Showing posts with label current events. Show all posts
Showing posts with label current events. Show all posts

Apocalypse in Islam Review

Apocalypse in Islam
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Apocalypse in Islam ReviewI have a detailed review of this book up on Aaron Zelin's Jihadology site, so I'll just give you the gist of it here...
I open with these two paragraphs:
Jean-Pierre Filiu's book, Apocalypse in Islam (University of California Press, 2011) makes a crucially important contribution to our understanding of current events - it illuminates not just one but a cluster of closely-related blind-spots in our current thinking, and it does so with scholarship and verve.
Al-Qaida's interest in acquiring nuclear weapons -- and Iran's - and the safety of Pakistan's nuclear materiel - and the situation in Jerusalem - depending how you count `em, there are a half dozen or so glaring world problems where one spark in the Mahdist underbrush might transform a critical situation. And yet as Ali Allawi put it in his talk to the Jamestown Foundation on Mahdism in Iraq a few years back, Mahdists ferments still tend to be "below our radar".
and close with this conclusion:
Filiu's book offers a powerful, accessible, and scholarly introduction to a set of critical issues that have largely escaped our notice until recently. Glenn Beck is about to thrust the topic of Mahdism before his core audience with an hour-long documentary this week, and the popular Christian fiction writer Joel Rosenberg's most recent novel is titled The Twelfth Imam - so Mahdism is seeping into popular awareness, particularly (and perhaps not surprisingly) in its Shi'ite form.
Filiu's book is well placed to serve as an antidote, both to the popular misrepresentations and overstatements of Rosenberg and Beck, and to the casual dismissal that has characterized much scholarly consideration of these topics. It is an important book - and though the year is less than a month old, will very likely wind up being my choice for book of the year.
Full review here: [']
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American Exceptionalism and Human Rights Review

American Exceptionalism and Human Rights
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American Exceptionalism and Human Rights ReviewIgnatieff's introductory essay is solid, but the rest of the contributions are only of interest if you already bemoan the ugly fact of American democracy obstructing the beautiful theories of international do-gooders. Look elsewhere for a serious treatment of this important subject.American Exceptionalism and Human Rights Overview

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Thriving in the Crosscurrent: Clarity and Hope in a Time of Cultural Sea Change Review

Thriving in the Crosscurrent: Clarity and Hope in a Time of Cultural Sea Change
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Thriving in the Crosscurrent: Clarity and Hope in a Time of Cultural Sea Change ReviewI loved this book. I have bought several copies and given them to friends. It is wonderful to hear someone, with the breadth of knowledge of Jim Kenney, say that there is truly hope of positive change in the complicated world we are faced with today.Thriving in the Crosscurrent: Clarity and Hope in a Time of Cultural Sea Change Overview

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The 21st Century Economy--A Beginner's Guide (Vintage) Review

The 21st Century Economy--A Beginner's Guide (Vintage)
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The 21st Century Economy--A Beginner's Guide (Vintage) ReviewThe 21st Century Economy - A Beginners Guide is fantastic; since reading it, I feel like I can be an informed and active participant in today's politics and current events.
I am a housewife in Oregon but I want to understand what I am hearing in the news, I want to engage in the discussion and be an informed voter. This book helped me with all those things.
Epping describes economic terms in a comfortable and understandable way. He uses real world examples that I can relate with. His topics are exactly in-line with the top stories in the news. His concise explanations help me understand the current economic problems and proposed solutions.Even reading the newspaper, if I come to a term I don't understand, I just open the glossary in the back of the book and get a quick and understandable definition... no wading through dozens of confusing web searches.
This book is outstanding and necessary. I think every American, from school kids to adults, should read it.
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You Are STILL Being Lied To: The NEW Disinformation Guide to Media Distortion, Historical Whitewashes and Cultural Myths (Disinformation Guides) Review

