Averse to The Elements

Averse to The Elements
Author: Lauren Thomson
Publisher: Lulu.com
Total Pages: 218
Release: 2010-02-09
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0244102791

Isogashii is an ancient city ruled by the mythology and religion of the Great Dragon Lords. When two of the most unlikely partners meet the story begins. Kohana dreams of great things for herself and like most girls her age wishes to find out who she really is. Xiapher is a warrior disinterested in connecting with people. She lives day by day without any knowledge of her own past, or any interest in it. Xiapher, following a gut feeling, takes Kohana on as an apprentice. A series of events occur that lead the women into discovering a mystery that is being hidden from the cities people by the newly instated religious leader, they quickly become a target for his anger and flee the city. But they are being followed by an incredibly dangerous foe, who could ultimately challenge the country's religious beliefs and change the way Xiapher understands her past forever.

Hermetica

Hermetica
Author: Hermes (Trismegistus.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 646
Release: 1926
Genre: Hermetism
ISBN:

Joyce's Finnegans Wake

Joyce's Finnegans Wake
Author: John P. Anderson
Publisher: Universal-Publishers
Total Pages: 460
Release: 2008-07
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1599429632

This non-academic author presents his key to opening James Joyce s infamously difficult and endlessly playful novel Finnegans Wake. The key was fashioned in Kabbalah, an ancient Jewish mystical tradition that as interpreted by Joyce champions independent individualism as the path to the highest spirituality. Kabbalah images a universe excreted by the ultimate god, a universe that is necessarily finite and limited that came with its own secondary god that is finite and limited, the god presented in Genesis that issues blessing and curses designed to make mankind fearful and dependent- the curse of Kabbalah. Joyce laid this curse in his dream-like "Book of the Night" in the elastic way that the latent or hidden content of a dream distorts the presentation of dream materials. Acting like a black hole, this curse pressures the main character Harold Chimpden Earwicker to "fall," to become fearful and dependent just like everyone else, that is reduced to the mere initials HCE for "Here Comes Everybody." Joyce traces this curse from the myths in Genesis to the primal horde, the first social organization of humans, to the Oedipal Complex and to nation state warfare such as the Battle of Waterloo. In a groundbreaking presentation, Anderson deciphers word by word the first two chapters and part of the last chapter to show how this key opens the lock. He shows, for example, how the joined ending and beginning of Joyce s wisdom book form the Hebrew word for curse and the ending shows confrontation rather than repression of fear of death as the key to life, to your own wake.

Mind

Mind
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 616
Release: 1904
Genre: Electronic journals
ISBN:

A quarterly review of philosophy.

Axiomatic Models of Bargaining

Axiomatic Models of Bargaining
Author: A.E. Roth
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 188
Release: 1979-10
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

The problem to be considered here is the one faced by bargainers who must reach a consensus--i.e., a unanimous decision. Specifically, we will be consid ering n-person games in which there is a set of feasible alternatives, any one of which can be the outcome of bargaining if it is agreed to by all the bargainers. In the event that no unanimous agreement is reached, some pre-specified disagree ment outcome will be the result. Thus, in games of this type, each player has a veto over any alternative other than the disagreement outcome. There are several reasons for studying games of this type. First, many negotiating situations, particularly those involving only two bargainers (i.e., when n = 2), are conducted under essentially these rules. Also, bargaining games of this type often occur as components of more complex processes. In addi tion, the simplicity of bargaining games makes them an excellent vehicle for studying the effect of any assumptions which are made in their analysis. The effect of many of the assumptions which are made in the analysis of more complex cooperative games can more easily be discerned in studying bargaining games. The various models of bargaining considered here will be studied axioma- cally. That is, each model will be studied by specifying a set of properties which serve to characterize it uniquely.

Risk, Decision and Rationality

Risk, Decision and Rationality
Author: Bertrand Munier
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 694
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 940094019X

Decision Theory has considerably developed in the late 1970's and the 1980's. The evolution has been so fast and far-r2aching that it has become increasingly difficult to keep track of the new state of the art. After a decade of new contributions, there was a need for an overview' of the field. This book is intended to fill the gap. The reader will find here thirty~nine selected papers which were given at FUR-III, the third international confe rence on the Foundations and applications of Utility, Risk and decision theories, held in Aix-en-Provence in June 1986. An introductory chapter will provide an overview of the main questions raised on the subject since the 17th Century and more particularly so in the last thirty years, as well as some elementary information on the experimental and theoretical results obtained. It is thus hoped that any reader with some basic background in either Economics, Hanagement or Operations Research will be able to read profitably the thirty-nine other chapters. Psychologists, Sociologists, Social Philosophers and other specialists of the social sciences will also read this book with interest, as will high-level practitioners of decision~making and advanced students in one of the abovementioned fields. An expository survey of this volume will be found at the end of the introductory chapter, so that any of the seven parts of the book can be put by the reader in due perspective.