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PROTOSCIENCE Free Energy...Gravity Control...Alternative Science... Weather Control: The Ultimate Weapon of Mass Destruction By Jerry Decker THE FORBIDDEN ARCHAEOLOGIST The Mutation Time Problem for Human Origin By Michael Cremo MEDIA Magical Egypt Series The Popular Ancient Mystery Documentaries Back for Encore By Vanese Mcneill ALTERNATIVE ARCHAEOLOGY Return to Rock Lake Wisconsin's "Sunken Pyramid" Continues to Raise Questions By Frank Joseph ANCIENT MYSTERIES Mysterious Missionaries So, Who Were the Globetrotting Teachers of the Ancients? By Susan B. Martinez, Ph.D. LOST HISTORY The Friar Who Discovered America The Amazing Adventures of Nicholas of Lynne By Steven Sora ALTERNATIVE HISTORY The Writing on the Wall? Uncovering the Trail of Ancients Letters? By William B. Stoecker ANCIENT WISDOM Lost Truth The Enduring Search for the Long-Lost Prisca Theologia By Robert Schoch, Ph.D. THE OTHER SIDE Exploring Purgatory Surprising Possibilities for the Afterlife By Michael E. Tymn OTHER WORLDS Once Upon a Time in Inner Space Locating the Lost Lineage of the Ancient Astronaut Hypothesis By Martin Ruggles DEBUNKING DEBUNKING Self-Fulfilling Skepticism Why Some Researchers Will Not See the Light By Brendan D. Murphy HOLISTIC HEALTH The Miracle of Spontaneous Remission Medicine Can't Explain It ...but It Happens Anyway By Patrick Marsolek ASTROLOGY Vesta: A 'Planetoid'? Understanding Our Solar System's Latest Mystery Member By Julie Loar
Inside this full-color digital edition: PROTOSCIENCE Free Energy...Gravity Control...Alternative Science... Dr. Pollack and the Case for a Fourth Phase of Water By Jerry Decker THE FORBIDDEN ARCHAEOLOGIST A Visit to Angkor Wat, Finally By Michael Cremo ALTERNATIVE ARCHAEOLOGY RETURN to the GREAT SPHINX The Geologist Who Startled the World by ReDating the Sphinx, Finds More Evidence -- It's Even Older Than He Once Thought By Robert Schoch, Ph.D. FORGOTTEN HISTORY Taboo The Curious Burial of Gobekli Tepe By RITA LOUISE, Ph.D. ALTERNATIVE SCIENCE Is the Planet in Midlife Crisis? Getting Old, They Say, Is Not for Sissies By SUSAN B. MARTINEZ, Ph.D. ALTERNATIVE SCIENCE Catastrophism Reconsidered New Evidence Puts Heat on the Uniformitarians By WILLIAM B. STOECKER ANCIENT AMERICA New Light on the 'Burrows Cave Controversy' Could the Debunkers have Gotten Ahead of Themselves? By FRANK JOSEPH LOST HISTORY Strange Saga of the Ramapough Lenape Exploring a Forgotten Chapter in America's Beginnings By STEVEN SORA THE OTHER SIDE Overshadowing Does Creativity Emerge from the World Beyond Our Five Senses? By MICHAEL E. TYMN ANCIENT MYSTERIES The Titans of Baalbek Powerful New Evidence and a Story of 12,000-Year-Old Advanced Engineering By HUGH NEWMAN HOLISTIC HEALTH Can DNA Tell the Whole Story? The Morphogenetic Field & the Future of Our Genes By CHRISTINA SARICH SPIRITUALITY The Synchronicity Phenomenon Exploring the Mysteries of Meaningful Coincidence By PATRICK MARSOLEK ASTROLOGY Saturn in Sagittarius Father Time Visits the Celestial Archer By Julie Loar DVD Emerging Threats & the Bible New Christian Videos Take On Some Popular Alternative Science Controversies By Marsha Oaks
Inside this full-color digital edition: PROTOSCIENCE Free Energy...Gravity Control...Alternative Science... Ezekiel's Wheel and Other Cutting-Edge Developments Jerry Decker THE FORBIDDEN ARCHAEOLOGIST The Buenos Aires Skull By Michael Cremo LOST HISTORY Debate Over the True Home of the Hebrew Lawgiver Still Rages By RAND & ROSE FLEM-ATH ALTERNATIVE SCIENCE In the Beginning Was The Word Were Human Speaking Skills Learned from Higher Powers? By William B. Stoecker ALTERNATIVE ARCHAEOLOGY A Solar-Induced Dark Age? Disturbing Evidence from Ancient Bulgaria By Robert Schoch, Ph.D. ALTERNATIVE ASTRONOMY Life from the Sun? Reviving the Ancient Case for Heliocentricity By Paul V. Young ALTERNATIVE SCIENCE Physics with a Twist Understanding Torsion and the Mystery of Consciousness By Brenden D. Murphy LOST HISTORY 33 The Magic Number Why Is This Number So Important to So Many? By Steven Sora ANCIENT MYSTERIES Exploring Indonesia's Bada Valley Far from the View of All butthe Most Determined Traveler Is One of the Planet's Most Mysterious Locales By David H. Childress ALTERNATIVE SCIENCE Ancient Recordings? Could a Lost Akashic FieldNow Provide Us With a Replay? By Patrick Marsolek PSI The Interdimensional Threat Understanding the Demonic Factor in Crime By Susan B. Martinez, Ph.D. ANCIENT TECHNOLOGY Copper Mining in Ancient America Primitive or Industrial? By Frank Joseph ASTROLOGY The Power of Myth Another Reason Astrology Works By Julie Loar
"The term "macaroni" was once as familiar a label as "punk" or "hipster" is today. In this handsomely illustrated book devoted to notable 18th-century British male fashion, award-winning author and fashion historian Peter McNeil brings together dress, biography, and historical events with the broader visual and material culture of the late 18th century. For thirty years, macaroni was a highly topical word, yielding a complex set of social, sexual, and cultural associations. Pretty Gentlemen is grounded in surviving dress, archival documents, and art spanning hierarchies and genres, from scurrilous caricature to respectful portrait painting. Celebrities hailed and mocked as macaroni include politician Charles James Fox, painter Richard Cosway, freed slave Julius "Soubise," and criminal parson Reverend Dodd. The style also rapidly spread to neighboring countries in cross-cultural exchange, while Horace Walpole, George III, and Queen Charlotte were active critics and observers of these foppish men."--Publisher's website.
