer concerned as always with the human condition
Freya Mathews argues that replacing the materialist premise of modern civilization with a panpsychist one transforms the entire fabric of culture in profound ways
and detailing the possible impacts of the mobilome on rumen function
the text covers the relativistic formulation of electromagnetism in great detail so that aspects of gravity and the nuclear interaction not usually encountered at the undergraduate level can be covered by using analogies with familiar electromagnetism