Not exact matches
So my point, was using An Anthology of Hebrew and Greek writings written by
authors of
different persuasions and
treating it like one homogenous book of ethics is a huge mistake.
The bulk of this scholarly volume
treats the distinctive and
different ways that the Lutheran, Calvinist, and Anglican traditions adapted what the
author identifies as the medieval model; the Catholic tradition, with its insistence that marriage constitutes a true sacrament of the new dispensation, thus serves as something of a foil for the book's extended argument.
The book's sixteen chapters, all by
different authors,
treat such features of denominational life as campus ministry, church - related colleges, women's organizations, theological schools, and foreign missions.
«A common fallacy is that schizophrenia can be
treated as a single disease,» says NYU Langone psychiatrist and lead study
author Dolores Malaspina, MD. «Our biologically driven study begins to answer longstanding questions in the field about why any two people diagnosed with schizophrenia may have drastically
different symptoms.
«Although
different types of brain stimulation are currently applied in
different locations, we found that the targets used to
treat the same disease are nodes in the same connected brain network,» says first
author Michael D. