Becker Books


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Becker Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Becker
Social Change in America: The Historical Handbook 2004 (Social Change in America)
Published in Paperback by Bernan Press (2003-11)
Author:
List price: $49.00
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Average review score:

A spot-on survey of how American society has changed
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-09
Compiled, organized and edited by professional demographer Patricia C. Becker, Social Change In America: The Historical Handbook 2004 combines straightforward narration with data from the 2000 Decennial Census and other recent governmental surveys, illustrated with clear charts and graphs. Covering matters of population, family life, health, housing, education, politics and voting, leisure time, work and employment, wealth and poverty and more, Social Change In America: The Historical Handbook 2004 is an absorbing and spot-on survey of how American society has changed and evolved in recent times. No academic or community library American Demography reference collection can be considered complete and up-to-date without the inclusion of Social Change In America: The Historical Handbook 2004.

Becker
Speak Like A Thai Volume 3 - Thai Proverbs and Sayings (Speak Like a Thai) (Speak Like a Thai)
Published in Audio CD by Paiboon Publishing (2007-05-25)
Author: Benjawan Poomsan Becker
List price: $15.00
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Average review score:

Another useful tool
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-12
Once again, Benjawan has managed to help those of use who want to speak Thai with our Thai friends and associates. Unlike many other Thai language course products which are more traditional in style and certainly more structured, the "Speak Like a Thai" series of CDs provides the user with common sayings -- and in the case of this particular CD, a useful look at sayings which parallel those commonly used in English. This helps the student of Thai to both understand a few new words, and "catch" a few colloquialisms which can instantly help the learner "fit in" with his/her Thai friends, and possibly, even endear him/her to the Thais he/she has occassion to interact with. I have found the "Speak Like a Thai" series of CDs to be valuable additions to my Thai language library in a practical and well received way. I reccomend it wholeheartedly.

Becker
A Statistical Portrait of the United States, 2002: Social Conditions and Trends (Statistical Portrait of the United States)
Published in Hardcover by Bernan-Unipub (2002-08)
Author:
List price: $147.00
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An indispensable library reference
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-11
Now in a completed revised and updated second edition for 2002, A Statistical Portrait Of The United States: Social Conditions & Trends is a solid reference packed cover to cover with charts, graphs, and hard data on everything from population data and crime rates, to education, income, labor, voting, and housing trends. A Statistical Portrait Of The United States is highly recommended as an excellent, first-class resource and an indispensable library reference.

Becker
The Structure of Evil: An Essay on the Unification of the Science of Man
Published in Hardcover by George Braziller (1968-06)
Author: Ernest Becker
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The Science of Man as Anthropodicy
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-02
Introduction

Not enough has been, nor can enough ever be said about Ernest Becker. He simply is one of the most impressive and towering intellects and theoretical synthesizers of our (or any) time. Ever the Scientist; the Social Psychologist, post-Freudian Existentialist; the Sociologist; a world class Psychiatrist, an Anthropologist; and then, ever so reluctantly, the Philosopher. Here, with the most exquisite of intellectual talents on display and operating them in delicate balance across a dizzying array of disciplines, Becker, throwing theories around like so much intellectual confetti, leads us on another one of his many daring cerebral high wire acts. His intellectual gymnastics take us far away from our own intellectual comfort zones into the depths of the unsettled and unknown. In his search for a "super-ordinate Science of Man," Becker disturbs and even awakens the dead. In the same way as he did in his Pulitzer winning signature work "The Denial of Death," and in his less well known but no less impressive, "The Birth and Death of Meaning," and in a book that is very similar to this one, "Escape from Evil," as well as in his groundbreaking, "The Revolution in Psychiatry," Ernest Becker again takes no intellectual prisoners. He seeks to devour with unerring logic, philosophy, history, and with his own improved models of sociology and Freudian-based Existentialist psychology.

Like Rachmaninov's "Fourth Piano Concerto," or John Coltrane's "A Love Supreme," in the wake of this intellectual tornado, Becker leaves a scorched and prostrated earth: The mind is unhinged from our brain and the cells are permanently rearranged. The intellectual landscape is no longer recognizable; the mind is zapped, lobotomized, changed forever...The only precipitate is the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.

Part I: The Science of Man as a Moral Problem

The Story begins as all of Becker's analyses begin, with a deep and thorough excavation, rereading, re-analysis and synthesis of history. Becker turns over and re-plows the well-trod ground of what we know about man's social existence since the pre-Renaissance Middle-Ages. And what we know is that despite the fact that the Middle Ages operated pretty much as society still does today: manipulated by politicians in power, run by warlords and Feudal lords, and by special interest groups all using what they know about social science to demagogue and profit from, war, hate and fear, the Middle Ages nevertheless left man with a sense of wholeness and a sense of community built into the rigid hierarchical social structure, a sense of wholeness that can no longer be found in today's overly-commodified and overly-industrialized world.

