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- The "Living Proof" Directory of Cher
- FAB!
- A must have for all Cher fans
- I just ordered the book
- BUY IT NOW!!!!!!
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The Cher Scrapbook
Mary Anne Cassata
Manufacturer: Citadel
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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Cher: If You Believe
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The First Time
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Cher: Extravaganza Live at the Mirage 1992
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Chastity
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Good Times
ASIN: 0806523433 |
Customer Reviews:
The "Living Proof" Directory of Cher.......2005-11-12
The Cher Scrapbook was an item on my Amazon Wishlist until my friend Chellie bought it for me for my Birthday. I'm forever grateful to her, for doing this. That's what I love about Amazon Wishlists! And, this book is a gift that keeps on giving, because it's packed with oodles of Photos of Cher & loads of information I never knew about. I've been a Cher fan since 1980 and haven't learned so much about Cher until 2005! Seriously, Mary Anne Cassata talks about Cher's wigs, collectible toys, Cher impersonators, fan clubs, rare & out of print music and all kinds of interesting stuff, including Cher's most personal quotes & info on her romances. There's just so much to learn about Cher, it's not even funny. And, many times, the fans & media turn a deaf ear to the real woman behind Cher, stalking her for publicity photos & tabloid trash. If they only knew the real woman behind the face...
This is the List of Contents (Chapter-Wise):
iX- Preface
01- The Cher Basics
02- Cherilyn Sarkisian LaPierre
03- The Sixties: We Got You, Babe
04- The Seventies: Cher-Superstar
05- The Eighties: Unmasked on the Big Screen
06- The Unmistakeable Cher Style
07- The Nineties: Turning Back Time
08- The Top Ten Cher Myths: Truth Or Hype?
09- Do You Believe In Love? The Men in Cher's Life
10- Cher on Film
11- The Top Ten Cher Scandals
12- What People Say About Cher
13- Cher Speaks Out
14- Cher Trivia - Including the Ultimate Quiz
15- Millenium Cher: Do You Believe?
16- Cher: Astrologically Speaking
17- Collecting Cher
18- The Cher Society
19- The 2000 Cher Convention Premiere
Appendix 1: Discography
Appendix 2: Cher Singles Released in the USA and Canada
Appendix 3: Sonny & Cher: The Singles
Appendix 4: Sonny & Cher: The Albums
Appendix 5: Cher Guest Vocals on Other Artists' Albums and Movie Soundtracks
Acknowledgements
About the Author
When my package arrived in the mail, I wasn't ready for such a thick carton. And the book itself is quite big, measuring at 8.5" X 10.75" and exactly .5" thick. That's quite good for the price! Due to the weight of the book and the glossy cover, it's easy to drop the item while reading it, which can crease the cover or pages. I haven't dropped mine, but I'm saying it as a precaution. The Cher Scrapbook is a unique conversation piece or coffee table book, because it will certainly win over the reader with one look. Let me get one thing straight. I'm not one for tabloid trash & being a paparazzi toward a celeb, but I did enjoy the much "lesser-seen" photos of Cher without her wigs and makeup. She's a normal woman like anyone else, with a 40 year career to back up her life-story. Mary Anne Cassata knows Cher personally, so I don't mind reading the info from a 2nd party.
There are minor errors in the book (you find them yourself). I don't want to be a spoiler. The photos alone make this book worth owning...and it's a great gift for any Cher fan, old & young alike. The book has 207 pages with writing or images on them. I recommend you buy the book brand new, rather than 2nd hand. It's a high-gloss and looks pretty impressive. Order it for yourself and you'll agree, this book is a fantastic addition to any Cher fan's Memorabilia or book collection. I also recommend Cher's Autobiography "The First Time", in hard or softcover.
FAB!.......2005-10-23
The most greatest Cher bio has arrived with colorful pics and words by Mary Cassata. I surely appeariate her putting this total for all of her rightful Cher fans, like myself, cause it was fab. I even used this book for a powerpoint project I did in school in the 12th grade. And my teacher was at an aww when she looked over the book she picked up a copy herself.
A must have for all Cher fans.......2005-10-19
Absolutely amazing, loads of information and many HQ photos
I just ordered the book.......2005-02-23
Hey Guys! I'm a huge Russian Cher fan from Saint-Petersburg and just ordered this book at Amazon.com! WOOHOOO! I am so excited!!! I just can't control myself and overcome with emotions! I love the one and only Cher!!! I believe! I can't wait to get this book!!! I'll definitely 'cher' all my thoughts with you!
