Book Description
Once upon a time, equipped with a solid marriage, driven careers, and a recently finished basement, my husband and I were ready to start a family. Like many 30-something couples, we thought it would be easy. Unfortunately, after nearly 18 months of doing things "the old fashioned way," my husband was diagnosed with a latent birth defect. It rendered us virtually infertile, not to mention devastated and confused.
The remarkable thing about confusion is that it can spur knowledge and strength. Infertility did just that for us. We moved forward to try to have a child with the help of science and technology. Before we could blink, we were in the midst of monumental efforts to finance our baby-making venture, ordering medications on the Internet, and undergoing multiple, sometimes risky, and invasive, procedures. We endured it all for a single chance to have a child of our own.
Pregnancy Wishes & IVF Dreams: A Story & Lessons About Life, Love, & Infertility is a compelling and insightful look at one couple's struggle with male factor infertility and everything that goes with it. From failed attempts at conception, batteries of fertility tests, and a devastating diagnosis, to IVF/ICSI, other treatments, and ultimately the birth of fraternal twin daughters, Pregnancy Wishes & IVF Dreams offers readers a sense of shared experience through a real-time, personal story. The book also provides first-hand insights, guidance, and quotes covering a range of universal issues including dealing with jealousy, great expectations, doctors, risk, finances, and family. Finally, Pregnancy Wishes comes full circle, leaving readers with twelve, invaluable lessons-learned about life, love, infertility, and numerous questions, and challenges in between.
Like an understanding friend, Pregnancy Wishes & IVF Dreams will leave you feelings less alone, and more empowered as you cope with infertility.
Customer Reviews:
a must read, must buy book.......2007-04-11
Pregancy Wishes and IVF Dreams is an honest and touching account of a couples difficulties with conceiving a child. I have not had to experience infertility directly, but I have a sister and a friend who did. I could also relate to and empathize with Kelley's story as the mother of two children. Kelley Taylor's book is an inspirational story about the challenges that life can present to the reader. It's a must read book for anyone who is facing infertiltity as well as those who have a loved one or friend who is experiencing infertility.
Average customer rating:
- Fresh, Original Stories
- SHARP, FUNNY, WONDERFUL
- One of the best short story collections I have read all year
- Wonderfully crafted short fiction . . .
- The best debut collection I've ever read
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You Are Not the One: Stories
Vestal McIntyre
Manufacturer: Carroll & Graf
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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Acqua Calda: A Novel
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Send Me
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The First Verse: A Novel
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From Boys to Men: Gay Men Write About Growing Up
ASIN: 0786714336 |
Book Description
In this debut collection of eight compulsively readable stories, Vestal McIntyre combines honesty and compassion with hilarious dialogue—bringing together the comic milieu of David Sedaris with the spot-on perceptions of Adam Haslett’s You Are Not a Stranger Here. With “ONJ.com,” a young woman in advertising decides she wants a gay man in her life, almost as if she were shopping for a poodle. Unluckily, the gay man she finds, a good-looking and fast-talking freelancer, isn’t as pleasant and “fun” as she had hoped. In the loopy “Dunford,” a lonely, aging architect with a suppressed fascination for female escorts decides impulsively to take the opportunity of his wife’s absence to set up a date. Sadly for Dunford, he realizes too late that his escort doesn’t share his penchant for masturbation in car washes. Quieter notes are sounded in “Foray” about a bookish teenaged recluse discovering an unexpected emotional connection to his family after his mother asks him to read Moby Dick to his young, mentally retarded cousin. And “Nightwalking” centers on a woman sleepwalker whose mother’s death frames the occasion for a rocky family reunion. You Are Not the One marks the auspicious arrival of an exciting new talent.
Customer Reviews:
Fresh, Original Stories.......2005-07-30
Vestal McIntyre has written eight very fine stories here, everyone of which is unique and original. The plots are as different as the kidnapping by teenage hoodlums of a busboy wearing a kangaroo suit to lure customers to the restaurant where he is employed to a man, no longer in love with his very successful wife, who hires a prostitute to have sex with him while driving his Mercedes through an automatic carwash. Mr. McIntyre is very wonderful with words and can do a lot with a little: "She looked at his tired gray eyes and lipless mouth. He had a habit of chewing on the inside of his cheeks." Another example: "The cousins slept scattered around the downstairs like shoes on the floor of a messy closet". And drinking brandy is like "swallowing candlelight."
