Extractions: Public Relations Speeches Marketing Advertising Resume Writing National Telemarketing Flat-Rate Long Distance Telephone! National Telemarketing Call Center Media Promotion, including Newspaper, Broadcast, and Internet Advertising Infomercials Classic Book Author Index, Plays, Religious Manuscripts, Historic Documents, and much more! Any A. Adams Audubon Bierstadt Botero Braque Cappiello Cassatt Cezanne Chagall Dali Da Vinci Degas Dufy Escher Gauguin Hockney Homer Hopper Kandinsky Kimble Klee Klimt Lichtenstein Magritte Matisse Michelangelo Miro Modigliani Mondrian Monet Mucha O'Keeffe Picasso Pissarro Raphael Remington Renoir Rivera Rockwell Rodin Rousseau Toulouse-Lautrec Van Gogh Vettriano Warhol Art Wolfe Wyeth
Lunar Craters Statistics 42. Gilbert N.; American che. ca; Soviet aeronaut (19031965). Kostinskiy. Lucretius.8.2S. 120.8W. 63. Titus C.; Roman scientific philosopher (c. 95-55 BC). Ludwig. http://lunar.arc.nasa.gov/science/atlas/text/cratertex_l.html
Extractions: A B C D ... Main Menu Latin Name Lat Long Diam Origin La-Caille Nicholas Louis De; French astronomer (1713-1762). La-Condamine N 28.2W "Charles Marie De; French astronomer, physicist(1701-1774)." La-Perouse "Jean Francois de Galoup, Comte De La Perouse; French explorer" Lacchini Giovanni; Italian astronomer (1884-1967). Lacroix Sylvestre Francois De; French mathematician (1765-1843). Lade Heinrich Eduard von; German astronomer (1817-1904). Lagalla Giulio Cesare; Italian philosopher (1571-1624).
Www.informika.ru/text/books/gutenb/gutind/TEMP/authors9809a1.txt Eugene, 18501895 Fielding, Henry, 1707-1754 Filson, John, ca. Russell, 1819-1891Lowell, Percival, 1855-1916 Lucretius, circa 95-55 BC Luther, Martin http://www.informika.ru/text/books/gutenb/gutind/TEMP/authors9809a1.txt
Lunar Republic : Craters ca.180), Syrian philosopher and satirist; his True History included an imaginaryvoyage to the Moon. Lucretius. 8.2S. 120.8W. 63. Titus ~ carus (c. 9555 BC), http://www.lunarrepublic.com/gazetteer/crater_l.shtml
Extractions: Craters (L) Craters A B C D ... Return To Gazetteer Index Latin Name Lat Long Diam Origin La Caille Nicholas Louis De ~ (1713-1762), French astronomer. La Condamine N 28.2W Charles Marie De ~ (1701-1774), French astronomer, physicist. La Perouse Jean Francois de Galoup, Comte De ~ (1741-1788); French explorer. Lacchini Giovanni ~ (1884-1967), Italian astronomer. Lacroix Sylvestre Francois de ~ (1765-1843), French mathematician. Lade Heinrich Eduard von ~ (1817-1904), German astronomer. Lagalla Giulio Cesare ~ (1571-1624), Italian philosopher. Lagrange Joseph Louis ~ (1736-1813), Italian mathematician. Lalande Joseph Jerome Le Francois De ~ (1732-1807), French astronomer. Lallemand Andre ~ (1904-1978), French astronomer. Lamarck Jean B. P. A. De M.~ (1744-1829), French natural historian. Lamb Sir Horace ~ (1849-1934), British mathematician, physicist. Lambert Johann Heinrich ~ (1728-1777), German astronomer, mathematician, physicist. Lame Gabriel ~ (1795-1870), French mathematician. Lamech Felix Chemla ~ (1894-1962), French selenographer.
