[bookshare-discuss] Re: I submitted a book! I think.

  • From: "Duane Iverson" <diverson@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <bookshare-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sun, 27 Mar 2005 19:26:59 -0600

thanks Cindy.
I submitted the book this again today becaus I wasn't sure; and
two is better the none.
thanks again.

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Duane Iverson" <diverson@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: <bookshare-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, March 26, 2005 10:09 PM
Subject: [bookshare-discuss] I submitted a book! I think.


> I just uploaded, I think, Kicking the Sacred Cow by James P.
> Hogan.
> I say I think, because I left the compputer to putter after
the
> thing went silent during the upload process.
> I heard a Ding! then dectalk jabbered away, but I didn't hear
> him say Thank you Duane! like he is supposed to when I succeed
> in submitting.
> Anyway if someone goes up to validate this book and doesn't
find
> it, let me know.
> Here is the synopsus of the book.
> Kicking the Sacred Cow:
> Questioning the Unquestionable and Thinking the Impermissible
> James P. Hogan
> Scientists are Only Human
> -and Not Immune to Dogma.
>
> A New York Times Best-selling Writer Examines the Facts in the
> Most Profound Controversies in Modern Science.
>
> Galileo may have been forced to deny that the Earth moves
around
> the Sun; but in the end, science triumphed. Nowadays science
> fearlessly pursues truth,
> shining the pure light of reason on the mysteries of the
> universe. Or does it? As best-selling author James P. Hogan
> demonstrates in this fact-filled and
> thoroughly documented study, science has its own roster of
> hidebound pronouncements which are Not to be Questioned. Among
> the dogma-laden subjects he examines
> are Darwinism, global warming, the big bang, problems with
> relativity, radon and radiation, holes in the ozone layer, the
> cause of AIDS, and the controversy
> over Velikovsky. Hogan explains the basics of each controversy
> with his clear, informative style, in a book that will be
> fascinating for anyone with an
> interest in the frontiers of modern science.
>
>
>
>
>


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