In Part I of this two part symphonic masterpiece, Becker raises, and then uses it to guide his enquiry, the same concerns that were raised at the end of the Dark Ages by Newton's "clockwork scientific revolution": the idea that maybe the seminal event guiding the Medieval worldview -- the bite from the apple in the garden of Eden -- was all wrong. Maybe man is not inherently evil? Maybe sin and evil are mere by-products of man's attempt to grapple with his own complex nature within the context of society? And in this regard, maybe it should be said that Newton's revolution came at exactly the wrong time, for it opened a can of worms that still reverberates today. It initiated a series of social revolutions, beginning with the French that re-opened for examination the thitherto hermitically sealed (mostly by the Catholic Church) idea of an uncritical God-centered and God-run physical and moral cosmology.

After Newton, and as part of man's attempt to better get his hands around the problem of how to deal with his own morality, (and lack of immortality) there came in quick succession misreadings of Malthus, Adam Smith, Sigmund Freud, Karl Marx, and most of all Darwin -- all neatly packaged with promises of a new morality, a new "Science of Moral Man" -- with the stress this time being on the word "Science." These were lavish promises that all turned into ideological "cotton candy" and thus could not be redeemed, because they failed as a suitable replacement even for the old corrupt but profoundly orderly Medieval cosmology. But far worse, the "mechanized paradigm of scientific morality" that they represented, led to its own moral excesses and its own unique moral problems: in particular to Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Auschwitz, racism, colonialism and most importantly to post-modern man's almost complete alienation from himself.

Part II: The Science of Man as Anthropodicy

In Part II of the book Becker attempts to square the existential circle by trying to determine exactly where "scientific moral man" went off the rails. More than anything else, what he discovers is that old cosmologies, when they die at all, always die hard. What happened is that the "new scientific moral order" was shaped by the same coalition of political and economic forces that "ran" the Middle Ages -- the Church, the Kingdom, and the modern reincarnation of the feudal lords, the industrial corporation. And as a result, they turned science into just another empty abstract vessel to continue Medieval greed, politics and control, by other more novel means.

In short, the "New Moral World Order," was just the old "Medieval immoral order" in new "scientific bottles." It represented the same old "spoils system" invented by the descendants of the old feudal land-owning elites. The old morality, had simply been repackaged in the Trojan Horse of science. The very hopeful morality that had "ushered in" the French and American revolutions with its grandiose ideals of freedom and democracy had already been fatally compromised and contaminated before it got out of the starting gate. Thus, it became, like the new religion that it underwrote, just another moral fetish - a byproduct and close relative of the same old medieval immorality.

Summary

After demonstrating that morally we have only been treading water, coming full circle back to square one, Becker makes his final and most important point about how to develop a "Science of Man" (which he calls an Anthropodicy); about evil, and about its most prominent instrumentality and root cause, alienation:

It is that man was put on this earth naked, without instincts; having to scrape, conjure and fashion his world from his own creation, meanings made from his own symbols. This ability is not only his sole basis of survival but is also the only tool that makes him human. In the end the ideal moral man is one who understands (as Becker's own life and books so aptly demonstrates) that life on earth can only be about being a free man in the sense of having the maximum freedom to create, that is with maximum individuality, and thus with the maximum ability to manifest that creativity in a larger community of meaning, which is itself evolving towards maximum meaning (what Becker refers to as Maximum community).

As inelegant and tortuous as this answer may sound, it is difficult to disagree with Becker that "maximum individuality in maximum community" is the only "moral sense" that can be fashioned independently in this world.

As a footnote, this book now makes clearer a comment ex-president Bill Clinton made in his book "My Life." His comment was in reference to how Becker's theories (in The Denial of Death) answered the question about the existence of god. Clinton drew what in the context of the Denial of Death seemed an eminently reasonable conclusion: that ultimately Becker believed in God. In light of the present analysis, however, it seems to me that the ex-President may have unintentionally stretched this point a bit by failing to make clear that Becker's reference to God, "as the strength of a cosmic force," is quite a different "man-made creation," than the equally "man-made creation" being worshipped in a private, personal, and often mean-spirited, selfish and egotistical way each Sunday morning by most of the normal "religious denominations." Becker's god was never intended to be a private servant of man or a night watchman over man's morals, but a force created by man and projected out into the universe; a force that would then continue to evolve with each new improvement in man's moral meanings.