Extractions: Bibliography On internet, Atomic Theory 1996. http://www.antoin.fsu.umd.edu Dalton's Atomic Theory http://dbhs.wvusd.k12.ca.us The Greek Concept Of Atomos John L. Park 1996 Parry/ Dietz/ Tellefsen/ Steiner Chemistry experimental foundations pretence hall 1983 G. Raymer-Cantham, Chemistry addison-wesley publishers
Index Translate this page 1947 Gutenberg Lucan AKA Marcus Annaeus Lucanus, 39-65 AD Gutenberg Lucas, EV(Edward Verrall), 1868-1938 Gutenberg Lucretius, ca 95-55 BC Gutenberg Luther http://www.elbooks.sk/angautL.html
Index Makaloa Mat, by London, Jack, 18761916 On The Method Of Zadig, by Huxley, ThomasHenry, 1825-1895 On The Nature Of Things, by Lucretius, ca 95-55 BC On The http://www.elbooks.sk/angdieloO.html
Project Gutenberg: Authors List Lucas, EV (Edward Verrall), 18681938. Lucretius, ca 95-55 BC. Luther, Martin,1483-1546. Lyall, Edna, 1857-1903, pseudonym AKA Bayly, Ada Ellen, 1857-1903. http://www.gwd50.k12.sc.us/PG-Authors.htm
Extractions: This is Project Gutenberg. This list has been downloaded from: "The Official and Original Project Gutenberg Web Site and Home Page" http://promo.net/pg/ PROJECT GUTENBERG ETEXTS AUTHORS IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER Last Updated: Monday 03 September 2001 by Pietro Di Miceli (webmaster@promo.net) The following etext have been released by Project Gutenberg. This list serves as reference only. For downloading books, please use our catalogs or search at: http://promo.net/pg/ Or check our FTP archive at: ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/ and etext subdirectories. For problems with the FTP archives (ONLY) email gbnewby@ils.unc.edu, be sure to include a description of what happened AND which mirror site you were using. THANKS for visiting Project Gutenberg. * (No Author Attributed) Abbott, David Phelps, 1863-1934 Abbott, Edwin Abbott, 1838-1926 AKA: Square, A Abbott, John S. C. (John Stevens Cabot), 1805-1877 Adams, Andy, 1859-1935 Adams, Henry, 1838-1918 Adams, John Quincy, 1767-1848 Adams, Samuel, 1722-1803 Adams, William Taylor, 1822-1897 AKA: Optic, Oliver, 1822-1897
Biblioteca Virtual 1938). The Slowcoach (.zip 119.68 Kb). Lucretius, (ca 95-55 BC). OnThe Nature Of Things (.zip - 167 Kb). Luther, Martin (1483 + 1546). http://www.bibvirt.futuro.usp.br/gutenberg/l.html
ScienceWeek Archive Lucretius (95-55 BC) Contentsof This Issue 1. Cell Biology Functional ions such as Na(+), K(+), ca(2+), Cl http://scienceweek.com/2000/sw000211.htm
SCIENCEWEEK Lucretius (95-55 BC). 2. Chervitz, SA , Aravind, L. , Sherlock, G. , Ball, ca, Koonin, EV , Dwight, SS , Harris, MA , Dolinski, K. , Mohr, S. , Smith, T http://scienceweek.com/2002/sw020510.htm
PROJECT GUTENBERG ETEXTS AUTHORS IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER 1947 AKA Lowndes, Belloc, 18681947 Lucan AKA Marcus Annaeus Lucanus, 39-65 ADLucas, EV (Edward Verrall), 1868-1938 Lucretius, ca 95-55 BC Luo, Guanzhong, ca http://www.sign-lang.uni-hamburg.de/fb07/GermS/Project-Gutenberg-Authors.html
Sketches In The History Of Western Philosophy Neoptolemus I, d.ca.360. This was never as popular as Stoicism, but there were afew Roman Epicureans especially Lucretius (9555 BC) and his poem De rerum http://www.friesian.com/hist-1.htm
Extractions: down to the Roman Empire The Hellenistic Age suffers from some of the same disabilities as Late Antiquity, i.e. it doesn't measure up to the brilliance of the Golden Age of Greece and of late Republican and early Imperial Rome. However, the Hellenistic world, although mostly not bothering with characteristic Greek experiments like democracy, is where Greece actually became a cosmopolitan culture, a sort of pre-adaptation for the Roman world. Just saying that the Bible begins with the book of Genesis , a Greek word, reflects the degree to which the older cultures of the Middle East came to express themselves in Greek. Several of the Hellenistic Kingdoms, mainly in Anatolia (Armenia, Pontus, Cappadocia, etc.), are domains of non-Greek peoples. Meanwhile, although the literature does not seem as brilliant, mathematics, science, and technology develop rapidly. Archimedes very nearly develops calculus. Eratosthenes estimates the size of the Earth with an accuracy that will not be surpassed until Modern times. Hero of Alexandria builds a kind of steam engine. This remains little more than a toy, but the same cannot be said of the immense engines, often of war, that Hellenstic technology otherwise produces. It is all inherited by the Romans, perhaps symbolicly with the killing of Archimedes at Syracuse by a Roman soldier in 212 (during the Second Punic War, 218-201). All of these tables are mainly based on E.J. Bickerman
