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1. The Pillars of Tubal Cain - Nigel Aldcroft Jackson 2001
At the secret heart of the Western Mystery Tradition lies the angelic wisdom that forms the teachings of true magick. Drawing from a wide range of sources, this book presents a new and unique overview of Western magick and occultism, exploring how this secret tradition has been inherited from Persian, Chaldean, Canaanite, Egyptian, Arabic, Hebrew and Greco-Roman sources. It also records how this tradition was preserved in the symbols and beliefs of Esoteric Christianity, Gnosticism, Hermiticism, alchemy, medieval magick, the Cabbala, the Tarot, the Grail mythos, the Arthurian legends, Freemasonry, Rosicrucianism and some forms of traditional witchcraft.
Topics include the origins of angelology; the gnostic myth of the Grigori or fallen angels; the forgotten civilisations of the giant races; the esoteric symbols within Hermeticism and Masonry that reveal the key to understanding the mythic theme of the Luciferian gnosis; the inner mysteries of the Grail; King Solomon's temple as a Goddess shrine; the real identity of the Queen of Sheba; the truth behind the myth of the Garden of Eden and the Fall; the place of the dark moon goddess Lilith in the Luciferian tradition; the symbolism and meaning of the previously forbidden Luciferian occult tradition concerning the Watchers, or fallen angels, and the so-called 'Prince of Darkness' - revealed to be really the Lord of Light; arcane lore that illuminates several mysterious figures in the Bible whose real significance and identities have been hidden from us for centuries; the real occult secrets of the sacred bloodline of Jesus and Mary Magdalene and the spiritual reality behind the worship of the goat-god Baphomet by the heretical Knights Templar.
This is a major work on a subject little known or discussed outside the inner circles of secret societies, occult orders and traditional witch covens. As we enter the 21st century, the information here may prove essential to understanding what is happening in the world today and the future destiny of the human race. It reveals that our modern civilisation is not the product of haphazard cultural phenomena, but its development has been guided and influenced by celestial intelligences who first made contact with humans in prehistory. These ?teaching angels', as they are called, are still there ready to teach and guide those who recognise their presence.
This book contains several appendices that offer ritual practices for those interested in contacting the angelic forces. This is the first book to be written exclusively on the Luciferian gnosis and angelic magick which reveals the real 'secrets' within the Western magical tradition. It provides an important and essential starting point for the reader to delve further into the numinous realm of the angels. 'The voice of the angels shalt speak unto you and by their signs shall ye know them.'
2. The Miracle Tree: Demystifying the Qabalah - R. J. Stewart
The Miracle Tree offers a revolutionary new approach to the Tree of Life from a leading author who has practiced Western Qabalah for more than 30 years. The word "Qabalah" originally meant an oral tradition, and the voice of this book is that of a teacher talking with a group of students (the readers), without elitism, obscurity, or willful secrecy. Some hitherto "secret" techniques are described, including Withdrawal from Time, The Qabalah of the Three Suns, Walking Participation, and entering the Inner Temple traditions. These techniques produce powerful and rapid results when the student practices them regularly: They work directly within us, founded upon the truth that we are already the Miracle Tree. Another unique and groundbreaking feature of this book is that the author traces the sources of Tree of Life meditations and visions in medieval Europe.
3. The Tower of Alchemy - David Goddard
The Tower of Alchemy is the first book published in the West to openly reveal the teachings and practice of the Hermetic Art in plain language. In this advanced manual, the alchemical symbols and motifs cease to be a bewildering maze and become helpful signposts on the Path of Liberation. David Goddard clearly explains the interior practices that are the essence of the Great Work itself. By assimilating the knowledge and practicing the exercises contained in this book, you will find that the once-confusing alchemical illustrations are now illuminated mandalas. Using classical Qabalah, and traditions as diverse as the Grail legend, Yoga, and Tibetan Buddhism, Goddard allows students access to the higher Mysteries. His specific teachings and guided practices will enable you to attain the secret to all spiritual works, which can culminate in the completion of the Great Work.
4. Born In Blood: The Lost Secrets of Freemasonry - John J. Robinson 1990
Unlike most of its five million members, including many world leaders, who believe that the Freemasons, the world's largest fraternal organization, evolved from the guilds of medieval stonemasons, historian Robinson persuasively links Freemasonry's origins and goals to the once powerful and wealthy Knights Templar order. Banned and persecuted by a 14th-century papal bull, he claims, the Knights were forced to form an underground society. The author combines scholarly research and entertaining storytelling in tracing Freemasonry as a worldwide political, religious, economic and social body dedicated to self-improvement and charity while governed by secret rituals and symbols (explained here in detail).
5. The Secret Book of Artephius
This has been transcribed from 'In Pursuit of Gold' by 'Lapidus'. This treatise describes the entire process of preparing the philosopher's stone. There are three separate operations described here: the preparation of the 'secret fire' (the catalyst or solvent which is used throughout the whole work, without which nothing can be achieved, but which is seldom if ever mentioned in any alchemical treatise), the preparation of 'mercury' (a metallic vapor made from antimony and iron, said to resemble vulgar mercury (Hg) in appearance, necessary in the preparation of the stone) and the preparation of the stone itself.
These operations are not presented in sequence. The reader will note that the language is allusive and recondite, that several names are used to refer to the same thing and that one name is used to refer to several things. This is, however, an exceptionally clear alchemical text. Artephius is said to have written this in the 12th century. Lapidus doesn't say who translated it (presumably from the Latin). Comments in [square brackets] are by the transcriber.
6. Mind Power Into the 21st Century - John Kehoe
Mind Power Into the 21st Century takes a
practical approach, giving readers techniques
that they can apply to their own lives.
This accessible road to personal improvement
is simple, easy, and straightforward,
without all the jargon.
7. The Lost Key: An Explanation and Application of the Masonic Symbols - Prentiss Tucker 1999
Symbols play a big part in our lives, but we often take them for granted. To illustrate the meaning of symbols this book uses the example of the American flag, and explains what the symbols found on the flag really mean. The important point is that without an understanding of American history we'd not know how to interpret the symbols on our flag. The same holds true for all symbols. Lacking enough background information causes us, many times, to miss their full meaning.
