Indiana Books
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Cyril Birch's excellent introduction to the San YanReview Date: 2005-01-10

Great Work!Review Date: 1998-06-25

Used price: $10.60

Hoosier Hysteria for Strange Indiana MonstersReview Date: 2007-10-07

Used price: $18.59

An Outstanding Blend of Scholarship and HumanityReview Date: 2000-03-04
This timely, outstanding blend of scholarship and humanity places this work in the category of a genuine classic. The book is a "must" for every serious scholar of American history. "No Shame in my Game" by Katherine Neuman would be a wonderful contemporary companion.
Used price: $175.00

A must-buy for fantasy scholarsReview Date: 2004-02-20
In my opinion, this is a book which is almost as hard to ignore to the fantasy scholar as is Tolkiens "On Fairy-Stories".

Good book on Black Documentary film.Review Date: 2000-12-25

Used price: $9.98

Northern Indiana Men Fight in Civil WarReview Date: 2006-04-16
Used price: $13.46

FantasticReview Date: 2000-06-21
In Hoc, Morton

A must if researching Switzerland Co., Ind.Review Date: 1998-09-07

Why we can discover laws of natureReview Date: 2004-02-03
Contrast this with the nonsense propagated in the first chapter of Samuelson's well-sold Economics text, where he asserts on the basis of a hokey picture that the difference between physics and the social sciences is not as great as it seems. In fact, there are no known invariance principles in the socio-economic sciences, and no corresponding laws of socio-economic motion (motion of money, e.g.). At best, there are intelligent gambling strategies like the equations for predicting option pricing, but these depend on market statistics that can change from one era to the next. Nor is it guaranteed that options traders will forever favor the dalta-hadging strategy and it's refinements. The last word: mathematical modelling and computer simulations are a completely different cat than approximate predictions based on laws of nature, like the laws of physics and genetics. The fact that we cannot yet (if ever) solve the Navier-Stokes equations for turbulence, which are grounded in local invariance principles and physical law, has nothing to do with our general inability to model human behavior mathematically.
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