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History Books |
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By: Henry W. (Henry William) Fischer (1856-1932) | |
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By: Henry Walter Bates (1825-1892) | |
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By: Henry Ward Beecher (1813-1887) | |
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By: Henry Watson Wilbur (1851-1914) | |
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![]() A review of events prior to, during and following the American Civil War bringing an insightful perspective on Lincoln's true attitude toward slavery and emancipation. |
By: Henry Watterson (1840-1921) | |
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By: Henry William Herbert (1807-1858) | |
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By: Henry Woodd Nevinson (1856-1941) | |
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By: Henryk Sienkiewicz (1846-1916) | |
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By: Herbert Adams Gibbons (1880-1934) | |
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By: Herbert Allen Giles (1845-1935) | |
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![]() Herbert Allen Giles (1845-1935) spent several years as a diplomat in China and in 1897 was appointed Cambridge University’s second professor of Chinese. His published works cover Chinese language and literature, history and philosophy. This series of lectures, published as “China and the Chinese”, was given at Columbia University in 1902, to mark the establishment of a Chinese professorship there. The lectures were not intended for the specialist, more to urge a wider and more systematic study of China and its culture, and to encourage new students into the field... | |
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By: Herbert Baird Stimpson (1869-) | |
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By: Herbert Brayley Collett (1877-1947) | |
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By: Herbert Darling Foster (1863-1927) | |
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By: Herbert Hayens | |
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By: Herbert M. (Herbert Millingchamp) Vaughan (1870-1948) | |
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By: Herbert Newton Casson (1869-1951) | |
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By: Herbert Strang | |
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By: Herbert W. (Herbert Winckworth) Tompkins (1867-) | |
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By: Herbert W. (Herbert Woodfield) Paul (1853-1935) | |
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By: Herbert W. McBride | |
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By: Herbert Wildon Carr (1857-1931) | |
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![]() The main purpose of this book is to show the historical relations of the new principle to the old philosophical problems and to the classical theories of space and time. - Summary by Adapted from the Preface | |
![]() Since the publication of this book, a little more than a year ago, the interest in Einstein and the principle of relativity has very greatly increased. There are now a large number of popular expositions, and the theory itself has undergone some notable advances in its philosophical, mathematical and physical application. In pure philosophy Lord Haldane's Reign of Relativity has applied it to the direct interpretation of the theory of knowledge. In mathematical physics the important work of Hermann... | |
![]() A problem of philosophy is completely different from a problem of science. In science we accept our subject-matter as it is presented in unanalysed experience; in philosophy we examine the first principles and ultimate questions that concern conscious experience itself. The problem of truth is a problem of philosophy. It is not a problem of merely historical interest, but a present problem—a living controversy, the issue of which is undecided. Its present interest may be said to centre round the doctrine of pragmatism, which some fifteen years ago began to challenge the generally accepted principles of philosophy... |
By: Herman Bernstein (1876-1935) | |
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By: Herman Melville | |
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![]() This is a tale based on Melville's experiences aboard the USS United States from 1843 to 1844. It comments on the harsh and brutal realities of service in the US Navy at that time, but beyond this the narrator has created for the reader graphic symbols for class distinction, segregation and slavery aboard this microcosm of the world, the USS Neversink. (Introduction by James K. White) |