In 1968 Smithson complicated and combined his site/nonsite work and his concern with the abyss in the Cayuga Salt Mine Project that he made for an “Earth Art” exhibition at Cornell University. He chose as the site pole of the work a ...
GERMAN EDITION Friedrich Nietzsche , Samtliche Werke : Kritische Studienausgabe , edited by Giorgio Colli and Mazzino Montinari ( Munich : Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag ; Berlin : Walter de Gruyter , 1980 ) .
Zur “Waffengenossenheit” Friedrich Nietzsche und Franz Overbeck. Mit einen Anhang unpublitzierter Texteaus Overbecks “Kirchenlexicon.” Berlin: Akademie Verlag, 1997. ———. Friedrich Nietzsche's “Der Antichrist”: Ein ...
... Paul, Dogs, 320–23 Renan, Ernest, 287 resemblance and similitude, 342–46 Reynolds, Sir Joshua, 55 Ritschl, Friedrich Wilhelm, 150 Rohde, Erwin, 69, 74, 150 Rorty, Richard, 7 Rubens, Peter Paul, 85 Russell, Bertrand, 341 St. Moritz, ...
In the final chapter, Shapiro undertakes a reading of the classical texts presupposed by Nietzsche_s claim that Zarathustra will not be understood unless one hears its _halcyon tone._ By juxtaposing Nietzsche_s halcyon with the Homeric ...
Taking readers inside the most cutting-edge businesses, Ninja Innovation is the ultimate guide to achieving victory in today's innovate-or-die economy.
... P. Arnell , T. Bickford , and Michael Graves , Buildings and Projects 1966-1981 ( New York : Rizzoli , 1982 ) ; for Robert A. M. Stern , See P. Arnell and T. Bickford , Robert A. M. Stern , 1965-1980 ( New York : Rizzoli , 1981 ) .
America's decline -- Why innovation?
In short, innovation is the American Dream. In The Comeback, Gary Shapiro shows us how to return innovation to its rightful place at the center of America's economic policy. The Comeback is a new blueprint for America's success.
NATIONAL BESTSELLER Ninja Future is an essential read for businesses and individuals striving to remain competitive in a rapidly evolving world: Gary Shapiro, the president and CEO of the Consumer Technology Association, casts his eye ...
In the final chapter, Shapiro undertakes a reading of the classical texts presupposed by Nietzsche's claim that Zarathustra will not be understood unless one hears its "halcyon tone.