The Lost Key is a book for Freemasons, and explains the meanings of their symbols. Masons are members of a longstanding fraternal order that functions along the lines of a mystical brotherhood. A number of rituals are performed as one progresses up the ranks, usually in the form of an initiation. Often times Masons themselves do not know what the symbols within these rituals truly mean while they are being performed -- so therefore do not fully understand what they are really doing and the true purpose of the initiation.
There are thirty-three degrees, or levels, in Freemasonry. This particular book covers the symbols found within the first three degrees of Freemasonry, making this an excellent guidebook for the beginning Mason, as well as providing a more complete understanding for those in the higher levels who administer or oversee their rituals.
In recent years statistics show that Freemasonry has begun to lose some of its members. The older books like The Lost Key have gone out of print and younger Masons may not have fully understood the purpose of their initiations -- at least enough to hold their interest. The symbols found within Freemasonry operate on a number of different levels. Now that The Lost Keyhas been "found" and is back in print once again, it may help to enrich an organization that traditionally attracts high-standing members of communities across North America and the rest of the world.
8. Lost Histories
In this cross-continental, time-traveling romp through history and mythology, readers can join the hunt for missing cities, treasures, people, and wrecks, all of which have vanished
9. The Facts on File Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins 4th editiion
This is an updated encyclopedia that explores the origins of thousands of words and phrases.The most comprehensive single-volume reference of its kind, "The Facts On File Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins, Fourth Edition" has been completely updated and expanded and now contains definitions and origins of more than 15,000 words and expressions. This encyclopedia features anecdotes and information on the development of a wide range of words, including slang, proverbs, animal and plant names, place names, nicknames, historical expressions, foreign language expressions, and phrases from literature. The emphasis throughout is on words and expressions whose origins are not adequately explained, or not addressed at all
10. Cosmic Catastrophes: Exploding Stars, Black Holes, and Mapping the Universe - j. craig wheeler
From supernovae and gamma-ray bursts to the accelerating Universe, this is an exploration of the intellectual threads that lead to some of the most exciting ideas in modern astrophysics and cosmology. This fully updated second edition incorporates new material on binary stars, black holes, gamma-ray bursts, worm-holes, quantum gravity and string theory. It covers the origins of stars and their evolution, the mechanisms responsible for supernovae, and their progeny, neutron stars and black holes. It examines the theoretical ideas behind black holes and their manifestation in observational astronomy and presents neutron stars in all their variety known today.
This book also covers the physics of the twentieth century, discussing quantum theory and Einstein's gravity, how these two theories collide, and the prospects for their reconciliation in the twenty-first century. This will be essential reading for undergraduate students in astronomy and astrophysics, and an excellent, accessible introduction for a wider audience
11. I Could Tell You But Then You Would Have to be Destroyed by Me: Emblems from the Pentagon's Black World By Trevor Paglen 2007
They’re on the shoulder of all military personnel: patches that symbolize what a soldier’s unit does. But what happens if it’s top secret?
Shown here for the first time, these sixty patches reveal a secret world of military imagery and jargon, where classified projects are known by peculiar names (“Goat Suckers,” “None of Your Fucking Business,” “Tastes Like Chicken”) and illustrated with occult symbols and ridiculous cartoons. Although the actual projects represented here (such as the notorious Area 51) are classified, these patches—which are worn by military units working on classified missions—are precisely photographed, strangely hinting at a world about which little is known.
By submitting hundreds of Freedom of Information requests, the author has also assembled an extensive and readable guide to the patches included here, making this volume one of the best available surveys of the military’s black world—a $27 billion industry that has quietly grown by almost 50 percent since 9/11.
Trevor Paglen is a geographer by training, and an expert on clandestine military installations. He leads expeditions to the secret bases of the American West and is the author, with A.C. Thompson, of Torture Taxi: On the Trail of the CIA’s Rendition Flights, which The New York Times praised as “the real thing . . . and not on the evening news.”
12. Anarchist Seeds Beneath the Snow: Left-Libertarian Thought and British Writers from William Morris to Colin Ward - David Goodway 2007
From William Morris to George Orwell, left-libertarian thought has long been an important but neglected part of British history. In Anarchist Seeds Beneath the Snow, David Goodway seeks to recover and revitalize that indigenous anarchist tradition. The book succeeds as both a cultural history of left-libertarianism in Britain and a demonstration of the applicability of that history to current politics. Goodway argues that a recovered anarchist tradition could—and should—be a touchstone for contemporary political radicals. Moving seamlessly from Aldous Huxley and John Cowper Powys to the war in Iraq, this challenging volume will energize leftist movements throughout Britain and the rest of the world.
13. Webster's New World Law Dictionary - Susan Ellis Wild 2006
The Plain-English Legal Dictionary for Anyone Who Wants to Understand the Often Incomprehensible Terminology
Law has a language all its own. Webster's New World Law Dictionary translates it clearly. Written in plain English, it's much easier to understand than typical legal documents. It's up-to-date and comprehensive, with:
* Clear, concise, and accurate definitions of more than 4,000 legal terms
* Coverage of terms from all areas of law, including criminal law, contracts, evidence, constitutional law, property law, and torts
* Common abbreviations, foreign words and phrases, and a full copy of the United States Constitution, including the Bill of Rights and all subsequent amendments
* Definitions of newer terms such as alternative minimum tax, three strikes law, and assisted suicide
In addition to those in the legal field, this desk reference is invaluable to journalists, researchers, lay people dealing with legal issues, and even those who simply want to use legal terms correctly in order to make their points more convincingly.
14. Freedom and the Law - bruno leoni 1991
Historically and traditionally, "law" was considered to be something that lawyers and judges "discovered," rather than something a group of legislators made up and voted on. The law was something that private parties used to settle disputes among themselves, not something that the state, or some groups in society, used to force their will upon others.
_Freedom and the Law_ explores this distinction, between the old idea of law and what people today call law, which is really legislation. Leoni persuasively argues for a return to the imperfect but vastly superior Roman law, or the English common law, as a means of restoring the individual liberty that the state has been destroying in modern times.
It is a challenging book, and perhaps best suited for those with a strong background in history, law, and/or economics. I first attempted to read it when I was younger, and stalled after the first chapter or two. Coming back to it with more education and understanding, I've found a lot to appreciate.