You Are STILL Being Lied To: The NEW Disinformation Guide to Media Distortion, Historical Whitewashes and Cultural Myths (Disinformation Guides)
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You Are STILL Being Lied To: The NEW Disinformation Guide to Media Distortion, Historical Whitewashes and Cultural Myths (Disinformation Guides) ReviewWe live in an age of perpetual 'spin'. Information given bias by the agendas of those who produce and/or communicate it. In "You Are Still Being Lied To: The Remixed Disinformation Guide to Media Distortion, Historical Whitewashes and Cultural Myths", editor Russ Kick has compiled reports, contributions, and commentaries by investigative reporters, political dissidents, academics, media watchdogs, scientist-philosophers, social critics, and independent scholars to reveal the true and underlying stories that have been commonly suppressed, distorted, and ignored by the mainstream media, the political establishment, and the culturally conservative. Enhanced with informed and informative essays by Noam Chomsky, Ron Paul, Sydney Schanberg; Gary Webb, R. Crumb; Howard Zinn; Graham Hancock; Michael Parenti; Rian Eisler, Jim Marrs, Howard Bloom, and others, "You Are Still Being Lied To" is a remarkable and seminal compendium that should be a part of every academic and community library Social Issues, American History, and Political Science reference collection and personal reading list.
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Losing Control? Sovereignty in an Age of Globalization Review

Losing Control Sovereignty in an Age of Globalization
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Losing Control Sovereignty in an Age of Globalization ReviewI was very much dissapointed by this book. She talks about "globalization", yet never shows exactly what she means by this, and most of her arguments rely on anecdotes.
Her argument goes like this; There's more overseas production, there are huge multi-nationals, and there's an international capital market, and then there are international issues that goes beyond the national boundaries. Therefore, the sovereign nation is losing power.
While these are all true, the most important question is; to what extent? She never adresses this, and so, the whole book amounts to not much than some trendy talk of "Oh the world is global now and everything's different". So, forget this book. There's nothing in this book that is not throughly and plainly explained by, say, Paul Krugman's "Pop Internationalism" or even his "Age of Diminished Expectations". These books provide much better value and information for our money.Losing Control Sovereignty in an Age of Globalization Overview

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Corporation Nation: How Corporations are Taking Over Our Lives -- and What We Can Do About It Review

Corporation Nation: How Corporations are Taking Over Our Lives -- and What We Can Do About It
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Corporation Nation: How Corporations are Taking Over Our Lives -- and What We Can Do About It ReviewLike another recent book, "Opposing The System" by Charles Reich, this effort by sociologist Charles Derber takes aim against the elitist and anti-democratic influence of contemporary multi-national corporations. Noting that corporations have so invaded the social, economic and political arenas of life in modern postindustrial societies that it is problematic for an individual to live a free and meaningful lifestyle without surrendering vital parts of his liberty and free choice to the whims and caprices of corporate policy. Thus, Derber claims, corporations have transformed the meaning of citizenship into a silent euphemism for corporate membership, and the society tends to identify loyalty to these organizations as a sort of patriotism (buy American).
This is an interesting and entertaining reading experience, and Derber's thesis is similar to and compatible with a number of other contemporary social critics like Reich, Neil Postman, Bill McKibben, and Kirkpatrick Sales. To the extent the rise of multinational corporation to a position of nearly exclusive domination of world markets with the new "global capitalism" (touted by politicians as the best thing since sliced bread) continues and endures, to that extent will our lives be increasingly influenced and characterized the kinds of choice these corporate entities view to be in their own narrowly conceived and fundamentally anti-democratic goals and objectives. Thus, to an ever-greater extent, these corporate entities are empowered at our expense to influence, manipulate, and even dictate the specific terms of social, economic and even political transactions within and without our borders.
Probably this single greatest recent example of this trend were the actions by the U.S Congress to ratify both the NAFTA and GATT trade treaties, whose main beneficiaries were multinational corporate entities. There was little or no meaningful national debate,And most Americans were so distracted by their petty personal pursuits of money, material goods, and the good life that they hardly paid any attention to all this happening under their noses. Rather than focusing on these issues, the national electronic media chose to cover other non-news events like the Michael Jackson child molestation charge, the OJ Simpson trial, the Louise Woodward trial, the Monica Lewinsky scandal, etc. Meanwhile, the corporations achieved their goals, and the future of American worker was sealed. All this transpired without any meaningful or informed public debate. And isn't it quite a coincidence that the electronic media in this country is owned, lock, stock, and barrel by several different multinational corporations.
The author offers an alternative by way of what he terms "positive populism", by which he then outlines an alternative approach to re-engaging the American public in a self-enlightened attempt to regain control of their lives and future through the available political process. This is an interesting, provocative, and often entertaining book, well written and well argued, and one which will engage the reader in a thoughtful process regarding the nature of our contemporary situation vis-à-vis the powers that be. I highly recommend it. EnjoyCorporation Nation: How Corporations are Taking Over Our Lives -- and What We Can Do About It Overview

