Denis the Inventor


Book Description

Ivanov Gennadiy Ivanovich is a 70-year old citizen of Russia, top-ranked design engineer and author of 150 inventions. He has an international certificate TRIZ Master. Gennadiy Ivanovich is an author of popular scientific books and methodological guidelines on theory of creativity, teacher of TRIZ, an internationally recognized technical advisor, a former pupil and successor of an outstanding Russian scientist G.S. Altshuller the founder of TRIZ.




Denis the Inventor:


Book Description

An extract from the review by the president of the International Association of Theory of Inventive Problem Solving, Mark Barkan: I have read Gennadiy Ivanovichs book Denis the Inventor and felt pity that I had not read it when I was 10-12 years old, but its never too late.




The Music of Life


Book Description

What is Life? Decades of research have resulted in the full mapping of the human genome - three billion pairs of code whose functions are only now being understood. The gene's eye view of life, advocated by evolutionary biology, sees living bodies as mere vehicles for the replication of the genetic codes. But for a physiologist, working with the living organism, the view is a very different one. Denis Noble is a world renowned physiologist, and sets out an alternative view to the question - one that becomes deeply significant in terms of the living, breathing organism. The genome is not life itself. Noble argues that far from genes building organisms, they should be seen as prisoners of the organism. The view of life presented in this little, modern, post-genome project reflection on the nature of life, is that of the systems biologist: to understand what life is, we must view it at a variety of different levels, all interacting with each other in a complex web. It is that emergent web, full of feedback between levels, from the gene to the wider environment, that is life. It is a kind of music. Including stories from Noble's own research experience, his work on the heartbeat, musical metaphors, and elements of linguistics and Chinese culture, this very personal and at times deeply lyrical book sets out the systems biology view of life.




Denis the Inventor:


Book Description

An extract from the review by the president of the International Association of Theory of Inventive Problem Solving, Mark Barkan: I have read Gennadiy Ivanovichs book Denis the Inventor and felt pity that I had not read it when I was 10-12 years old, but its never too late.




Everything Explained That Is Explainable


Book Description

Everything Explained That Is Explainable is the audacious, utterly improbable story of the publication of the Eleventh Edition of the legendary Encyclopædia Britannica. It is the tale of a young American entrepreneur who rescued a dying publication with the help of a floundering newspaper, and in so doing produced a series of books that forever changed the face of publishing. Thanks to the efforts of 1,500 contributors, among them a young staff of university graduates as well as some of the most distinguished names of the day, the Eleventh Edition combined scholarship and readability in a way no previous encyclopedia had (or ever has again). Denis Boyles’s work of cultural history pulls back the curtain on the 44-million-word testament to the age of reason that has profoundly shaped the way we see the world.




STEREOSCOPY


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The Invention of Paris


Book Description

The Invention of Paris is a tour through the streets and history of the French capital under the guidance of radical Parisian author and publisher Eric Hazan. Hazan reveals a city whose squares echo with the riots, rebellions and revolutions of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Combining the raconteur’s ear for a story with a historian’s command of the facts, he introduces an incomparable cast of characters: the literati, the philosophers and the artists—Balzac, Baudelaire, Blanqui, Flaubert, Hugo, Maney, and Proust, of course; but also Doisneau, Nerval and Rousseau. It is a Paris dyed a deep red in its convictions. It is haunted and vitalized by the history of the barricades, which Hazan retells in rich detail. The Invention of Paris opens a window on the forgotten byways of the capital’s vibrant and bloody past, revealing the city in striking new colors.




United States Plant Patents


Book Description