While all eight stories are excellent, the last two are quite brilliant. In "Foray" the narrator Ray reads MOBY DICK to a young relative, Vance, who has Down syndrome. The story overwhelms the reader with its compassion as the young Vance is touched by hearing this great epic read aloud. When the narrator finishes MOBY DICK as the Pequod and its crew were "swallowed by the sea," "Tears streamed down Vance's face and fell into the sand. His hands moved from the armrest to cling to my [Ray's] arm as if there were something I could do for all those men. For him it had been not tragedy, but disaster." In the final story, "Nightwalking," three adult children for the first time after the death of their mother all get together with their father and each other. This little gathering sounds too much like family get-togethers too many of us have experienced. One sister is much more welcome if she shows up with her husband and child, rather than alone. A brother brings a new woman friend to meet his family for the first time and gets turned on by the idea of sleeping with her in his old bedroom from childhood. And, of course, somebody brings up a dicey topic at dinner which offends another sibling. Sound familiar?
Mr. MCIntyre in this his first collection writes stories that both delight the reader and leave him all the more wise for having read them.
SHARP, FUNNY, WONDERFUL.......2005-07-04
This collection offers the kind of rewarding experience readers desire and so seldom get. The story "Sahara," about the mistaken-identity kidnapping of a boy wearing a kangaroo costume, is just one example of how original, touching, and wildly entertaining this book is. Vestal McIntyre is a major talent, and YOU ARE NOT THE ONE is one of the sharpest, funniest and most well-crafted story collections I've ever read. I highly recommend it.
One of the best short story collections I have read all year.......2005-05-05
Vestal McIntyre has created the most eccentric characters and bizarre situations in this collection of darkly funny short stories. He writes about things that people could relate to, yet he adds a touch of peculiar situations that make the stories dark and compelling at the same time. Some stories were written in second-person narrative and that gave the stories a more unique voice. My favorite story is "ONJ.com." I like to think of the aforementioned story as Will and Grace with a twist. I also loved "Nightwalking," "Disability," and "Binge." I enjoyed entering McIntyre's world with this fascinating collection and I look forward to reading more of his stuff in the future.
Wonderfully crafted short fiction . . ........2005-01-12
Vestal McIntire's world of characters is one well worth visiting. He has an astute vision of the human condition and manages a focus of modern living with clarity and humor that is biting and wise. ONJ.com, Dunford and Disability are my favorites.
The best debut collection I've ever read.......2004-12-02
A couple months ago, I got ahold of an advanced reader's copy of this short story collection. And I devoured it in three days. It's brilliant, and I have been telling everyone I can that Vestal McIntyre is the next big thing. There are several debut collections that You Are Not the One reminded me of, including David Leavitt's Family Dancing, Michael Chabon's A Model World, and Robert Bingham's Pure Slaughter Value. But McIntyre's book is vastly superior to all three. Like those writers (and Lorrie Moore, his closest literary relative), his prose is gorgeous and funny and stylistically unique. But his immensely original characters are so sympathetic--even when they are behaving badly--that by the end of each story, they feel like close relatives or old friends. You love them, forgive, and mourn their absense. I honestly don't understand how anyone could not love, could not respect, could not enthuse about this book. It is best debut collection I've ever read.
Book Description
A Different Love Story
Average customer rating:
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Fifty Ways to Lose Your Lunch or 'Not THAT Restaurant, Robert': Stories of a Food Safety Consultant that Could Save Your Relationship, Your Restaurant (If You Own One) and Maybe Your Life
Dotty Heady
Manufacturer: Transformata Publishing LLC
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ASIN: B00006LJ62
Release Date: 2002-09-16 |
Book Description
Dotty Heady, Ed.D., is a food safety consultant, nationally known for her `teaching' audits. She serves as both administrator and faculty member at Sullivan University and specializes in food safety sanitation training and contamination prevention. Her Fifty Ways to Lose Your Lunch provides practical information for food service operators that can serve as a valuable training tool for all employees. If you don't want your business to be in the obituary column of `deceased' restaurants, you'll want to read this. And, if you're a member of the consuming public, the tips and opinions of this food safety expert can guide your choice in eating establishments, preserve your health, and maybe save your life.