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Citizen Cyborg: Why Democratic Societies Must Respond To The Redesigned Human Of The Future Review

Citizen Cyborg: Why Democratic Societies Must Respond To The Redesigned Human Of The Future
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Citizen Cyborg: Why Democratic Societies Must Respond To The Redesigned Human Of The Future ReviewI found "Citizen Cyborg" quite readable, and James Hughes brings up a number of interesting arguments against both the bio-Luddite and libertarian-Extropian views of human transformation through technological means. Regarding the latter, Hughes points to the contradiction between the Extropians' desire to re-engineer naturally evolved biology without limits, versus their taboo against intervening into the evolved "spontaneous orders" of markets. Ironically the Extropians' guru F.A. Hayek in "The Fatal Conceit" asserts that we cannot rationally control the direction of an evolved system of any sort, even in principle. But Extropians deliberately ignore that aspect of Hayek's philosophy because it conflicts with their biological agenda.
I also like how Hughes treats the futurist philosopher F.M. Esfandiary (who also called himself FM-2030) as a serious thinker. Many of FM-2030's speculations about the values and lifestyles of "Future Man" sound more plausible now than when he first promoted them in the 1970's and 1980's, and I would like to see his contributions receive more recognition.
I find fault with Hughes's book in the following areas, however:
1. He puts too much emphasis on the technology of baby-making, maybe he because writes for a "family values" friendly American readership, at a time when most developed democratic countries now face population declines, especially Japan. It looks as if people in democracies have better things to do than planning to create genetically improved offspring.
2. He doesn't deal with the threat Peak Oil poses to the future of technological civilization.
3. He fails to address the fact that aging people for the most part can't or won't integrate novelty and additional risks into their lives, and what this means for the acceptance of new technologies in aging democratic societies.
4. He doesn't explain how Transhumanism would address the conflict of secular modernity versus third-world christianity and traditional Islam.
5. He assumes that everyone will behave himself to thrash out all these policy issues through democratic processes, instead of looking for shortcuts to get his way.
6. And, he assumes that the people with superior energy, ability and ambition, regardless of their social origins, will just tolerate living under democratic rule, instead of using their enhancements to challenge the authorities, like Magneto from the X-Men mythos. (A few years ago I asked: How do we handle the prospect of the Evil Transhuman? Answer: Plan on becoming the first one!) Many philosophers have long recognized that most people (the vulgar) live closer to the animal level than a relative handful of humans who have greater capacity for cognition and achievement. These natural aristocrats chafe now under the regime of the vulgar -- so why wouldn't they use enhancements to break free from social-political constraints and start making their own rules?
Maybe Hughes will address these issues in the future books I've heard he plans to write. I find it unfortunate that this one seems to have fallen dead-born from the press, compared with the best-selling book Ray Kurzweil published about future technologies. I hope "Citizen Cyborg" can get its second wind, because the questions it raises will require social responses much sooner than we think.Citizen Cyborg: Why Democratic Societies Must Respond To The Redesigned Human Of The Future Overview