BUY IT NOW!!!!!!.......2005-02-04
If you're a Cher Lover you should already have this collection of pictures, info and facts about the greatest Diva of all time. It's really cheap for having tons & tons of pictures inside. I highly 100% recommend it!
Amazon.com
Nonzero, from New Republic writer Robert Wright, is a difficult and important book--well worth reading--addressing the controversial question of purpose in evolution. Using language suggesting that natural selection is a designer's tool, Wright inevitably draws the conclusion that evolution is goal-oriented (or at least moves toward inevitable ends independently of environmental or contingent variables).
The underlying reason that non-zero-sum games wind up being played well is the same in biological evolution as in cultural evolution. Whether you are a bunch of genes or a bunch of memes, if you're all in the same boat you'll tend to perish unless you are conducive to productive coordination.... Genetic evolution thus tends to create smoothly integrated organisms, and cultural evolution tends to create smoothly integrated groups of organisms.
Admittedly, it's as hard to think clearly about natural selection as it is to think about God, but that makes it just as important to acknowledge our biases and try to exclude them from our conclusions. It is this that makes Nonzero potentially unsatisfying to the scientifically literate. Time after time we've seen thinkers try to find in biological evolution a "drive toward complexity" that might explain all sorts of other phenomena from economics to spirituality. Some authors, like Teilhard de Chardin, have much to offer the careful reader who takes pains to read metaphorically. Others--legions of cranks--provide nothing but opaque diatribes culminating in often-bizarre assertions proven to nobody but the author. Wright is much closer to de Chardin along this axis; his anthropological scholarship is particularly noteworthy, and his grasp of world history is excellent. Unfortunately, he has the advocate's willingness to blind himself to disagreeable facts and to muddle over concepts whose clarity would be poisonous to his positions: try to pin him down on what he means by complexity, for example. Still, his thesis that human cultures are historically striving for cooperative, nonzero-sum situations is heartening and compelling; even though it's not supported by biology, it's not knocked down, either. If the reader can work around the undefined assumptions, Wright's charm and obvious interest in planetary survival make Nonzero a worthy read. If the first chapter's title--"The Ladder of Cultural Evolution"--makes you cringe, the last one--"You Call This a God?"--will make you smile. --Rob Lightner
Book Description
In his bestselling
The Moral Animal, Robert Wright applied the principles of evolutionary biology to the study of the human mind. Now Wright attempts something even more ambitious: explaining the direction of evolution and human history–and discerning where history will lead us next.
In
Nonzero: The Logic of Human Destiny, Wright asserts that, ever since the primordial ooze, life has followed a basic pattern. Organisms and human societies alike have grown more complex by mastering the challenges of internal cooperation. Wright's narrative ranges from fossilized bacteria to vampire bats, from stone-age villages to the World Trade Organization, uncovering such surprises as the benefits of barbarian hordes and the useful stability of feudalism. Here is history endowed with moral significance–a way of looking at our biological and cultural evolution that suggests, refreshingly, that human morality has improved over time, and that our instinct to discover meaning may itself serve a higher purpose. Insightful, witty, profound,
Nonzero offers breathtaking implications for what we believe and how we adapt to technology's ongoing transformation of the world.
Customer Reviews:
Nice job!.......2007-09-09
The book could have been better organized, the tone was somewhat grating, and some of the ideas fell flat, but I still rate this 5/5 stars, because in one book the author makes a convincing case that cultural evolution is inexorable and that with enough time it is inevitible that evolution would produce a species capable of culture. Way to go!
Antidote Against Fear.......2007-08-04
This book deserves more exposure to create momentum towards more positive interaction among different religions, societies, cultures and nation states.
It's a good antidote against the fear, uncertainty and doubt (FUD) used to isolate, stigmatise and demonise.
Robert Wright is also contradiction in terms, since his demeanor is quite negative while he talks of positive change being manifest in history. In his own words, "grim inspiration" is what he offers...you can download the video of his TED talk.
He's also probably one of the few proponents for evolution who actually dare to make some argument for the existence of a higher being.
Most evolutionists are just as fundamentalist in their denial of a higher being (in the context of a "beginning" and the free will of intelligent beings), as many Christians are horrified at discussing evolution (in the context of biology). Both sides seem to have a compelling need to believe, their reasons or their faith, to the total exclusion of the other.
It will benefit society as a whole if you read this book.......2007-03-20
This is an excellent book. Basically the premise is that natural selection tends to favor non-zero sum activity on both a biological and cultural level. Wright is not only a visionary thinker but also a great writer and teacher. This stuff could be very hard to grasp, but he does a great job of making the subject easily accessible to anyone with a decent understanding of natural selection.