Incidentally, this volume actually contains two books: _Freedom and the Law_ and _The Law and Politics_. The latter is a relatively short collection of lectures from the 1960's, but will be of particular interest to anyone who's studied public choice economics, as Leoni examines the then-new ideas of Duncan Black, James Buchanan, and Gordon Tullock.
15. Free Energy Guide: A Practical Guide To Free Energy Devices - Patrick Kelly
This is a huge incredible book on all kind of free energy devices
16. A Well-Regulated Militia: The Founding Fathers and the Origins of Gun Control in America - Saul Cornell 2008
Americans are deeply divided over the Second Amendment. Some passionately assert that the Amendment protects an individual's right to own guns. Others, that it does no more than protect the right of states to maintain militias. Now, in the first and only comprehensive history of this bitter controversy, Saul Cornell proves conclusively that both sides are wrong. Cornell, a leading constitutional historian, shows that the Founders understood the right to bear arms as neither an individual nor a collective right, but as a civic right--an obligation citizens owed to the state to arm themselves so that they could participate in a well regulated militia. He shows how the modern "collective right" view of the Second Amendment, the one federal courts have accepted for over a hundred years, owes more to the Anti-Federalists than the Founders. Likewise, the modern "individual right" view emerged only in the nineteenth century. The modern debate, Cornell reveals, has its roots in the nineteenth century, during America's first and now largely forgotten gun violence crisis, when the earliest gun control laws were passed and the first cases on the right to bear arms came before the courts. Equally important, he describes how the gun control battle took on a new urgency during Reconstruction, when Republicans and Democrats clashed over the meaning of the right to bear arms and its connection to the Fourteenth Amendment. When the Democrats defeated the Republicans, it elevated the "collective rights" theory to preeminence and set the terms for constitutional debate over this issue for the next century. A Well Regulated Militia not only restores the lost meaning of the original Second Amendment, but it provides a clear historical road map that charts how we have arrived at our current impasse over guns. For anyone interested in understanding the great American gun debate, this is a must read.
17. Everybody's Guide to Small Claims Court in California - nolo 2008
The only guide to California Small Claims Court that provides tips by former judges!
The definitive guide to California Small Claims Court for more than 25 years, this plain-English guide gives you step-by-step instructions to bring or defend your case --from preparing evidence and lining up persuasive witnesses, to making a presentation in court and collecting the money you're awarded.
Everybody's Guide to Small Claims Court in California shows you how to:
decide if you have a winning casemediate a settlement if possibledetermine how much to sue forwrite your demand letterfile and serve papersprepare evidence and witnesses for courtplan a winning courtroom strategyconvince the judge that you are rightcollect your money when you win With a proven sales record over the last 20-plus years, the 17th edition -- updated with the new notarization requirements for California and the ruling on Security Deposit Interest for California Landlords in Rent Control Cities also explains how to handle disputes involving Internet transactions. Go after the money that's owed you -- represent yourself in small claims court and win!Summary: Good ReferenceRating: 5It had all the data I needed. A good reference for going to Court.Summary: Well done!Rating: 5Well-laid out topics, suggestions and hints to avoid putting yourself in a precarious situation. The book covers almost everything that you can possibly think of. Summary: Excellent self help guide on the subjectRating: 5If you are reading this review, you are most probably a prospective plaintiff considering recovering losses you incurred in an auto accident through the small claims court process. This guide will help you tremendously. The NoLo series is an incredible service to mankind. It is the equivalent to the Dummies series focused on the Law. And, who besides expensive lawyers really understand the Law? Readers who have studied NoLo books! The book is very well organized. Even though there is a lot of material, it is easy to extract the information pertaining to your very specific situation. The author covers a lot of those; as he dedicates specific chapters to auto repairs, auto accidents, lord-tenant dispute, etc... The author states that he covers the main type of cases that account for 99% of the cases tried in small claim courts. I believe him. If your case is outside those presented, there is a good chance it does not belong in small claims court. The author gives crucial information about the basics of small claim courts. If you are not a lawyer, you are unfamiliar with all the procedures associated with it. Thanks to this book, you will know exactly what to do and when to file, prepare, and try a claim in small claims court. Once you have done the studying and the preparing it is not all that difficult. And, this book allows you to navigate through a bureaucratic process that would appear overwhelming and Byzantine otherwise. This is my second NoLo book and hopefully the last. Who wants to deal with the Law if you don't have to? My first one was on how to fight a ticket. Thanks to NoLo, I reduced the price of my ticket by $120. Now, I anticipate recovering the cost of a fender bender where I am dealing with one uninsured and one unwilling party. It is not fun, but those NoLo books allow you to uphold your rights when you have to. Summary: START WITH THIS BOOK FIRSTRating: 5If you want to make less mistakes, save time and money, it's best to start with this book so you can get the correct service, venue, and evidence organized to file and win. I found the chapter on how to write a demand letter and settle your claim before it gets to court very helpful. They even offer sample letters you use to settle your case. Nolo Press seems to put together the best legal self help books.Summary: Win in Small Claims Court!Rating: 4If you have a claim involving $5,000 or less, you can easily and inexpensively bring an action in Small Claims Court. But even though Small Claims Court is designed for non-attorneys (in fact, attorneys are not allowed) you still must have a basic understanding of the rules of evidence and know how to put on your case. Invest a little time to read this book, and you will stand a much better chance of winning.
18. The Boat Beneath the Pyramid: King Cheops' Royal Ship - By Nancy Jenkins 1980
More than a quarter of a century ago a young Egyptian archaeologist, clearing a site just south of the Great Pyramid at Giza, broke through a massive slab of limestone to reveal a vault beneath his feet. For the first time in 4,500 years the sun’s rays were shining down on the timbers of a great papyriform ship, built for a king and then dismantled and buried here at the height of the Egyptian Old Kingdom. Astonishingly well preserved, it was by far the most ancient vessel ever to come to light.
Nancy Jenkins is the first to tell the full story of this Royal Ship — its discovery, excavation and reconstruction. She tells also who built it and why, how it has survived intact for so long, and what connection it may have had with the age-old Egyptian myth of the Sun-god, eternally journeying cross the heavens in his Reed Float. But this is also a story of modern Egypt and of one man in particular, Ahmed Youssef Moustafa, Chief Restorer of the Department of Antiquities, who almost single-handedly put back together the 1,223 pieces of .the ship. Working with a giant jigsaw puzzle—though a puzzle without a picture on the box—Ahmed Youssef devoted fourteen years to the immense task of reconstruction.