Sullivan University eDocs are published by Transformata Publishing in Louisville, Kentucky (USA). Sullivan University eDocs are available only at Amazon.com. For special pricing on multiple copies, please contact info@transformata.com.
Download Description
Dotty Heady, Ed.D., is a food safety consultant, nationally known for her 'teaching' audits. She serves as both administrator and faculty member at Sullivan University and specializes in food safety sanitation training and contamination prevention. Her Fifty Ways to Lose Your Lunch provides practical information for food service operators that can serve as a valuable training tool for all employees. If you don't want your business to be in the obituary column of 'deceased' restaurants, you'll want to read this. And, if you're a member of the consuming public, the tips and opinions of this food safety expert can guide your choice in eating establishments, preserve your health, and maybe save your life.
Sullivan University eDocs are published by Transformata Publishing in Louisville, Kentucky (USA). Sullivan University eDocs are available only at Amazon.com. For special pricing on multiple copies, please contact info@transformata.com.
Book Description
This digital document is an article from The Sporting News, published by Sporting News Publishing Co. on August 19, 2005. The length of the article is 1692 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: Jones has a story you've got to love: it's not cool to be a fan when you're in this business. But I happily admit this: I root for Todd Jones, one of the most special regular dudes in sports.(BASEBALL)
Author: Stan McNeal
Publication:
The Sporting News (Magazine/Journal)
Date: August 19, 2005
Publisher: Sporting News Publishing Co.
Volume: 229
Issue: 33
Page: 58(2)
Distributed by Thomson Gale
Book Description
A stunning blend of visionary storytelling and majestic prose,
The Mark of Ran is a new masterpiece of imaginative fiction. In this epic adventure, Paul Kearney records the voyages of a reluctant hero, a band of outcasts, and a quest into the unknown no one has ever dared before…
In a world abandoned by its Creator, an ancient race once existed–one with powers mankind cannot imagine. Some believe they were the last of the angels. Others think they were demons. Rol Cortishane was raised in a remote fishing village with no idea of his true place in the world. But in his veins runs the blood of this long-forgotten race and he shares their dangerous destiny. Driven from home, accused of witchcraft and black magic, Rol takes refuge in the brooding tower sanctuary of the enigmatic Michal Psellos. There Rol is trained in the assassin’s craft and tutored by the beautiful but troubled Rowen. It’s no accident that Rol and Rowen have been brought together, but the truth about their past is a secret they will have to fight to discover. Now they’ve set their sights across the sea in search of the Hidden City and an adventure that will make them legends…if it doesn’t kill them first.
Customer Reviews:
Good read!.......2007-02-17
I've been meaning to read some of Paul Kearney's works for some time now. This author is not widely known in North America, but he's been on the European scene for quite a while. Even better, I've only heard good things about him. Last but not least, Kearney comes with the Steven Erikson seal of approval! All in all, the odds appeared to be in favor of my liking Kearney's novels.
This author is known for the brevity of his books. And in this day and age, fans are screaming for epic fantasy works of titanic proportions, or so it seems. Hence, Kearney's novels are a far cry from the "doorstopper" works which have made Tad Williams, Robert Jordan, Steven Erikson, Peter F. Hamilton and George R. R. Martin famous. As as such, can the man compete with authors like these? Well, the answer is yes! Believe me when I tell you that great things come in small packages!
The Mark of Ran immediately grabs hold of you and won't let go. The pace is fast and crisp, with a narrative that flows effortlessly. Much like a thriller, the novel is a page-turning reading experience. With relatively short chapters, you always tell yourself that you'll only read one more. And then you reach the end of the book!
One would tend to believe that a 400-page novel would be rather linear and simplistic. Nothing could be further from the truth. This is a work that echoes with depth and an assured knowledge of the sea.
Unlike writers like Jordan, Erikson and company, Kearney doesn't go overboard (no pun intended!) with secondary characters and sub-plots. As a result, his main characters are more fleshed out more rapidly, and the novel moves along without a glitch.
Umer appears to be a far-reaching world, even if Kearney only offers us a glimpse in this opening chapter. Something tells me that the worldbuilding will continue to impress me as subsequent volumes are released.
The storylines don't necessarily offer anything new, but Kearney's style is definitely his own. The high seas and other naval elements make The Mark of Ran something special.