Specialists and scientists can assuredly point to specific examples that contradict Wright's theory, but as a whole it seems like a pretty solid theory with alot of supporting evidence throughout history. Things are never black and white, so nonzero-sumness may not be the end-all-be-all explanation for the arrow of history, but it sure seems like a pretty large piece of the puzzle. The great thing about it, like natural selection, is that it just makes a whole lot of sense. Understanding the inter-related nature of the world might be the real key to our progress/survival as a species, and Nonzero is as good a place as any to start.
On a side note: to truly maximize the enjoyment of this book, go to Wright's website Bloggingheads.tv and watch one of his dialogues. He has a very dry personality that can be incredibly witty at times. I could hear his voice while reading this book and it made his quirky little jokes infinitely more amusing.
PS it's nice to know that some Presidents actually used to take an interest in books like this.
What about the environment?.......2007-01-04
Mr. Wright knows how to write, of course. His witty and off-handy way of explaining things and of finding connections hidden to most other mortal beings is almost unparalleled (if that were the only aspect to rate, it would be a 5). However, I found most disturbing the fact that he seems to dismiss or not address (on purpose?) the effect his (quite well argued) linear o destined history has had on the environment. He tells a lot of stories on how humankind has evolved from hunter/gatherers towards capitalism and not once (or perhaps only once) says he something about the dire consequences this has had oh-so-many-times on natural resources, biodiversity, cultural diversity, etc. Perhaps we are doomed (blessed?) to become all capitalists, but we should not succumb to a Greek-tragedy type of historicism. Mr. Wright: how much are we able, according to your hypotheses, to control our fate? If we are going to be capitalists, let us hope we will be able to develop at least a type of capitalism, that, contrary to your book, will have in mind that this is the only planet we have (sorry for the cliché, but its true!) and that the trend we are following will destroy it utterly sooner than later, no matter what.
The End of History ?.......2007-01-04
At one level, this seems like an unfashionable foray into old, well-worn territory: History has a direction and, yes, something like a purpose; the nation-state will crumble in favour of supra-national government; the material superstructure of society changes the way we think and interact. Marx might well be turning in his grave. But to buttress his seemingly unscientific propositions, Wright marshalls an impressive array of very scientific arguments and evidence. The whole approach taken by the author is - at least to a non-expert layperson like me - quite startling: He sees cultural evolution - which include material advancement and information technology - as a LOGICAL AND NECESSARY OUTGROWTH OF ORGANIC EVOLUTION ! And the dynamic by which this is achieved? The logic of non-zero summness, ie, interactions resulting in equal gain; the growing complexity of a globalised world is tending towards positive gains for all. Is this, then, the End of History ?
Book Description
This digital document is an article from First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life, published by Institute on Religion and Public Life on August 1, 2000. The length of the article is 1878 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: NONZERO: THE LOGIC OF HUMAN DESTINY.(Review) (book review)
Author: William A. Dembski
Publication:
First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life (Refereed)
Date: August 1, 2000
Publisher: Institute on Religion and Public Life
Page: 46
Article Type: Book Review
Distributed by Thomson Gale
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Nonzero: The Logic of Human Destiny.(Review): An article from: Independent Review
Pierre Lemieux
Manufacturer: Independent Institute
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ASIN: B0008HO1UA
Release Date: 2005-07-28 |
Book Description
This digital document is an article from Independent Review, published by Independent Institute on January 1, 2001. The length of the article is 1954 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: Nonzero: The Logic of Human Destiny.(Review)
Author: Pierre Lemieux
Publication:
Independent Review (Refereed)
Date: January 1, 2001
Publisher: Independent Institute
Volume: 5
Issue: 3
Page: 460
Article Type: Book Review
Distributed by Thomson Gale
Book Description
James Trefil takes the reader on a thrilling tour across the borders of current scientific knowledge-from astronomy to genetics, from information technology to cosmology, the great contested questions that preoccupy researchers today and will become headlines tomorrow. In elegant, witty three-page summations, Dr. Trefil "makes sense of science for the rest of us" (Washington Post).
Customer Reviews:
Still relevant and interesting ten years after publication.......2006-09-03
Having read Trefil's Are We Unique? A Scientist Explores the Unparalleled Intelligence of the Human Mind (1997) and his Human Nature: A Blueprint for Managing the Earth--by People, for People (2004) I was pleased to come across this volume published in 1996. Trefil is an engaging writer with a gift for making scientific ideas accessible to the general reader.
The "101 Things," which amount to 101 mini essays on scientific subjects, are organized into eight chapters ranging from the physical sciences through biology to technology. Trefil is by education a physicist and by inclination a science generalist.