Train yourself to interpret dreams, heal the sick or travel out of body. These occult feats defy the logic of our modern world, yet they can be a potent force in your life. The author, a well-known authority on psychic and occult experiences, shows how a knowledge of "Huna," an ancient Hawaiian religion, helps you master feats of occult magic. With this unique guidebook, you can teach yourself the ancient Kahuna techniques. Use them to foresee the future, to increase your wealth, to control the weather and other ways to enrich your life. As the author says, "I want readers to discover their ability to apply some of the psychic secrets employed by the Kahunas."
In the most comprehensive account of this legendary island, Joseph provides compelling evidence based on 20 years of research around the globe that Atlantis was at the root of all subsequent human civilizations.
Science is undergoing an identity crisis! A renown psychologist and biologist diagnoses our age of wishful, magical thinking and blasts out a clarion call for a return to reason and the search for objective knowledge and truth. Fans of Matt Ridley and Nicholas Wade will adore this trenchant meditation and call to action. Science is in trouble. Real questions in desperate need of answers—especially those surrounding ethnicity, gender, climate change, and almost anything related to ‘health and safety’—are swiftly buckling to the fiery societal demands of what ought to be rather than what is. These foregone conclusions may be comforting, but each capitulation to modernity’s whims threatens the integrity of scientific inquiry. Can true, fact-based discovery be redeemed? In Science in an Age of Unreason, legendary professor of psychology and biology, John Staddon, unveils the identity crisis afflicting today’s scientific community, and provides an actionable path to recovery. With intellectual depth and literary flair, Staddon answers pressing questions, including: Is science, especially the science of evolution, a religion? Can ethics be derived from science at all? How sound is social science, particularly surrounding today’s most controversial topics? How can passions be separated from facts? Informed by decades of expertise, Science in an Age of Unreason is a clarion call to rebirth academia as a beacon of reason and truth in a society demanding its unconditional submission.
The spread of the British Empire around the globe made vast changes in the relationship of peoples to places. Because the logistics of colonization varied, countries passed in and out of the empire, some rapidly and others slower or by degrees. Multiculturalism broadened the world’s ability to read the English language and understand and adopt England’s ethics and morals. Into the early twentieth century, the posting of the British army and navy and the establishment of English-style embassies and police forces in remote colonies freed single travelers, especially women and children, of the fear of violence or kidnap. As a result, girls and women found outlets for creativity by exploring unfamiliar lands. In Women's Art of the British Empire, Mary Ellen Snodgrass provides an overview of multiracial arts and crafts from Great Britain’s Empire. Drawing upon primary sources, this volume encompasses a wide variety of artistic accomplishment, such as: sewing and quilting basketry and weaving songwriting and dancing diaries, memoirs, editorials, and speeches Each entry includes a comprehensive bibliography of primary and secondary sources, as well as further readings on the female artists and their respective crafts. With its informative entries and extensive examinations of artistic talent, Women's Art of the British Empire is a valuable resource for students, scholars, and anyone interested in learning about the history of women and their artistic contributions.
King mesmerizes readers with fiction deeply rooted in the sixties, exploring in five interconnected narratives, spanning 1960 to 1999, the haunting legacy of the Vietnam War. "Engaging . . . King's gift of storytelling is rich".--"The Los Angles Times Book Review".
The terms ‘Nordic’ and ‘Scandinavian’ are widely used to refer to the politics, society and culture of Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden. But why have people felt the need to frame things as Nordic and why has the adjective Nordic become so prominent? This book adopts a rhetorical approach, analysing the speech acts which have shaped the meanings of the term. What do the different terms Nordic and Scandinavian have in common, and how have the uses of these terms changed in different historical periods? What accounts for the apparent upsurge in uses of the rhetoric of Nordicness in the 2010s? Drawing on eight case studies of the uses of Nordic and Scandinavian from the nineteenth century to the present day, the book explores the appeal and the flexibility of the rhetoric of Nordicness, in relation to race, openness, gender equality, food, crime fiction, Nordic co-operation and the Nordic model. Arguing that ‘Nordic’ and ‘Scandinavian’ are flexible and contested concepts that have been used in different, often contradictory and inherently political ways, the book suggests that the usage of the term has evolved from a means of creating a cultural community, to forging political co-operation and further to marketing models in politics and popular culture. The rhetorical approach also shows how many of the hallmarks of Nordic political culture, such as the Nordic model, Nordic gender equality or Nordic openness are more recent conceptualisations than usually assumed. As such, the book argues for the need to turn attention away from analysing the different components of Nordicness into studying how, when, and for what purpose different features were made Nordic.