Hopefully this review will pique people's curiosity enough for them to give Paul Kearney a chance. Especially in the USA and Canada, where he remains little known. This is an author worth discovering! It's with great pleasure that I'll now read the second volume in The Sea Beggars sequence, This Forsaken Earth.
In my opinion, The Mark of Ran makes a fine addition to any fantasy collection.[...]
An excellent start to a series.......2007-02-07
I picked this novel up never having heard of Kearney before, and I have to say I enjoy his writing. I have read in some other reviews people have put him down for using common themes in fantasy. Unfortunately these themes have been used since time immemorial. You might as well scold Tolkien for ripping off Finnish folk tales.
Kearney brings a new twist to the old themes with a gritty hero who isn't a great person, in fact is relatively amoral. Kearney's writing is very stark and graphic, the hero doesn't always win, or get the girl. I get the feeling also that he has served time in both the military and on the ocean. His imagery has a lot in common with Glen Cook's Black Company series, in that it doesn't gloss over the harshness of life, whether fantasy or otherwise. His writing is spare clean and powerfull, and I relly felt immersed in his imaginary world, which is really why I shell out my hard-earned cash for a book in the first place.
I have the second book which I will be cracking open and I am hoping that it is as well written and entertaining as the first.
Lucky to get 3.......2007-01-11
Lets put it this way: The book sits unfinished collecting dust on my coffee table with about thirty-five pages left. I will not completely bash it, for it is an honorable introduction for some to sci-fi, but for those who are veterans of the genre, don't expect too much.
I picked up the book because I was interested at some 'On-the-sea' writing and was convinced by other reviews that this book was just what I was looking for. Well, thankfully it is pretty easy reading, because I did not want to spend much time on it. I will finish it one of these days, but I am not excited to find out what happens to the very predictable storyline...which is full of outrageous coincidences. For instance: a ship in the distance breaks apart on the rocks, all sailors are lost except for one man, the same man Rol, the lead character, befriended in a bar two years ago. Its a bit wishy-washy and not epic in the least.
Beginners only.
The Mark of RAN... a great beginning!.......2006-11-26
An enticing fantasy/adventure by Paul Kearney.
When I started to read this book I had some initial concerns that it may have been meant for an adolescent audience; such is not the case. Although the story seems to begin rather tamely, the main character (Rol) quickly becomes engrossed in a story of travel, intrigue and combat; then add to this some sexual innuendos, betrayals and a liberal dose of magic, and you have just about everything anyone could want in a good adult fantasy novel.
The quality of writing is good, however it is the story line, with its many twists and surprises, that really make this book hard to put down.
All in all, a excellent start to (hopefully) a ongoing series of entertaining novels. The second book is coming out soon and I'm looking forward to being able to continue to follow the story of Rol. 5 Stars.
Entertaining Sea Tale.......2006-08-17
First off, Paul's theory of the Gods abandoning humanity is an interesting one, but not new. He gains originality on creating a different version of shape-shifting creatures.
I would have loved to see more details about this new race though.
There is little in way of plot of the story, but lots of adventure. The description was a bit light, but enough where I can picture most of the characters. But, the scenery was fairly well shaped.
Now to the characters.
Rol- I liked him, but there was little depth or emotional growth. I did not think his wanting to kill Psellos genuine enough. He is at least quick-thinking, and not whiny like a lot of heroes his age.
I did not feel that he aged properly, I think Paul rushed through much of his learning and exprience...
He did not show enough of Rol's powers, or why he was different than other Heroes.
Rowen-I was attracted by her strength, her will power, and her character. This person was well done, and had lots of emotions. I was rooting for her, more than Rol. Yet, not enough was done about her either. I wished to read more about how she became the feared Prince killing machine she turned out to be.
Psellos-- your typical "villain" character. He's nothing special, but, darned, if I would've loved to see more of his ancient blood to be revealed later on or talked about here.
Action--it was decent. The sea scenes were worthy of many sea-going movies, and even equal to Master and Commander: the Far Side of the World.
If you love the sea, or love sea-action--this is the book for you!
Not bad over all, but not great.
Average customer rating:
- How many Frankowski's?
- An adolescent's Mary Sue fantasy; complete drivel.