He is also opinionated, which I think puts him one level above those writers who are loath to express an opinion for fear of being wrong or of offending some group or persons. Sometimes Trefil's opinions are surprising, most notably his view that the case for global warming as caused by human activities has not yet been made. Or when he opts for an earth that is managed for the benefit and convenience of humans beings with only secondary regard for preserving natural environments.
The first chapter is entitled "The Top Ten Problems in Science," the first of which is "Why Is There Something Rather than Nothing." This is really not a problem in science; this striking question more properly belongs in the realm of philosophy. At any rate, Trefil doesn't attempt to answer the question. Instead he writes about the origin of the universe, the Big Bang, about quantum uncertainty in which it is seen that the vacuum of space is not so vacuous as was once thought.
In most of the essays--which incidentally average around a tidy thousand words each--Trefil gives his view on how the problem will play out. In some cases however his conclusion is a bit fuzzy, as it is in the essay "Will We Ever Understand Consciousness?" (pp. 15-17)
First he doesn't define consciousness, which is often a major failing whenever the subject arises. He does say the "debate" is over what "it means for a human being...to think, to feel emotions, to have a subjective experience of the world." If this is the question of consciousness, then the question is one that will never be answered since it is hopelessly subjective. It is like trying to explain to someone who has been blind from birth what the color "red" looks like.
Usually consciousness is defined as awareness or self-awareness or as an identification with the self. It isn't just one question. The question of self-awareness is separate from the question of awareness of the external world and separate from the question of self-identity. Lumping them together as Trefil and many others do just confuses the issue. His answer ("My own guess is that consciousness will turn out to be an emergent property of complex systems") is one that I would agree with; but I wonder if Trefil really appreciates the implication of his answer when he hopes (against Francis Crick's view) that "human beings will be found to be something more than a 'vast assembly of nerve cells and their associated molecules.'" (p. 17) I wish he had speculated on what that "more" that might be. One senses that the mysterian in Trefil's soul is yearning to be out and about, but that Trefil's sense of (scientific) propriety is keeping him under lock and key. Maybe if and when Trefil writes his memoirs we'll know how he really feels.
By the way, speaking of fuzzy logic, there is an essay on the subject entitled "Where Next with Fuzzy Logic?" on page 324.
I also want to take issue with Trefil's statement that "only a relatively small range of values of phenomena like the gravitational force or electrical charge will allow the possibility of life." (p. 54) This idea (often found coupled with the so-called "anthropic principle") is really something like the "anthropic arrogant delusion." Life as we know it, of course, probably requires the familiar range of values; however, life in general, in the widest sense of the word, may exist in conditions we can't even imagine.
Despite some quibbles, Trefil's book is a most interesting and informative read, and although it is ten years old, much of what he writes is still relevant and at or near the cutting edge of the science in question.
Interesting Read.......2006-06-06
This author tries to layout in terms normal people will understand 101 things that are important in science but that no one really understands. The author does this by using terminology any reasonably educated person would be familiar with. He also limits his explanations to 3 pages. This cuts down on too much overload. The book suffers from the author's own predictions of becoming dated because of new technologies and new discoveries but it is still relevant.
These are the topics covered:
The top ten problems in science:
1. Why is there something instead of nothing?
2. Is there a future for gene therapy?
3. Will we ever understand consciousness?
4. Why do we age?
5. How much of human behavior depends on genes?
6. How did life begin?
7. Can we monitor the living brain?
8. Are viruses going to get us all?
9. When will we have designer drugs?
10. Is there a theory of everything and can we afford to find it?
Other subject headlines are:
The physical sciences
Astronomy and cosmology
Earth and planetary sciences
Biology
Medicine
Evolution
Technology
Technical but fascinating.......2005-05-14
Someone gave this book to me as a gift. I like the way it is organized into sections according to sub-categories in science, such as biology, physics, medicine, etc... Some sections are quite technical and take effort to envision, but other sections offer a great view much more complicated subjects like quantum mechanics. This book makes a great gift.
Facts can be fun.......2002-08-21
I've always been interested in science but I cringe at reading boring scientific papers.
James Trefil does a real service for the rest of us by digesting significant scientific advances into a small 330 page book.
What I especially like is how the author doesn't drone on and on; He breaks down the topics and even breaks down the topics to questions such as "How many other stars have planets?" Even the questions are answered in an informal manner that makes for engaging reading.
Excellent book for anyone interested in science.
Fascinating reading, even a few years on.......2002-02-01
It's fascinating to read this book just a few years after it was written and to see how things have changed in just that short period of time. It's essentially a snapshot of the state of science at the time, covering 101 open questions in three pages each. One wonders how much of it will need to be rewritten 25 or 50 or 100 years down the line.