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Field Notes from a Catastrophe: Man, Nature, and Climate Change Review

Field Notes from a Catastrophe: Man, Nature, and Climate Change
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Field Notes from a Catastrophe: Man, Nature, and Climate Change Review
One never ceases to marvel at the consistent way in which we humans seem to be lunging headlong into the ecological abyss. In this wonderful new book by former New York Times reporter Elizabeth Kolbert, the reader is whisked away into a series of field trips into the myriad of places across the globe where the increasing evidence of approaching disaster is being observed, discussed, and reacted to in ways that has to give the reader pause. Eskimos are abandoning a small island in the Artic Ocean even as the surrounding ice cap that once protected from wind and storm damage melts into oblivion as a direct result of the Greenhouse Effect.
Kolbert offer us poignant glimpses at humans forced to confront ugly truths about the nature of the Anthropocene era, that is, that so-far limited expanse of time that humans have inhabited the earth. Presented with the bulk of the evidence, it is hard for an objective intellect to escape the distinct possibility that as a species we seem to be hell-bent on self-destruction. Indeed, the breadth and scope of the manifest effects of climate change on human habitation is breath-taking, affecting societies as far-flung as Netherlands to Siberia, from South Africa to the Great Barrier Reef. She writes wryly about stepping through the looking glass in a conversation with a Washington wonk who attempted to justify the Bush administration's active opposition to both the Kyoto Treaty and any attempt to rework it into a manageable tool to effectively combat the effects of global warming.
It is in such encounters that she discovers her voice and her poignant sense of urgency; if the best educated among us choose to stand in active opposition, what chance is thereto turn this catastrophic change in climate around? Furthermore, in interviewing climate specialists, we discover that the environment is moving rapidly toward disaster, and while there are reasons to hope, there is also reason to view our inaction and our opposition to meaningful global action with alarm. As the former Third World countries like India and China become both more industrial and more consumptive societies, the environment's ability to overcome the cumulative injuries to the earth's biosphere becomes even more difficult to imagine. This book is an easy read, is quite informative, delivered in a reporter's style of succinct and yet comprehensive prose. It does yeoman's service in informing citizens of just how dangerous and calamitous this developing ecological, social, and economic catastrophe truly is. This is a great book, and one I can heartily recommend. Enjoy!
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China and the Transformation of Global Capitalism (Themes in Global Social Change) Review

China and the Transformation of Global Capitalism (Themes in Global Social Change)
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China and the Transformation of Global Capitalism (Themes in Global Social Change) ReviewHo-fung Hung is an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Indiana. His collection of essays ("China and the Transformation of Global Capitalism") provides an excellent short background on the start of China's economic miracle, and then evolves into providing an eye-opening view of the current status of important Chinese clothes and shoe manufacturers.

China is anything but ideology-bound when it comes to economic policy. Recent astonishing rates of state-directed urbanization and huge mega-projects (airports, high-speed trains, roads, dams, canals, power generation) suggest China acts like a Keynesian state, contrary to the neoliberalism ('Chicago-school') associated with its earlier downsizing the size and role of the state. That period included the earlier corporatization of state-owned enterprises (SOEs) - telling them they no longer could depend on government for financing and eliminating deficits, and dismantling the welfare state (K-12 education, health care, pensions). Now it is moving back to a more balanced approach - providing minimum living allowances for farmers, increased health spending and establishing a national health insurance system, and increased K-12 and university spending. Further, K-9 education has been made both mandatory and free. However, China's government still plays a major leadership role in the economy - controlling access to cheap credit, providing protection from external competition, assisting access to export markets (includes not antagonizing/sanctioning others) and foreign technology, and discouraging 'excess' internal competition in areas requiring expensive R&D and/or equipment. Government's subordination of labor unrest in export-led areas (a tricky balancing act given constitutional text stating that workers are the masters of society) has also played a major role in making the nation more attractive for foreign investment. Public officials must receive periodic training from a network of 2,800 schools before becoming eligible for promotion. (An implicit assumption is that top-quality minds were recruited into economic analysis and policy-making - Korea and Japan select from the top 2% of exam-takers, Singapore identifies the best students in secondary school and provides them with college scholarships, Taiwan recruits from its leading university and requires graduate training abroad - it has also cut the number of agencies in half - "Transferable Lessons," Peter Evans; China has a long history of requiring high examination scores to qualify for government work, and the CCP actively recruits star students and wealthy entrepreneurs.) Finally, this all had to be followed up by insuring that profits were reinvested rather than channeled into speculation or consumption, and that policies did not work at cross-purposes.