- Great, Classic Series
- Best read at the bottom of a mineshaft, during a power failure while wearing a blindfold
- There is no one named Conrad in this book. (spoilers)
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Conrad's Time Machine (Conrad)
Leo Frankowski
Manufacturer: Baen
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
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Similar Items:
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Lord Conrad's Crusade
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Conrad Stargard: The Radiant Warrior
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Conrad's Lady (The Conrad Stargard)
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The Flying Warlord (Adventures of Conrad Stargard, Book 4)
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The Fata Morgana
ASIN: 0743435575 |
Customer Reviews:
How many Frankowski's?.......2005-11-25
I really do like this book; however, it suffers from the same weakness that all the "Conrad" books do. It has a great underlying story and very competent writing in some sections. In other sections, the writing is dreadful. It's as if a high quality professional writer shared the task of writing with a not very capable junior high student. There isn't even much integration between the pieces. Some other authors have good books and terrible ones - Frankowski is the only author I've seen who accomplishes both in the same book time after time.
Interesting problems are posed - e.g. "How can the existence of time travel bring about its own creation?" and then the text wanders off into inanity (Let's bring in an extremely knowledgeable alien to overcome the problem - an incredibly weak "deus ex machina".) Diversions, such as the erotic scenes, are set up, only to miserably fail after a promising start. The resolution is anything but erotic. Come on, such scenes are inserted to divert attention from a book's weaknesses. That's partially because it's almost impossible to do these scenes badly. Frankowski manages it, though.
It would be really great to have a "Conrad" book with a high quality of writing through the whole book.
An adolescent's Mary Sue fantasy; complete drivel........2005-10-18
The worst thing about Conrad's Time Machine is the first couple of chapters; they're actually rather good, and they imply that the book might be worth buying. This would be a mistake, because the quality of the book rapidly drops from there (from "promising" to "claptrap" and below), and as for the plot- well, there isn't one.
The characters... initially have potential. But once the "story" gets under way - well, it isn't really a story, as much as a wish-fulfillment fantasy of the main characters getting laid, getting laid, getting laid, living well, getting laid.
Maybe Frankowski needs to get laid. Maybe then he could stop *writing* about it with the fervent intensity of a teenager whose right forearm is noticeably larger than his left. As though this isn't made clear, there's one scene where the first-person main character is forcibly raped by several women and seems to enjoy the experience. Come *on*.
But no, it's not *just* sex that the characters do. They have a great life in other areas... and do nothing of real interest. Sure, *being* them would be nice, but reading about them becomes mind-numbingly tedious in rapid time. The characters are godlike in their superiority and in how everyone else seems to worship them; never are they in any danger to speak of, never do they meet anything remotely resembling a challenge. One of the chapter titles sums it up nicely: "Playboys in paradise."
Unfortunately, there's no plot. There's an excessive amount of sex, but no bad guys, no plot, no story. Frankowski doesn't exactly keep his wish-fulfilment fantasies out of his writing at the best of times, but in this one he seems to have dropped all restraint.
On the other hand, I've had difficulty finding much in his other work that justifies more than two stars. "He can do better", in the case of Leo Frankowski, really isn't saying much.
Perhaps a better way of putting it would be to say that it would be very, very hard for anyone to write a book worse than this drivel.
Great, Classic Series.......2005-08-15
This series is a real favorite of mine. Great story line, great characters, and unique ideas. Now (as of Summer 2005) the latest Conrad book, "Conrad's Crusade" is now available from Leo Frankowski, on line! It is solid action on par with the best in the series. An e-copy is available at (...) and I recommend it highly.
Best read at the bottom of a mineshaft, during a power failure while wearing a blindfold.......2005-07-12
Not absolutely awful . . .if the author were a 14 year old boy with moderate writing skills. Rather embarrassing for a grown man to publish novels populated by nothing but "Mary Sue". John Lange at least had the decency used a pseudonym,though sadly he too is still writing.
If you don't know,the original "Mary Sue" was Lieutenant Mary Sue . . . "the youngest Lieutenant in the fleet -- only fifteen and a half years old" . . .in Paula Smith's "A Trekkie's Tale," in her 1974 fanzine Menagerie #2.
Basically Mary Sue (or in Frankowski's case, Marsia Zuzwana) is a character (or characters) that directly represent the authors own ego/wish fulfilment and generally sucks the life out of the story like an infestation of tapeworms.
However, as Frankowski's target audience is adolescent males, the lack of anything resembling a character is probably going to be unnoticed and unlamented.
