Tag: Genealogy

Truth and Truthfulness An Essay in Genealogy


Bernard Williams, "Truth and Truthfulness: An Essay in Genealogy"
English | ISBN: 0691102767 | 2002 | 344 pages | PDF | 2 MB
What does it mean to be truthful? What role does truth play in our lives? What do we lose if we reject truthfulness? No philosopher is better suited to answer these questions than Bernard Williams. Writing with his characteristic combination of passion and elegant simplicity, he explores the value of truth and finds it to be both less and more than we might imagine.

(more…)

The Complete Genealogy Reporter / Builder 2023 Build 230108 Multilingual


The Complete Genealogy Reporter / Builder 2023 Build 230108 Multilingual | 8.2 Mb
The Complete Genealogy Reporter uses the GEDCOM data exported from any genealogy data management program to create comprehensive genealogy reports, books, or websites. The Complete Genealogy Builder is a new genealogy data management program that provides 99.9% genealogy data standards compliance via a user interface that delivers maximum data visibility, rapid navigation capability, and layered data entry forms.

(more…)

The Complete Genealogy Reporter / Builder 2023 Build 230104 Multilingual


The Complete Genealogy Reporter / Builder 2023 Build 230104 Multilingual | File size: 8.2 MB
The Complete Genealogy Reporter uses the GEDCOM data exported from any genealogy data management program to create comprehensive genealogy reports, books, or websites. The Complete Genealogy Builder is a new genealogy data management program that provides 99.9% genealogy data standards compliance via a user interface that delivers maximum data visibility, rapid navigation capability, and layered data entry forms.

(more…)

The Forever Witness How DNA and Genealogy Solved a Cold Case Double Murder [Audiobook]


The Forever Witness: How DNA and Genealogy Solved a Cold Case Double Murder (Audiobook)
English | ASIN: B09V1YH1TX | 2022 | 10 hours and 26 minutes | [email protected] kbps | 268 MB
Author: Edward Humes
Narrator: Edward Humes

A relentless detective and an amateur genealogist solve a haunting cold case-and launch a crime-fighting revolution that tests the fragile line between justice and privacy. In November 1987, a young couple on an overnight trip to Seattle vanished without a trace. A week later, the bodies of Tanya Van Cuylenborg and her boyfriend Jay Cook were found in rural Washington. It was a brutal crime, and it was the perfect crime: With few clues and no witnesses, an international manhunt turned up empty, and the sensational case that shocked the Pacific Northwest gradually slipped from the headlines.

(more…)

The Genealogy of Aesthetics


Ekbert Faas, "The Genealogy of Aesthetics"
English | 2002 | ISBN: 0521811821 | PDF | pages: 451 | 45.4 mb
Is it body or spirit that makes us appreciate beauty and create art? The distinguished Canadian critic Ekbert Faas argues that, with occasional exceptions like Montaigne and Mandeville, the mainstream of western thinking about beauty from Plato onwards has greatly overemphasized the spirit. This study redresses this imbalance, and offers a radical re-reading of thinkers like Plato, Augustine, Kant, Hegel, Heidegger and Derrida. Professor Faas attacks both the traditional and postmodern consensus, and offers a new pro-sensualist aesthetics, heavily influenced by Nietzsche, that draws on contemporary cognitive science.

(more…)

The Genocidal Genealogy of Francoism


The Genocidal Genealogy of Francoism: Violence, Memory and Impunity
English | 2016 | ISBN: 1845197496 | 176 Pages | PDF (True) | 5 MB
The Francoist command in the Spanish Civil War carried out a programme of mass violence from the start of the conflict. Through a combination of death squads and the use of military trials around 150,000 Spaniards met their deaths. Others perished in concentration camps and prisons. The terror took other forms, such as mass rape, extortion, "appropriation" of children and forced exile. The planned nature of this violence meant that the Francoists decided when the violence would begin, the way it would be carried out and when it would come to an end. This is a primary reason why the judicial concept of genocidal practice, alongside the use of comparative history, can furnish insights. The July 1936 uprising was not only aimed at ending the Republican regime, but had ideological goals: preventing the supposed Bolshevik Revolution, defending the ‘unity of Spain’ and reversing centre-left social and cultural reforms. An over-arching objective was the elimination of a social group identified as ‘an enemy of Spain’ – a group defined as: not Catholic, not Spanish, not traditional. The genocidal intent of the coup via access to state resources, their monopoly of force in some territories and their subsequent victory ensured that the practice of genocide could be realised in the whole Spanish territory, permitting the hegemonic nature of the denialist discourse surrounding these crimes. Public debate over Francosim brings with it substantive disagreements. The book engages with the root causes of these disagreements. Violence and the memory of violence are viewed as part of a single phenomenon that has continued to the present, a process that is located within a comparative framework that analyses the Spanish case beyond the debate between Francoism and anti-Francoism. The author explains the political and judicial proceedings in recent Spanish history with regard to its violent past and the implications for international justice initiatives. Published in association with the CaƱada Blanch Centre for Contemporary Spanish Studies, LSE.

(more…)