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This is Nathaniel Goldberg first self titled publication, it traces back 25 years of his photographic career condensed in a collection of photos which include fashion, celebrity portraits, beauty, landscapes and a preview of personal projects that he has been working on for several years which examines an Aghori Sadhu in West Bengal and the other explores the friendship of a group of male prostitutes in Bangkok. He navigates between fashion photography and his passion for documentary photography with ease which transpires thru the pages of this book, juxtaposing these different worlds, far apart from each other but when seen together reflect the correlation between fashion and documentary photography. Nathaniel Goldberg's classic approach to photography expands beyond fashion where the lines are blurred between the subjects that he feels passionate about.
Examining the deep philosophical topics addressed in superhero comics, authors Gavaler and Goldberg read plot lines for the complex thought experiments they contain and analyze their implications as if the comic authors were philosophers. Reading superhero comic books through a philosophical lens reveals how they experiment with complex issues of morality, metaphysics, meaning, and medium. Given comics’ ubiquity and influence directly on (especially young) readers—and indirectly on consumers of superhero movies and video games—understanding these deeper meanings is in many ways essential to understanding contemporary popular culture. The result is an entertaining and enlightening look at superhero dilemmas.
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This is a work in Kantian conceptual geography. It explores issues in analytic epistemology, philosophy of language, and metaphysics in particular by appealing to theses drawn from Immanuel Kant's Critique of Pure Reason. Those issues include the nature of the subjective, objective, and empirical; potential scopes of the subjective; what can (and cannot) be said about a subject-independent reality; analyticity, syntheticity, apriority, and aposteriority; constitutive principles, acquisitive principles, and empirical claims; meaning, indeterminacy, and incommensurability; logically possible versus subjectively empirical worlds; and the nature of empirical truth. Part One introduces two theses...
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Focuses on Federal agency competition with private industry.
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