Another point that seems equally misrepresented but is cleared up in this book as well is Becker's notion of what it means to be mentally ill. By my reading of Becker, and following what I know about the works of one of his mentors, Thomas Szasz, it seems quite clear that Becker is only saying that there are two forms of neuroses, covering a spectrum from private to public, and that somehow we have come to understand only the private as constituting a sickness. I believe Becker would argue that, either both are sick, or it doesn't make sense to speak of neuroses as a sickness.

Enough said. Ten stars

Becker
Studios by the Sea : Artists of Long Island's East End
Published in Hardcover by (2002-06-01)
Authors: Bob Colacello and Jonathan Becker
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Average review score:

Artists of Long Island's East End
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-19
This is a beautiful book, with great shots of the studios of different artists. The studios are as different
from each other as the artists are themselves. It has given me great inspiration in designing my own
studio.

Becker
Surfing Anonymously
Published in Paperback by Data Becker (2002-03)
Author: Florian Schaeffer
List price: $12.95
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Average review score:

Shhh! It's a Secret
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-07
SURFING ANONYMOUSLY
AUTHOR: Florian Schaeffer
PUBLISHER: DataBecker
REVIEWED BY: Barbara Rhoades

BOOK REVIEW: Remember the old adage: "There is no such thing as a free lunch" and "Let the buyer beware"? This applies also to free dial-up services. Once again Data Becker provides a small but power-packed book on surfing the web anonymously. This book contains the notes and tips sections that the Fast Byte Series is noted for and lots of information packed into only 160 pages.

Provider passwords, free dial-up services, setting the security risk in Office and Internet Explorer, how to handle email properly, and viruses and their kind are all discussed in Surfing Anonymously. The reader is given tips and suggestions on how to handle various subjects with safety.

Cookies, firewalls and finally surfing anonymously are the subjects of the final chapters. There are several suggestions on web sites where you can obtain free programs for, among other things, firewalls, checking on your browser capabilities and even a site that will give you a sampling of just how much information a web site can gather when you visit. All of this information can be had for the small price... Get your copy today.

Becker
Swedes of Greater Worcester Revisited (MA) (Images of America)
Published in Paperback by Arcadia Publishing (2005-05-09)
Authors: Eric J. Salomonsson, William O. Hultgren, and Philip C. Becker
List price: $19.99
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Average review score:

Home Sweet Home
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-16
Imagine showing this book to my 91 yr old Mother,as she pointed out her grandfather's store on Greenwood Street, and recognized many names and faces from our past, as I grew up there also. It is a lovely collection of photographs and area history. The house where my Mother was born, and the school we attended,as well as our church are all shown here. I am very happy to have this lovely book. Thank you, Nancy Nelson McKee,daughter of Ruth Forsberg Nelson and David W. Nelson, great-grand daughter of Wilhelm Forsberg.

Becker
Tales of a Midwest Nothing: My Experiences and Reflections on Life
Published in Paperback by AuthorHouse (2001-08-09)
Author: Joseph C III Becker
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Average review score:

Buy this book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-18
I am a personal friend of the authors, and I want to say he has written great book. Very funny. I am in the book as well, "Joe Becker on Norm". Let me just say all true. I got confused on his "stories" but they were crafted quite well. If you want a laugh and a realistic point of veiw on life, compiled with interesting stories, this is your book. This book also notes breifly to the works of KISS.

Becker
Testing the Limits of Teams: How to Implement Self-Management in Health Care
Published in Paperback by Jossey-Bass (1998-01-15)
Authors: Elizabeth D. Becker-Reems and Daniel G. Garrett
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Average review score:

The foundation on building teams in health care.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-17
Health care organizations are struggling with the construct of empowerment of employees. Utilizing the basics for business has not been advantageous. Becker-Reems and Garrett have provided the basics and beyond of self-managed work teams with a specific focus for health care. Real examples across the health care continuum are provided. Book is well organized. Each chapter serves as a stand alone section. Information is presented in table format for ease of reading. Team activities are provided for each section. Additionally contact persons are listed for the designated organizations--with phone numbers. Book is excellent for health care organizations and for students studying team development.

Becker
Tickly Prickly (Growing Tree)
Published in Paperback by HarperFestival (1999-06-30)
Author: Bonny Becker
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A fun whimsical rhyming book. My daughter loved it!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-04
Mrs. Becker has a way with words. Fun and lively, the words present the animals and the world around us. For instance, she nails what a lamb feels like with, "CRINKLY CURLS. WOOLLY WHIRLS." A true delight, my only criticism is that the book made my daughter and I wanting more.


Books-Under-Review-->Reference-->Biography-->B-->Becker-->31
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