The triumphant result is not only an aesthetic masterpiece to rival the Great Pyramid but also a vital source of information about the design and construction of ancient ships and a tribute to one of the greatest periods in the history of civilization.”
19. Justification for US Military Intervention in Cuba - u.s military 1962
very interesting document for understanding Cuban Crisis and propably 911...
20. FM 5-250 EXPLOSIVES AND DEMOLITIONS - United States military 1992
The purpose of this manual is to provide technical information on explosives used by United States military forces and their most frequent applications. This manual does not discuss all applications but presents the most current information on demolition procedures used in most situations.
21. Karl Marx's Theory of History - By G. A. Cohen 2000
A clear, definite, and well-reasoned interpretation of what the theory really is. . . . Admirably argued and generally exhilarating.
(Anthony Quinton The Times Literary Supplement )
Cohen's blend of sound scholarship and acute philosophical reasoning has produced a work with which anyone seriously interested in understanding Marx must come to terms.
(Peter Singer New York Review of Books )
22. Guide to the Universe: Asteroids, Comets, and Dwarf Planets - Andrew Rivkin 2009
This volume in the Greenwood Guides to the Universe series covers asteroids, comets, and dwarf planets—those small bodies that revolve the Sun—and provides readers with the most up-to-date understanding of the current state of scientific knowledge about them. Scientifically sound, but written with the student in mind, Asteroids, Comets, and Dwarf Planets is an excellent first step for researching the exciting scientific discoveries of the smallest celestial bodies in the solar system.
The book will introduce students to all of the areas of research surrounding the subject, answering many intriguing questions. It defines a dwarf planet and explains why Pluto is one. It looks at how such small bodies form, what they are made of, and what kind of atmospheres might they have. And it asks—and answers—whether asteroids, comets, and dwarf planets present a hazard to the Earth or to spacecraft.
23. The Solar System, 3 vol set - David G. Fisher, Richard R. Erickson 2009
This book features essential coverage of all major aspects of Earth's solar system, from every feature of the major planets to their satellites, small bodies, interplanetary phenomena, and cosmological context. Designed to meet the needs of both general readers and students, this completely revised and updated edition covers 180 major topics on Earth's solar system as it is understood from the latest perspectives. For this new edition, 58 new topics have been added and every essay has been thoroughly expanded, from the text through bibliographies, to bring it up to date in view of the many interplanetary missions that have expanded our knowledge of the solar system - from Pioneer and Voyager through the missions of Galileo, Cassini-Huygens, the Hubble Space Telescope, and the latest Mars probes as of 2009. Scope and coverage: No reference dedicated to the solar system is this detailed or complete and up to date. Coverage is presented in an A-Z format - from 'Archaeoastronomy' and 'Asteroids' through 'Venus' Volcanoes' and 'White and Black Dwarfs' - and is supplemented by more than two hundred photos. For those wishing instant access to essays grouped by planetary system, a Category Index appears in the front of every volume. Essays fall into one or more of the following categories: the Cosmological Context, Earth, the Jovian System, Life in the Solar System, Mars, Mercury, Natural Planetary Satellites, Neptune, Planets and Planetology, the Saturnian System, Scientific Methods, Small Bodies, the Solar System as a Whole, the Stellar Context, the Sun, Uranus, and Venus. Organization and format: Essays range in length from three to seven pages and offer a complete overview of the topic as well as an assessment of knowledge gained, methods of study, or applications. Each essay begins with standard, ready-reference information, including the title of the essay, the category (or categories) in which the essay falls, and a summary of the importance of the topic and the current state of our knowledge. The essay is then broken down into several subsections. An 'Overview' section, generally the longest subsection in the essay, details basic information about the subject and discusses the main facts about the topic. 'Knowledge Gained/Methods of Study/Applications' details how the topic is investigated, what scientific knowledge we have accumulated, or the uses of the knowledge we have gained. 'Context' addresses the topic from the larger perspective of the history of solar-system science and its relevance for humankind. 'Further Reading' is an annotated selection of the most important print resources for further study. Lastly, 'See Also' lists cross-references to other essays in The Solar System covering related topics. Special features: the front matter of each volume includes a Complete List of Contents and a Category Index. The set is heavily illustrated, with over 300 photos. At the end of volume three, users will find a general bibliography, a list of web resources, a comprehensive glossary, and a full subject index. This title contains 3 Volumes; 1,056 Pages; 180 Essays, 58 New; 'See Also' Cross-References; Complete List of Contents; Category Index; Glossary; Bibliography; Web Sites; and Subject Index.
24. Remote Viewing by Tim Rifat
Union systematised its investigations in to how to harness the paranormal and use it for military purposes. What in other times was seen as magic or witchcraft -laying a curse, predicting the future, having second sight - had already gained scientific respectability in the USSR with the recognition of clairvoyance and the acceptance of psychic phenomena; research into telepathy had started in the Soviet Union in the twenties and thirties.
However it was stopped by Stalin, who thought it smacked of idealism and superstition. Now the Russians plunged into a large-scale research programme. Billions of roubles were poured into the investigation and development of psychic energy (psi) and electronic mind-control technology. To convince hard-nosed military men that psychic phenomena can win wars may, on the face of it, appear to be a forlorn task. In fact, it happened the other way, around as some of the leading minds in the Russian military convinced their leaders to spend fortunes on this effort.
Science fiction writers have not come close to the reality of the actual research undertaken since then. The aim was no less than to produce psychic agents, capable of visualizing top-secret sites and installations located thousands of miles away, reading the minds of their country’s enemies, intervening and altering thought processes, and even killing thro
ugh psychic attack. The first step was the development of remote viewing.
People displaying psychic sensitivity were sought out all over the USSR and trained under the strictest secrecy as spies with a difference. They were required to focus on, say, a particular top-secret facility in the US or China perhaps, and conjure up a detailed picture of it, its location and personnel, in their mind’s eye, which they would then describe to their spy masters. Remote viewing then is a kind of psychic spying.
