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  Author: creativelivenew1   |   19 March 2024   |   comments: 0
God's Undertaker Has Science Buried God
Free Download God's Undertaker: Has Science Buried God? By John C. Lennox
2007 | 192 Pages | ISBN: 0745953034 | PDF | 3 MB
Intended to provide a basis for discussion, this book evaluates the evidence of modern science in relation to the debate between the atheistic and theistic interpretations of the universe. Written like a scientific detective story, this excellent introduction to the current debate grew out of the author's lengthy experience of lecturing and debating on the subject.

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  Author: Baturi   |   03 January 2023   |   comments: 0
The Undertaker's Wife A True Story of Love, Loss, and Laughter in the Unlikeliest of Places
Jodie Berndt, "The Undertaker's Wife: A True Story of Love, Loss, and Laughter in the Unlikeliest of Places"
English | ISBN: 0310340837 | 2015 | 224 pages | EPUB | 625 KB
On Dee Branch's first date with Johnnie Oliver, a fourth-generation funeral director, she knew she was in for a unique relationship when he had to leave "for just a minute"-and he came back to the car with a corpse.

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  Author: Baturi   |   24 August 2022   |   comments: 0
Undertaker of the Mind John Monro and Mad-Doctoring in Eighteenth-Century England (Medicine and Society) 11
Undertaker of the Mind: John Monro and Mad-Doctoring in Eighteenth-Century England (Medicine and Society): 11 By Jonathan Andrews
2001 | 388 Pages | ISBN: 0520231511 | PDF | 22 MB
As visiting physician to Bethlem Hospital, the archetypal "Bedlam" and Britain's first and (for hundreds of years) only public institution for the insane, Dr. John Monro (1715-1791) was a celebrity in his own day. Jonathan Andrews and Andrew Scull call him a "connoisseur of insanity, this high priest of the trade in lunacy." Although the basics of his life and career are well known, this study is the first to explore in depth Monro's colorful and contentious milieu. Mad-doctoring grew into a recognized, if not entirely respectable, profession during the eighteenth century, and besides being affiliated with public hospitals, Monro and other mad-doctors became entrepreneurs and owners of private madhouses and were consulted by the rich and famous. Monro's close social connections with members of the aristocracy and gentry, as well as with medical professionals, politicians, and divines, guaranteed him a significant place in the social, political, cultural, and intellectual worlds of his time. Andrews and Scull draw on an astonishing array of visual materials and verbal sources that include the diaries, family papers, and correspondence of some of England's wealthiest and best-connected citizens. The book is also distinctive in the coverage it affords to individual case histories of Monro's patients, including such prominent contemporary figures as the Earls Ferrers and Orford, the religious "enthusiast" Alexander Cruden, and the "mad" King George III, as well as his crazy would-be assassin, Margaret Nicholson. What the authors make clear is that Monro, a serious physician neither reactionary nor enlightened in his methods, was the outright epitome of the mad-trade as it existed then, esteemed in some quarters and ridiculed in others. The fifty illustrations, expertly annotated and integrated with the text, will be a revelation to many readers.

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