Frankowski's writing is new and original. Unfortunately, what is new is not original and what is original is not new.
I suspect LF is an environmental engineer, since he seems so skilled at recycling cr*p.
There are MANY better time travel stories out there --- H. Beam Piper's Paratime stories for example.
Try LF out at the library first and if you like him, there are many many used copies of these books.
There is no one named Conrad in this book. (spoilers).......2005-03-21
The cover shows a man at a complex battle station facing off against dinosaurs AND a future-city with spaceships. Neither of these are in the book.
Even though this book was written by a man, there seemed to be a large misandrystic (?) streak. After the first quarter or so, women did practically everything, with a hidden subtext that they did it better than most any of the men could.
The main character marries one of these uberfrauen named Barbara. Why, I don't know. She's good in the sack, but due to some of the plot devices he has access to literally thousands of woman who are eager to get him in the sack. Barbara is a stuck-up prig who keeps thousands and thousands of secrets from him.
Continuing with the "men and their feelings aren't important," at one point the main character is raped by three women. Literally raped, he's tied up, handcuffed, ball gag in his mouth, and they have their way with him. But it's OK:
"I don't think that the women involved deserved twenty years in jail apiece for their crimes, which is what would have happened to three men back in the States, if they had done to a woman what these three did to me."
Why not?! Rape is rape, no matter who the victim is and who the rapists are.
Oh, and the rape was actually part of the surprise bachelor party organized by the main character's best friend. With friends like that...
The end of the book just happens with no climax or resolution and more questions left asked then answered. Nowhere in the book does it mention being part of a series and I didn't even know it was until I came to this site.
Book Description
Professor Tambiah is one of the leading anthropologists of the day, particularly known for his penetrating and scholarly studies of Buddhism. In this accessible and illuminating book he deals with the classical opposition of magic with science and religion. He reviews the great debates in classical Judaism, early Greek science, Renaissance philosophy, the Protestant Reformation, and the scientific revolution, and then reconsiders the three major interpretive approaches to magic in anthropology: the intellectualist and evolutionary theories of Tylor and Frazer, Malinowski's functionalism, and Lévy-Bruhl's philosophical anthropology, which posited a distinction between mystical and logical mentalities. He follows with a wide-ranging and suggestive discussion of rationality and relativism and concludes with a discussion of new thinking in the history and philosophy of science, suggesting fresh perspectives on the classical opposition between science and magic.
Customer Reviews:
Tambiah's internal framework of science schemata.......2004-04-15
Concerning Tambiah's inquiry into science in this book:
In "Magic, Science, Religion, and the Scope of Rationality," Harvard anthropologist Stanley Tambiah examines the logic and sociology of scientific inquiry. Tambiah identifies (see figure on page 141) the internal framework of scientific inquiry as a collection of relations between, on the one hand, bodies of specialized knowledge (rectangles) and, -- on the other, subdisciplines, specializations with conventions and "rules of the game" (ovals) accepted by peer groups and professional associations.
Tambiah suggests
"that the Western conception of science as a labeled, self-conscious and reflexive activity of experimentation, measurement and verification matured in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries in Europe, that at this time there was a decisive separating off of Christianity (Protestantism) from science, and the repudiation of a third realm of activity as magic. . . . A very critical precondition of modern science was the contribution of early Greece. According to the classicists it was in early Greece that the systematization of the rules of demonstration and proof was begun, and the marking off of nature as the domain of regular laws of causality was achieved (p. 140)."
While Tambiah's historical explanation situates science in relation to magic and religion, the chart on page 141 is schematically useful to orient the internal framework of science in relation to external frameworks (of special contemporary interest), namely to 1) technological applications and interventions in society, 2) the social construction of knowledge / cosmological and ideological belief systems, 3) soico-political and economic interests in society, and 4) the impact of "external history." To gain useful purchase on the sociology of science, see this chart / figure.
Books:
- Puttering about in a Small Land
- Red Meat Cures Cancer: A Novel
- Red Weather: A Novel
- Set This House on Fire
- Seven Indicators That Move Markets: Forecasting Future Market Movements for Profitable Investments
- Somewhere Off the Coast of Maine: A Novel
- Steelhead River Journal: Skagit-Sauk (WA) (Steelhead River Journal)
- Tarzan The Terrible
- The Ambidextrist
- The Apprentice Lover: A Novel
Books Index
Books Home
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