25. The Natural Herbal Cures and Remedies
This ebook covers all the necessary details on natural cures, mainly herbal natural cure. Whatever you want to know on the subject, you will get all the information in this ebook. After you finish reading the ebook, you will discover so many facts on herbs and herbal cures, which you were unaware of, until you read this ebook and also a lot of wrong notions you might have had, will be eradicated. Also, read the ebook carefully as it contains a lot of valuable information, which you can apply in your everyday life.
26. Shaman, Healer, Sage - alberto villoldo
The author has studied the shamanic healing techniques of the descendants of the Incas for more than 25 years. In this manual Villoldo explains the luminous energy field that he maintains surrounds living beings and shows how to use it in both healing and prevention of illness.
27. Dancing the Dream: The Seven Sacred Paths Of Human Transformation - jamie sams 1999
Your journey dancing the dream may have already begun. You may feel restless, like there is something more to life than what you can see and touch. You might see something in this book that will get the cogs going again or you might not. I think the goal is that hopefully, like a finely tuned watch, by the end of the book, all the wheels will be turning in time and you will awaken to a world that you only dreamed. Its a personal journey, some might walk only a few paths on the wheel, some might want to make it their lifes' mission to walk all seven directions and become one of the very few in humans history that have.
28. Hypnosis: A Power Program for Self-Improvement, Changing Your Life and Helping Others - William W. Hewitt 1995
A practical step-by-step book to make the techniques of Self-Suggestion, Self-Persuasion and Self-hypnosis available to everyone. Use to counter hopelessness and despair and channel it into constructive pathways. Shows how to access the Univeral Subconscious Mind via Self-hypnosis to relax the conscious mind/cross the barrier to your subconscious. Use to achieve whatever level of success you desire: lose weight, stop smoking, eliminate fear, etc.
29. Lucid Dreaming: Gateway to the Inner Self - Robert Waggoner 2008
Lucid Dreaming: Gateway to the Inner Self is the account of an extraordinarily talented lucid dreamer who goes beyond the boundaries of both psychology and religion. In the process, he stumbles upon the Inner Self.
While lucid (consciously aware) in the dream state and able to act and interact with dream figures, objects, and settings, dream expert Robert Waggoner experienced something transformative and unexpected. He was able to interact consciously with the dream observer-the apparent Inner Self-within the dream. At first this seemed shocking, even impossible, since psychology normally alludes to such theoretical inner aspects as the Subliminal Self, the Center, the Internal Self-Helper in vague and theoretical ways. Waggoner came to realize, however, that aware interaction with the Inner Self was not only possible, but actual and highly inspiring. He concluded that while aware in the dream state, one has both a psychological tool and a platform from which to understand dreaming and the larger picture of man's psyche as well. Waggoner proposes 5 stages of lucid dreaming and guides readers through them, offering advice for those who have never experienced the lucid dream state and suggestions for how experienced lucid dreamers can advance to a new level.
Lucid Dreaming offers exciting insights and vivid illustrations that will intrigue not only avid dreamworkers but anyone who is interested in consciousness, identity, and the definition of reality.
Summary: A must read for anyone with an interest in lucid dreams!
Rating: 5
In his book titled "Lucid Dreaming: Gateway to the Inner Self", Robert Waggoner takes lucid dreaming to a new level which is much deeper than any other lucid dream explorers have before. His expertise and insights in the areas of lucid dream healing, interaction with the deceased, mutual lucid dreaming, dream reality creation, precognitive dreams are simply unparalleled. I wholeheartedly recommend this book to anyone with an interest in lucid dreams.
Summary: Just awesome
Rating: 5
I've read my fair share of books about lucid dreaming and there are certainly better how-to books, but I'm glad that this isn't another how-to book. No other book on lucid dreaming has fascinated and inspired me as much as this one.
Before I read this book I just saw my lucid dreams as a playground where I could live out my fantasies. Now it's so much more than that. It feels like I've just started out on a great adventure into the unknown.
All the others that gave this book five stars have said it better than me, this really is a great book. This book has earned it's place in my lucid dreaming library, next to Stephen LaBerge's books. But if you're a beginner and want to learn step by step how to have lucid dreams, I recommend that you buy Steven LaBerge's book Exploring the World of Lucid Dreaming instead. If you can afford it, buy both books. They complement each other.
Summary: Best book on Lucid Dreaming I've ever read
Rating: 5
I've been waiting for years on a book like this. Finally a lot more depth when it comes to the subject of Lucid dreaming!
Summary: Lucid Dreaming: Gateway to the Inner Self
Rating: 5
I loved this book. I loved it's cross-referencing to classical philosophers, psychologists and poets, as well as it's alignment to current day scientific thinking. I felt that Robert Waggoner's significant intelligence and genuine humility blazed out of every page. I am an active lucid dreamer, and this may account for why I related to the book so strongly. I am in awe of what Robert Waggoner has personally experienced, and have tried to replicate his experiences. From doing this, I have found that 'what he says' works. The knowledge and techniques learned from his book have taken me to the next level in Lucid Dreaming, and I therefore can not recommend it strongly enough to anyone interested in exploring this potentially life-changing phenonema.
30. The Qabalah Codex - steven ashe
From the hermetic teachings of the Fraternity of the Sanctum Regnum, an esoteric study group pursuing the Golden Dawn tradition since 1981. Containing teachings on the fundamentals of Qabalistic theory, an initiated commentary upon the Tarot and Qabalistic symbolism, the official planetary & zodiacal invocations of the Golden Dawn lodge of the FSR, Zodiacal Magic, the planetary and zodiacal significance of the 72 Angels of the Shemhamphorash (Divided Name), essential esoteric rites for the Opening of the Temple, the Sidereal Zodiac and the employment of the Angels with relevance to the fixed-stars, etc. From the author of Qabalah of 50 Gates and The Complete Golden Dawn Initiate.
31. Propaganda - Edward Bernays 1928
A seminal and controversial figure in the history of political thought and public relations, Edward Bernays (1891–1995), pioneered the scientific technique of shaping and manipulating public opinion, which he famously dubbed “engineering of consent.” During World War I, he was an integral part of the U.S. Committee on Public Information (CPI), a powerful propaganda apparatus that was mobilized to package, advertise and sell the war to the American people as one that would “Make the World Safe for Democracy.” The CPI would become the blueprint in which marketing strategies for future wars would be based upon.
