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In the year 2191, on planet Canadian Exodus, the hundred year war against the Bloodline terrorist faction is drawing to a close.Before the terrorist leaders can be banished, however, the elite paramilitary unit known as Track and Pursuit is called into enemy territory for one last hunt. Days later, five of the six deployed hunters are dead at the hands of a single fugitive, and the survivors of the unitknow that their only hope is to enlist the aid of retired Captain Chester Wolf, the only man more deadly than their adversary. No hunt is what it seems, as Wolf knows very well. The killer is one of their own, and this hunt will be like no other.
On her first day, the newest member of the United States Senate witnesses a brutal murder on the Senate subway. But by whom, and why does someone now seem determined to put a permanent end to her political career? As she stakes out her claim on an important issue, she begins to see a link between her cause and the murdered man. It's a connection leading down a trail of dark secrets that people will mercilessly kill again to keep!
Vol 1 905p Vol 2 961p.
This book provides the first comprehensive account of Hume’s conception of objects in Book I of A Treatise of Human Nature. What, according to Hume, are objects? Ideas? Impressions? Mind-independent objects? All three? None of the above? Through a close textual analysis, Rocknak shows that Hume thought that objects are imagined ideas. But, she argues, he struggled with two accounts of how and when we imagine such ideas. On the one hand, Hume believed that we always and universally imagine that objects are the causes of our perceptions. On the other hand, he thought that we only imagine such causes when we reach a “philosophical” level of thought. This tension manifests itself in Hume’s account of personal identity; a tension that, Rocknak argues, Hume acknowledges in the Appendix to the Treatise. As a result of Rocknak’s detailed account of Hume’s conception of objects, we are forced to accommodate new interpretations of, at least, Hume’s notions of belief, personal identity, justification and causality.