Reaper's Lottery


Book Description

"They've put Kaz on trial for the murders!" cried Aziz. "They're going to execute her as the killer!"Tori shook her head in an attempt to wake more fully. "What? No. That's a mistake. Kaz wouldn't harm an insect. There's no way a court could find her guilty.""The krakun legal system doesn't give a damn about geroo. They find everyone guilty!"Their first-ever serial killer is stalking the crew, and though the Reaper's Harvest III is a high-tech starship, Tori has no access to any forensic science. If she wants to save her best friend's life, she needs to think of a new way to solve the crimes ... and fast!







Lottery


Book Description

Money isn’t the same as treasure, and IQ isn’t the same as smarts—An uplifting and joyous new novel hailed by Jacqueline Mitchard as “solid gold.” Perry L. Crandall knows what it’s like to be an outsider. With an IQ of 76, he’s an easy mark. Before his grandmother died, she armed Perry well with what he’d need to know: the importance of words and writing things down, and how to play the lottery. Most important, she taught him whom to trust-a crucial lesson for Perry when he wins the multimillion-dollar jackpot. As his family descends, moving in on his fortune, his fate, and his few true friends, he has a lesson for them: never, ever underestimate Perry Crandall.







Infinity, Causation, and Paradox


Book Description

Infinity is paradoxical in many ways. Some paradoxes involve deterministic supertasks, such as Thomson's Lamp, where a switch is toggled an infinite number of times over a finite period of time, or the Grim Reaper, where it seems that infinitely many reapers can produce a result without doing anything. Others involve infinite lotteries. If you get two tickets from an infinite fair lottery where tickets are numbered from 1, no matter what number you saw on the first ticket, it is almost certain that the other ticket has a bigger number on it. And others center on paradoxical results in decision theory, such as the surprising observation that if you perform a sequence of fair coin flips that goes infinitely far back into the past but only finitely into the future, you can leverage information about past coin flips to predict future ones with only finitely many mistakes. Alexander R. Pruss examines this seemingly large family of paradoxes in Infinity, Causation and Paradox. He establishes that these paradoxes and numerous others all have a common structure: their most natural embodiment involves an infinite number of items causally impinging on a single output. These paradoxes, he argues, can all be resolved by embracing 'causal finitism', the view that it is impossible for a single output to have an infinite causal history. Throughout the book, Pruss exposits such paradoxes, defends causal finitism at length, and considers connections with the philosophy of physics (where causal finitism favors but does not require discretist theories of space and time) and the philosophy of religion (with a cosmological argument for a first cause).







Blazing Hearts


Book Description

Are you ready to feel the heat of Blazing Hearts? Experience pure romantic intensity with these 120 passionate tales of explicit romance. These fiery stories will transport you to a world filled with passionate love, heart-thumping adventure and soul-stirring emotion – everything you could ever need for an unforgettable escape. Allowing readers to explore their innermost feelings on love, Blazing Hearts - Fiery Tales of Intense Romance is your ticket into a world where wild passions come alive. You'll feel the heat as each story unravels with intense emotion, and be captivated by explicit details that will leave no doubt about the authors' love for their craft. 120 explicit stories full of intense passion and emotion for those who dare to venture into the unknown. Lose yourself in the fiery tales of forbidden love, deep commitment and unquenchable desire as you feel your heart race with each unexpected turn in these richly detailed and emotionally charged romances.




The Trial of Galileo


Book Description

In The Trial of Galileo the new science, as brilliantly propounded by Galileo Galilei, collides with the elegant cosmology of Aristotle, Aquinas, and medieval Scholasticism. The game is set in Rome in the early decades of the seventeenth century. Most of the debates occur within the Holy Office, the arm of the papacy that supervises the Roman Inquisition. At times action shifts to the palace of Prince Cesi, founder of the Society of the Lynx-Eyed, which promotes the new science, and to the lecture halls of the Jesuit Collegio Romano. Some students assume roles as faculty of the Collegio Romano and the secular University of Rome, the Sapienza. Others are cardinals who seek to defend the faith from resurgent Protestantism, the imperial ambitions of the Spanish monarch, the schemes of the Medici in Florence, and the crisis of faith throughout Christendom. Some embrace the "new cosmology," some denounce it, and still others are undecided. The issues range from the nature of faith and the meaning of the Bible to the scientific principles and methods as advanced by Copernicus, Kepler, Tycho Brahe, Giordano Bruno, and Galileo. Central texts include Aristotle's On the Heavens and Posterior Analytics; Galileo's Starry Messenger (1610), Letter to Grand Duchess Christina (1615) and Dialogue on the Two Chief World Systems (1632); the declarations of the Council of Trent; and the Bible.




Short Story Index


Book Description