Bernays applied the techniques he had learned in the CPI and, incorporating some of the ideas of Walter Lipmann, became an outspoken proponent of propaganda as a tool for democratic and corporate manipulation of the population. His 1928 bombshell Propaganda lays out his eerily prescient vision for using propaganda to regiment the collective mind in a variety of areas, including government, politics, art, science and education. To read this book today is to frightfully comprehend what our contemporary institutions of government and business have become in regards to organized manipulation of the masses.
32. Encyclopedia of Public Relations - Dr. Robert L. Heath
The Encyclopedia of Public Relations provides the facts, opinions, and data for a thoughtful analysis of the profession. According to the editor, 'this work intends to provide an honest but positively biased treatment of public relations.' And so it does... Recommended for academic and large public libraries." -- Sue Polanka BOOKLIST 20050415 For academic purposes, a good subject encyclopedia should describe the theory, practice and development of a discipline. If aimed at students, such tools should also provide the foundation for further research. With this groundbreaking guide to public relations, Robert Heath has accomplished all these tasks in exemplary fashion... This outstanding set is highly recommended to academic and large public libraries. -- John R.M. Lawrence Lawrence Looks at Books 20050501 "Its emphasis is on historical, philosophical, and theoretical aspects of the field. What we have here then is an encyclopedia that continues the gulf between the academic world, the profession, and the public. " -- Ray E. Hiebert Science Direct 20060622
"Its emphasis is on historical, philosophical, and theoretical aspects of the field. What we have here then is an encyclopedia that continues the gulf between the academic world, the profession, and the public.
33. Changing Images of Man - Stanford Research Institute 1974
explores the reasons why changes may have to take place in the fundamental conceptual premises, laws, attitudes and ethics once suitable for guiding the development of the United States and other highly industrialized nations if a humane (and “workable”) future is to be achievable. It discusses the evidence that such changes may be occurring and the possibility that an evolutionary transformation may be underway that is at least as profound as the transition in Europe when the Medieval Age gave way to the rise of science and the Industrial Revolution.
34. Dare the School Build a New Social Order - George Counts 1932
Count's brief book on the role of teachers in the shaping of society's values is a must read for future teachers and anyone interested in the social foundations of education. By positing that teacher should champion classroom discourse that focuses on issues of democratic living, he places the emphasis of the curriculum where it should be - issues of social justice. Likewise the implementation of this ethically conscious curriculum is left in the hands of those who, if empowered, could have the greatest impact concerning issues of equity in American society - classroom teachers. The relevance of Count's criticism of racism, rote education and of the dangers of unchecked capitalism are such that this work could have just as easily been written in our present.
35. None Dare Call It Education - John A.Stormer
This is an extremely well-documented, fact-filled book exposing the deplorable condition of our public school system. I don't see how anyone can argue with the facts---the book is loaded with quotes from those in the educatinal system and excerpts from public school books / curriculum, and he sites each source. I highly recommend it...in fact, I have loaned my copy out to at least 12 people and every one of them, without exception, loved the book...most of them purchased their own copy after reading mine. The information contained in this book will scare you, especially if you have children in the public schools. Unfortunately, most parents have no idea what is really going on in their child's school---this book is a "wake-up call!" Once you begin reading, you won't be able to put it down.
36. UNESCO: Its Purpose and Its Philosophy - Sir Julian Huxley 1946
Unesco [UN Educational, Social and Scientific Organization] also can and should promote the growth of international contacts, international organizations, and actual international achievements, which will offer increasing resistance to the forces making for division and conflict. In particular, it can both on its own and in close relation with other UN agencies such as the FAO [Food & Agriculture Organization] and WHO [World Health Organization], promote the international application of science to human welfare. As the benefits of such world-scale collaboration becomes plain (which will be speedily be the case in relation to the food and health of mankind) it will become increasingly more difficult for any nation to destroy them by resorting to isolationism or to war." Page 14. [See The UN Plan for Food and Land]
"Further, since the world today is in process of becoming one, and since a major aim of Unesco must be to help in the speedy and satisfactory realization of this process... Unesco must pay special attention to international education - to education as a function of a world society, in addition to its function in relation to national societies, to regional or religious or intellectual groups or to local communities." p. 29-30
"The fact has also been emphasized by the development of intelligence testing, some authorities in this field going so far as to assert that only 10-20% of the population are capable of profiting by a university course
37. Deliberate Dumbing Down of America - Charlotte Thompson Iserbyt 1999
38. Die Insider - gary allen
39. Kissinger: The Secret Side Of the Secretary Of State - gary allen
40. The Rockefeller File - gary allen 1976
GARY ALLEN's shocking, true story of the most powerful family in America. How the House of Rockefeller became a political and financial dynasty. The New World Order it plans to creat - and control.
41. On Generation And Corruption - Aristotle 2004
The studies in this collection are well-informed, intelligent and illuminating ... It provides a most thorough and engaging study. Daniel W Graham, The Classical Review Of great interest to scholars and graduate students working on ancient natural science and philosophy. Ian Mueller, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
42. does the usa intend to dominate the whole world by force - noam chomsky
43. Mirrors of Destruction: War, Genocide, and Modern Identity - Omer Bartov 2002
His insights about the Great War, the Holocaust, and public memory makes Mirrors of Destruction an important contribution to the literature. History What does it mean to "come to terms with the Holocaust?" ... Bartov brings a prodigious amount of reading, intelligence, and critical energy to [this question] ... To his credit, [he] rejects the mystifications that one often finds in writing on the Holocaust--for instance, the notion that it is fundamentally inexplicable, or that only survivors can grasp its deeper significance ... In his conclusion [he] explores new material, taking on new polemics and problems and offering a brilliant analysis of the strange case of Binjamin Wilkomirski, a Swiss writer who falsely claimed to be a Holocaust survivor in his memoir 'Fragments. The New York Times Book Review Bartov's work has always been characterized by its thoughtfulness and independence, and here he combines archival research with an interdisciplinary critique of the literature drawn from widely diverse fields. He focuses on the links of social, cultural, and military history and offers particularly interesting insights into Europe's two major wars in this century and their relationship to the Holocaust. This is history painted in large strokes, and anyone trying to understand how and why the promise of the twentieth century went horribly wrong should read this book
44. The Landscape of History: How Historians Map the Past - John Lewis Gaddis 2002
Gaddis examines the nature of history and the function of historians through a wide range of metaphors. By putting forth the question: How long is the British coast line? Gaddis immediately sets out that if we measure in miles we won't get to the alcoves and cubbyholes and we'll probably end up with a nice round number. If we measure in microns and millimeters, it'll take a while but we'll measure every single bend and dog leg and we'll have a much larger number. Many of Gaddis' metaphors spur philosophical discussions but he does not approach them with a philosophical background, instead he sets out to solve a functional question: What is history? Is it a natural science? If it is, then why can we not replicate any historical findings as biology and physiology can? Is it a social science? Then why do other social sciences like economics and anthropology try to find an independent variable upon which everything hangs when historians try to put out the bigger picture? Gaddis' conclusion then is that history is its own beast. It does not mirror either the hard sciences nor the social sciences although it may pick up some of their properties.