China has largely followed the lessons of its Asian predecessors - Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, South Korea, and Singapore. Confucian values - starting with loyalty to and respect for leaders (presumed autocratic) provided the foundation. Each of these Asian entities, with the exception of Hong Kong, began its economic transformation under the leadership of a strong, long-term autocrat. Social harmony, another Confucian value, has been boosted by state-encouraged nationalism - regaining Hong Kong and Taiwan, international sports competition, the Beijing Olympics and the 2010 Shanghai World's Fair, religious limitations (eg. the head of China's Catholics must pledge allegiance to Beijing, not Rome), the secret police, severely restricting alternatives to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), CCP control over the leadership and budgets of the 8 approved 'democratic parties,' selective CCP membership (5.6%) disciplined with the threat of explusion, CCP control over leadership of large businesses - include private, having judiciary and local government units subservient to CCP leadership, and censorship. Confucian-valued dedication to personal hard work, and respect for learning also helped, along with an approximately 50% savings rate. From its Russian comrades, China also learned that World-Bank, IMF, and American-prescribed 'shock-therapy' had brought the downfall of the prior communist states in Europe. Export-oriented industrialization has been China's emphasis until recently. Probably the most accurate description of China's economic transformation is that it has been a series of experiments, starting with testing the idea of restoring free enterprise (and self-responsibility) to farmers - a move that created a huge surplus of labor, establishing special economic zones in easily-accessed coastal areas, 'coordinating' (initially, Japan - advanced products, others - medium-level sophistication, China - high-labor content; now China = final assembler and exporter in an east Asian production network) product offerings with other Asian nations, and then allowing foreign firms, along with their capital, technology, and ideas to enter.

The major thrust of "China and the Transformation of Global Capitalism" is to show how its suppliers have grown in size and scope to better serve and counter large U.S. retailers such as Wal-Mart, JCPenney, Target, etc., allowing major increases in China's market share since the 2005 expiration of the 'Multi-Fiber Agreement' that limited each nation's exports to developed nations. These developments have reduced the market-making power of large foreign firms to now dominate or even move into China's retail market, and increasingly threatens their long-term home-base strength as Chinese firms acquire more indigenous innovation, and bricks-and-mortar and Internet marketing skills.

Appreciating the muscle of large Chinese clothing manufacturers first requires unlearning many lessons of modern American manufacturing management. Contrary to our experience that the era of gigantic company towns (Cannon Mills, Fordlandia), and facilities (River Rouge) is over, replaced by decentralized, 'mass-customization' production, China has numerous very large production centers, some employing hundreds of thousands, with company-supplied room-and-board. These allow employers to achieve scale economies, not only in manufacturing, but also in the provision of room-and-board and transportation to work - 'passed on' to workers and customers in the form of lower wages than otherwise. Critical functions such as inventory management, sales forecasting, design, and logistics control often migrate to these Chinese firms - in some instances with extensive IT capabilities as well. Job enrichment (eg. job rotation, using higher-level skills) and job enlargement (broadening the number of steps performed) receive little/no attention - specialization and learning-curve maximization rule. Another major difference - vertical integration is common. Unfortunately, so are Dickensian working conditions (especially outside China), abetted by the ability to move production among a number of factories located in several poor nations.