The biggest short-term changes are in genetics: Trefil devotes one of his short chapters the Human Genome Project, then well underway and some years from completion. Now, of course, the "first draft" has been completed and geneticists are contemplating the next step. One obsolete fact has come out already: Trefil states that the human genome has about 80,000 genes when the HGP (and the private counterpart Celera) has discovered, surprisingly, that there are only 30,000.
Also, Trefil discusses the possibility of past or present life on Mars without mentioning the controversial Mars meteorite ALH84001, in which, some scientists claim, there are traces of life.
And the last chapter discusses the Y2K problem, then still looming on the horizon, now safely past (thanks to the hard work of many computer programmers, including me).
Other chapters, I think, will be much the same for many years: we still have a long way to go to understand consciousness, to figure out how life began, and to come up with a fundamental theory that covers all of basic physics, both relativity and quantum mechanics. Not surprisingly, all three of these Trefil puts in his "top ten" problems.
All in all, it's a fascinating read and a great bathroom book with its short chapters - for the nerds, at least.
Amazon.com
Perfect for "Did you know . . .?" barroom conversations, this handy volume--intended more as a reference book for browsing than a sequential narrative--includes a chapter on the top 10 problems in modern science and explains the outer frontiers of current biology and physics knowledge to the layman. String theory, neurobiology, chaos theory: all are touched on lightly and concisely as Trefil describes key concepts in a broad range of scientific enigmas. With its excellent bibliography, this book could provide the springboard for many further excursions in scientific literature.
Book Description
James Trefil takes the reader on a thrilling tour across the borders of current scientific knowledge. From astronomy to genetics, from information technology to cosmology, he surveys the great contested questions that preoccupy researchers today and will become the headlines of tomorrow. In a series of elegant three-page summations, written with wit and wisdom, Dr. Trefil predicts the course of future breakthroughs over the whole range of the sciences. The Edge of the Unknown asks and answers such questions as: Is there an asteroid in our future? What's the likelihood of discovering proof of extraterrestrial intelligence? Can we reasonably hope to cure brain tumors with an injection? What's the future of "designer drugs" and DNA repair? Will we ever understand consciousness? Are physicists on the verge of discovering the origin of the universe? How worried should we be about killer bees and mutant viruses? The Edge of the Unknown is the perfect book and ideal gift for browsers of the s
Customer Reviews:
A thought-provoking book.......2005-04-03
Trefil's book has a format that may be a turnoff for some and turnon for others in that the book contains various small passages on many different topics. I enjoyed it.
an interesting exploration of scientific wonders in..........1998-07-16
An interesting exploration of scientific wonders in easy to read 3 page sections. As the author says , this is not meant to be read cover to cover.
Informative and Pertaining.......1998-07-06
Trefil's book does contain 101 of the most fascinating unanswered questions of our time. This book is an excellent source for grad students looking for a dissertation as well as for the average person just wanting to learn a little more on science. Admittedly he doesn't go into a lot of detail, but that is part of the books charm, he keeps it short.
Stuffed full of fascinating stuff.......1997-03-12
If, like me, you were learning to fix cars or skipping class when everyone else in your high school was dissecting frogs, but you always had an interest in science, this book is well worth reading.
It's more of a spot-reference book than anything else; for detailed information, you'd need to look elsewhere. The author takes a brief, yet informative look at some of the hottest topics in science today (while pointing out that what's foremost in the popular mind isn't always what researchers are most interested in). Some of the questions are as old as thought itself: why does the universe exist? Why do we get old? Why haven't we cured the common cold? Will we ever invent a thinking machine?
There's stuff in here that's been examined in science fiction, and a few theories so esoteric that I suspect even Larry Niven never would have thought of them. You come away with the realization that, contrary to what they teach you in school, science *doesn't* have all the answers; scientists look at the universe with as much wonder and curiosity as the rest of us
Average customer rating:
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You've Been Had!: How the Media and Environmentalists Turned America into a Nation of Hypochondriacs
Melvin A. Benarde
Manufacturer: Rutgers University Press
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ASIN: 0813530504 |
Books:
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- The Lives and Times of Bonnie & Clyde
- The Middle Ground: Indians, Empires, and Republics in the Great Lakes Region, 1650-1815 (Studies in North American Indian History)
- The Pleasure of Finding Things Out: The Best Short Works of Richard P. Feynman
- The Point of Existence: Transformations of Narcissism in Self-Realization (Diamond Mind Series, 3)
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- The Roots of Endurance: Invincible Perseverance in the Lives of John Newton, Charles Simeon, and William Wilberforce (Swans Are Not Silent)
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