Jivaja


Book Description

Mecca is a murderer. That's what she thinks when she accidentally kills the man who attacks her her favorite coffee shop's parking lot. Self defense, right? Except how is she to explain that he died with only her hand on his wrist?Vampires don't exist. Well, not in the "traditional" sense. The Visci, a species that subsists on human blood, are not undead. They're not human. And they never were.Everything you know is wrong.Close kin to humans, the Visci pass within our society easily, and over millennia, wedged their way into positions of power. Long-lived, they are also very difficult to kill. However, they have an evolutionary flaw. While they do not die easily, they also do not reproduce easily. But they can mate with humans - and have, giving rise to a population of human-Visci hybrids, called half-bloods by those of pure lineage.For centuries, half-bloods and pure bloods lived and worked together. But tensions have risen and civil war now rages on the doorstep.But Mecca Trenow knows none of this when she flees to her father, panicked over her unintended use of the family Gift: the one that allows her to manipulate human energy. She's always hated her gift and wouldn't learn anything about it beyond how to control it so she wouldn't hurt anyone. That is, until the rogue pure blood attacks her. She reacts instinctively, draining his life - the life he's stolen from another - from him in moments.And now she's a murderer.When word gets back to the Visci of one who can kill their kind with just a touch, the race is on to acquire Mecca as a weapon in the coming battle. As she learns about this shadowy underground group, she discovers her father's dark past and the secret he has kept from her her whole life.Reeling from this discovery, unable to trust the one person she has always counted on, Mecca is isolated from everything she once knew, all while being hunted by dangerous creatures bent on using her Gift for their own bloody purposes.




Tradition and Reflection


Book Description

This book examines, above all, the relationship between reason and Vedic revelation, and the philosophical responses to the idea of the Veda. It deals with such topics as dharma, karma and rebirth, the role of man in the universe, the motivation and justification of human actions, the relationship between ritual norms and universal ethics, and reflections on the goals and sources of human knowledge. Halbfass presents previously unknown materials concerning the history of sectarian movements, including the notorious “Thags” (thaka), and relations between Indian and Iranian thought. The approach is partly philosophical and partly historical and philological; to a certain extent, it is also comparative. The author explores indigenous Indian reflections on the sources, the structure and the meaning of the Hindu tradition, and traditional philosophical responses to social and historical realities. He does not deal with social and historical realities per se; rather, basing his work on the premise that to understand these realities the reflections and constructions of traditional Indian theorists are no less significant than the observations and paradigms of modern Western historians and social scientists, he explores the self-understanding of such leading thinkers as Sankara, Kumarila, Bhartrhari and Udayana.







Biology-vol-I


Book Description

A text book on Biology




Genetics Classical To Modern


Book Description

1. Genetics, Epigenetics and Genomics: An Overview 2. Mendel's Laws of Inheritance3. Lethality and Interaction of Genes 4. Genetics of Quantitative Traits (QTs): 1. Mendelian Approach (Multiple Factor Hypothesis)5. Genetics of Quantitative Traits:2. Biometrical Approach6. Genetics of Quantitative Traits: 3. Molecular Markers and QTL Analysis7. Genetics of Quantitative Traits:4. Linkage Disequilibrium (LD) and Association Mapping8. Multiple Alleles and Isoalleles9. Physical Basis of Heredity1. The Chromosome Theory of Inheritance10. Physical Basis of Heredity2. The Nucleus and the Chromosome11.







A Complete Course in ISC Biology


Book Description




Multicultural Matters


Book Description




Conversations with the Animate ‘Other’


Book Description

Human interventions with living entities have had to be in a constant state of negotiating space necessary for co-habitation with animals, birds, trees, plants, grasslands, forests, hills, water bodies in the creation of villages and other settlements. The book argues that negotiating this space meant sharing, which impacted economic strategies, religious experiences, cultural interactions and oral performances that humans have strategized and preserved. This intersectional theme, through individual case studies, ultimately provides us the civilizational ethos of the Indian sub-continent on how human non-human relations informed it. The book provides a window on how this relationship was represented in a variety of material and literary texts, visual representations, archival records, folklore and oral testimonies. It brings to the fore these narratives over the longue durée to explicate the complex and delicate relationships in region specific ecological settings and thus give readers a perspective that crosses disciplinary and conceptual boundaries.