Examples: Nien Hsing Textile is the world's largest denim manufacturer (18,000+ workers, 11 factories), serving fashionistas through Calvin Klein, DKNY, Hilfinger, Nautica, and GAP, as well as plebeian private-label shoppers at JCPenney, Wal-Mart, Target, and Sears. Esquel Group, 47,000 employees, is one of the world's leading producers of premium cotton shirts. It not only grows its own cotton, but does its own ginning and seed production, and operates stores in China as well. TAL produces 12+% of U.S. dress shirts for high-level vendors such as Brooks Bros. and Lands' end, as well as JCPenney. TAL synchronizes production with Penneys' store-level demand - bypassing both JCPenney warehousing and corporate decision-making. Liz Claiborne designers meet directly with Luen Thai Holdings at its 2 million square-feet factory to reduce their combined R&D and design staff; Luen Thai also makes back packs and PC carriers, and arranges store-direct delivery.

Li and Fung Group (35,000 employees in 40 countries; $17 billion in 2008 revenues) has nearly 900 retail outlets in China and other Asian nations that it operates for Circle K, Toys "R" Us, high-end men's clothiers (including its own), and others. Some of its marketing entities include Internet marketing. Its main activity is contract manufacturing - drawing upon a network of 10,000-some manufacturers, its own staff, and others to design, manufacture, and deliver. Yue Yuen/Pou Chen Industrial Holdings is the world's largest maker of branded athletic and casual footwear (280,000 employees, about $5 billion/year revenues), with 434 footwear lines - now expanded into safety-shoes. Other products include jackets and back packs. Customers include Nike, Reebok, Adidas, New Balance, Puma, Timberland, and Rockport. The firm produces its own machinery, and manages over 640 stores and 2,100 distributors in China; it does not, however, produce shoes with its own or a private-label.

Side Note: It is often difficult to determine ownership of firms operating in China, thanks to confusing levels and regulations. Sometimes what appears to be privately owned is actually majority-owned by the government, and often indigenous firms are disguised through exporting capital to Hong Kong where it is re-imported through a 'foreign-investment entity' (at least 25% foreign owned) to create 'foreign direct investment' and receive preferential regulatory, banking and tax treatment.

Bottom-Line: Ho-fung Hung's "China and the Transformation of Global Capitalism" is a wake-up call for American businesses and political leaders about the need to consider the implications of China's ascendancy for global capitalism. His book reveals that much 'soft-goods' production in China takes place on a very large scale, utilizing considerable years of experience, sophistication, capital, and personnel. Further, many of...Read more›China and the Transformation of Global Capitalism (Themes in Global Social Change) Overview

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The Great Global Warming Blunder: How Mother Nature Fooled the World's Top Climate Scientists Review

The Great Global Warming Blunder: How Mother Nature Fooled the World's Top Climate Scientists
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The Great Global Warming Blunder: How Mother Nature Fooled the World's Top Climate Scientists ReviewA truly excellent book. Spencer calls attention to three things we all SHOULD HAVE figured out for ourselves. And it is a book about the science, not at all about the leaked emails (which other books have handled very well).
First, Spencer makes a powerful case for the heretofore largely understated role of clouds. Second, his presentation of material on the feedbacks was outstanding. I had never seen the distinction between amplification of forcings, and true positive feedbacks (in the run-away sense), made. Thirdly, his notion that choosing the wrong (weaker) forcing element for a given warming can result in a large overestimation of sensitivity is clearly right. Every physicist or engineer KNOWS these things, but we may not THINK about them. Luckily we have Spencer to remind us that we do know them.
As for the PDO as a major driver, the evidence Spencer shows is very interesting and well-presented, and is clearly much much better that a CO2 explanation. (To just say it is a better explanation that CO2 would do it an injustice.) The book makes the point that there are indeed many strong sources of internal variability. The so-called "consensus" in concentrating on a flawed, politically popular view (man-made CO2), is certainly effectively impeding progress toward a more rational understanding of the scientific puzzle.
A second excellent book by Dr. Spencer - for the layman (or scientist!) who still thinks.

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