Book Lists Lucretius (c.9555 BC) _On the Nature of Things_ 18. Lucretius, _On the Nature ofThings_ 19. sigh), Mike Morris (msmorris@watsci.uwaterloo.ca) Jon Ferro http://www.geocities.com/Athens/5952/books.html
Www.2000english.com/information/Contents.txt Lucanus, Marcus Annaeus ( 3965 ) ¬¿² Pharsalia Civil War ¡¶ÄÚÕ½¼Ç¡·Lucas, EV (1868-1938) The Slowcoach Lucretius (ca.95-55 BC) ¬¿ËÀ http://www.2000english.com/information/Contents.txt
A History Of Extropic Thought Presented June 18, 1995 at Extro^2 conference in Santa Monica, ca. Abstract. Whatis extropy? In ancient Rome, Lucretius (c.9555 BC) wrote in The Nature of http://home.attbi.com/~reillyjones/history.html
Extractions: Parallel Conceptual Development of Technicism and Humanism Presented June 18, 1995 at Extro^2 conference in Santa Monica, CA Hamlet in The Revolt of the Masses The strategic battle plans that give us power over necessity and over time are comprised of concepts. We must have conceptual fuel to stoke the fire of civilization. Our conceptual capabilities go far beyond our perceptual capabilities. They do not merely categorize our immediate sensory stimulation, they categorize very general and abstract relations transcending temporality. Concepts are linked to intentionality, they tell us what we can do with things, or what things can do to us. To discover what things can do to us, we map a conceptual landscape as we experience novelty. Our maps are always incomplete, but there is no limit to creative interpretations of them. We have freedom to judge all aspects of reality using an infinitude of concepts of ever increasing refinement and versatility. Life is a struggle between seeking and avoiding surprise, recognition is the serious business of turning the novel into the ordinary, to help us know what we can do with it. Oswald Spengler in The Decline of the West There are so many concepts linked to what can be called, very roughly, an extropic worldview, that I thought a general overview of how they were generated would be of interest. I have reviewed almost 500 historical figures as to where and when they lived, what their vocations were, and gave them a summary subjective evaluation of their contribution to an extropic worldview. My evaluations are based on my incomplete knowledge of what the extropic worldview is and the incomplete knowledge of what exactly these individuals really thought. Nevertheless, a generalized picture emerged that may not differ greatly from what others would come up with independently. In the two tables below, the areas and vocations are listed in order of oldest to newest.
- Great Books - after the death of Lucretius; and, although it is likely on the lost work of Suetonius, that Lucretius died on. say with certainty that Lucretius was born between 98 and http://www.mala.bc.ca/~mcneil/tlucret.htm
Stephen Wolfram: A New Kind Of Science -- Index K-o 893, 934 Li, Wentian (USA, 1959 ) and ca classes, 948 in 180 AD) and inhabitantsof Moon, 1190 Lucretius, Titus carus (Italy, ~95 - ~55 BC) and atomism http://www.wolframscience.com/nks/index/names/k-o.html?SearchIndex=k-o
Stephen Wolfram: A New Kind Of Science -- Index Li-lz rule 110 axiom system, 1168 in rule 110 ca, 31, 292 120 ~180 AD) and inhabitantsof Moon, 1190 Lucretius, Titus carus (Italy, ~95 - ~55 BC) and atomism http://www.wolframscience.com/nks/index/li-lz.html
Alexander Hahn: On Things In General The working title translates from Lucretius (95 55 BC) epic poem ?De RerumNatura. His theory of These clips were assembled chronologically, from ca. http://www.alexanderhahn.com/Hahn-AboutNature.html
Extractions: When the sun strikes a CCD, the light-sensitive recording element of a video camera, the image tends to collapse and begins to pulsate between dark and white, maybe as result of stabilizing efforts by the circuitry. The four tracks are enveloped by such a solar pulse. Under the strobing sun and the drumming rain, the images and their reflections on the water appear and disappear, immersing the gallery space in the hypnotic spectacle of memory's light.