Gaddis uses metaphors that seem to have little connection with hsitory, such as fractal geometry and natural sciences. The connections are then developed and this may be a way of making scientists understand the nature of history or giving students with a familiarity in natural sciences a correlation to the study of history. Also, Gaddis' humor makes a philosophical discussion of history a little less tense and certainly more cheerful.
All in all, this book is very readable for a historiography and may appeal to non-historians seeking a perspective on history. The chapters read more like the text of a speech than a textbook so the minimal 140 or so pages will make this a very easy read.
45. Privateers and Pirates 1730-1830 - Angus Konstam 2001
Following the pirate scourge of the early 18th century, many sea captains took to privateering as a means of making money. A form of nationally sponsored piracy, it reached its peak during the American Revolution, when the fledgling American navy had to rely on privateers to disrupt British shipping between England and the rebellious colonies. Following peace in 1815, many former privateers turned to piracy, spawning the last great piratical wave, which would last for a decade. The world of these privateers and latter-day pirates comes vividly to life in this detailed exploration of their ships, crews, ports and battle tactics.
46. Maps of Time: Introduction to Big History - David Christian 2004...($808.68)
San Diego State University historian Christian is one of the founding figures of the "Big History" movement. His basic premise is that to truly make sense of human history, history must be integrated with virtually all other disciplines-and in order to do this correctly, historians must reach back to the beginning of time. It is becoming fairly well accepted for historians to draw on biology, economics, environmental studies and politics as well as a host of other fields of study, and Christian does a very nice job of explaining the factors that led to the rise of states, the industrial revolution and the information revolution, as well as looking at future possibilities for humankind. What is far less successful is his integration of cosmology, astrophysics and evolutionary biology with the basic fare usually associated with historical analysis. Rather than using the cosmological principles associated with the Big Bang, for example, to demonstrate "underlying unity and coherence" in all systems across time, Christian leaves the reader with a weak metaphor and limited insight. By attempting to cover all of the universe's 13 billion years in a single volume, even one approaching 600 pages, Christian is forced to use such a broad brush that readers will find much of this book to be fairly superficial. 45 b&w illus., 9 maps.
47. A Short History Of Nearly Everything - Bill Bryson 2003
As the title suggests, bestselling author Bryson (In a Sunburned Country) sets out to put his irrepressible stamp on all things under the sun. As he states at the outset, this is a book about life, the universe and everything, from the Big Bang to the ascendancy of Homo sapiens. "This is a book about how it happened," the author writes. "In particular how we went from there being nothing at all to there being something, and then how a little of that something turned into us, and also what happened in between and since." What follows is a brick of a volume summarizing moments both great and curious in the history of science, covering already well-trod territory in the fields of cosmology, astronomy, paleontology, geology, chemistry, physics and so on. Bryson relies on some of the best material in the history of science to have come out in recent years. This is great for Bryson fans, who can encounter this material in its barest essence with the bonus of having it served up in Bryson's distinctive voice. But readers in the field will already have studied this information more in-depth in the originals and may find themselves questioning the point of a breakneck tour of the sciences that contributes nothing novel. Nevertheless, to read Bryson is to travel with a memoirist gifted with wry observation and keen insight that shed new light on things we mistake for commonplace. To accompany the author as he travels with the likes of Charles Darwin on the Beagle, Albert Einstein or Isaac Newton is a trip worth taking for most readers.
48. The Anti Terrorist on Standing in Court
49. The Anti Terrorist Playing to Win
50. The Anti Terrorist on the Freeman-Strawman-Man
51. Free Online Records
Self explanatory; relating to Europe and the US
52. us constitution, bill of rights & declaration of independance
53. The Confederate Handbook
54. How to Hustle & Win Excerpts: A Survival Guide To The Ghetto - Supreme Understanding 2008
How to Hustle and Win is a powerful book that every hustler, male or female, should pick up and read. Not only is the book inspirational, but it will also enlighten the minds of our trapped and confused youth. --The Real "Freeway" Rick Ross
Supreme Understanding leaves no stones unturned and keeps it real, 100 percent. Ain't no faking it. If you want the real deal, and you want to learn something that will help you in life, then read this book. How to Hustle and Win will answer every question and provide all the direction you need to start winning this game of life in words you can understand and relate to. So put down that new Triple Crown book and pick up How to Hustle and Win. --The Urban Book Source
how to Hustle and Win is a no-nonsense, practical book that is like having a loving but strict parent, a super-honest coach, a street-wise mentor, a honest homey, and a positive thugged-out drill seargant, all in one. It kicks you in the ass with love and knowledge on how to motivate yourself and get your goals accomplished. If Supreme Understanding didn't write this book, I was about to! I absolutely love it for its swagger, depth, originality, ULTRA practicality and I personally recommend it to all the homeys out there who feel like the world owes them something...get up, get out and get this book
55. Business Law
56. Lesson 1: Introduction to Law and the Meaning and Essentials
57. The Truth About Hiring a Criminal Defense Lawyer
58. Traffic Stops & Courts
69. Self Inking Stamps for Redemption 2007 Web Catalog
Im going to try and get as many of these books i can and upload them here
70. Default Course
71. Individual Sovereignty
72. AFFIDAVIT OF TRUTH ACTUAL AND CONSTRUCTIVE NOTICE
73. HOW TO BE YOUR OWN PRIVATE DETECTIVE - by Gerald Stein 1993
Introduction ..................................................... 1
CHAPTER I - Searching Public Records ........................... 5
CHAPTER II - To Locate Anyone ................................ 35
CHAPTER III - Suppliers of Information ........................... 41
CHAPTER IV - Electronic Gadgetry Suppliers ..................... 47
CHAPTER V - How to Develop Confidential" Inside" Contacts. ...... 51
CHAPTER VI - Personal and Premarital Background Investigations ... 57
CHAPTER VII - Is He Really A Doctor. A Lawyer
or Just A Lying Bum? ........................... 67
CHAPTER VIII - Employee Background Investigations ............. 73
CHAPTER IX - Marital Investigations ............................
CHAPTER X - Infidelity and Other Dirty Tricks .................... 93
CHAPTER XI - Business Background Investigations ................ 99
CHAPTER XII - Background Investigations -
(Noisy or Nasty Neighbors) .................... 105
CHAPTER XIII - Surveillance and Undercover Investigations ....... 109
CHAPTER XIV - Obtaining Information Through Pretext .......... 115
74. Practical Handbook for Private Investigators - Rory J. McMahon
The book is designed for individuals studying to become investigators, as
well as private investigators of all types and with all levels of experience.
The author shares what his research and experience have taught him. He
does not claim to have all the answers, as there is something new to be
learned about investigations and people every day. From his perspective,
this is one of the most attractive features of this career. This book is for
use in the academic realm for the many private and community colleges
offering classes in investigation and as a perspective that may be useful
to private investigators in terms of their approach to working cases. It is
certainly not meant to be the de?nitive thesis on how all investigations
should be performed.
Most of the author’s research on the various types of investigations
was performed while he was a college teacher at a small private junior
college in Fort Lauderdale, and during his 25 years as an investigator.
Much has been borrowed from a wide variety of academic and professional
sources over the years. It is hoped that the information will be useful to
both students and professionals in the ?eld of private investigation.
75. How to Fake Fingerprints 2006
Simple instructions how copy and fake fingerprints
76. Biometrical Fingerprint Recognition: Don't Get Your Fingers Burned
One of the most critical issues to solve when building multi-accessible systems, such as computer
applications, cars or physical buildings, is to determine the identity of a person. A system protecting
confidential information, or items of value, puts strong security demands on the identification. Biometry
provides us with a user-friendly method for this identification and is becoming a competitor for current
identification mechanisms, especially for electronic transactions. However, there are ways to
compromise a system based on biornetric verification. This article focuses on the drawbacks and risks of
biometric verification, specifically verification based on fingerprints. It shows how all currently
available fingerprint scanners can be fooled by dummies that are created with very limited means and
skills.
77. Cracking the Code - The Fascinating Truth About the taxation of america - Peter Eric Hendrickson
Let's get this said loud and clear right at the outset: IF
YOU HAVE TAXABLE INCOME, YOU ARE SUBJECT TO THE
INCOME TAX. Section l(a) of the Internal Revenue Code says:
"There is hereby imposed on the taxable income of-... [a tax of
varying percentages]" Pretty straightforward. Of course, it
does raise the question of exactly what is "taxable income"...
"... 'income', as used in the statute should be given a
meaning so as not to include everything that
comes in". United States Supreme Court, So. Pacific v.
Lowe, 247 U.S. 330,(1918)
"Inclusio unius est exclusio alterius. The inclusion of
one is the exclusion of another. The certain designation of one
person is an absolute exclusion of all others.... This doctrine
decrees that where law expressly describes [a] particular
situation to which it shall apply, an irrefutable inference must be
drawn that what is omitted or excluded was intended to be
omitted or excluded."
Black's Law Dictionary, 6th edition.
78. vegetable gardening encyclopedia with special herb section
79. Law of Negotiable Instruments - Boughton 1904
80. Infinite Energy Issue 43
Dirac’s Equation has profound implications both for sci-
ence and for the search for new energy. If we continue to
use the wrong model (and the Standard Model is pro-
foundly wrong) we will continue to get confusing results
that are difficult to replicate.
The enclosure shows the nature of the energetic, non-
stationary aether that Einstein missed, that Dirac’s equa-
tion demonstrates, and that Heisenberg and others
destroyed when they dismantled this equation. It further
suggests that special conditions, catalysis, and energy
available to a plasma may cause the synthesis, rather than
the release, of free neutrons, causing transmutations and
the release of energy via beta decay.
The treatment of Dirac’s equation is a lesson in the way
modern science works (or rather doesn’t). This treatment has
more recently been paralleled by the treatment of Reich,
Pons and Fleischmann, Halton Arp, and others. But I think
if one had to point to a single place where science went pro-
foundly and permanently off the track, it would be 1934 and
the emasculation of Dirac’s equation. This crisis at the heart
of science caused a chronic “hardening of the paradigm” and
science thereby lost the ability to self-correct.
81. Language, Self, and Business Ethics - Raymond N. MacKenzie 2000
Language has been one of the most discussed topics in twentieth-century
philosophy and psychology, yet it is rarely addressed in the field of business
ethics. Of course, general prohibitions against lying and fraud do exist, and the
ethical codes for professional communicators’ associations (such as the Public
Relations Society of America and the Society for Technical Communication)
call for language to be used “responsibly.” But such prohibitions and codes
offer little concrete guidance in a world in which statement has become spin,
and the line between truth and fantasy is increasingly blurred. Much of the
humor in the hugely popular Dilbert comic strip is based on the sort of gross
abuse of ordinary language that has become routine in modern business envi-
ronments; such humor is a necessary release for the many modern employees
who see their business environment as plagued by deceit, suspicion, and mu-
tual mistrust between management and employees. This widespread situation
suggests that we need to reconsider the importance of language in our ethical
lives. To do this, we need to recover a view of language that has been largely lost
or neglected in the twentieth century: We need to reconsider the relationship
between language and the self, between what we say and what we are.
82. Cracking The Code 3 - Jordan Maxwell
83. Meaning and Truth - Investigations in Philosophical Semantics - Betty Bytheway
84. language and freedom - noam chomsky 1970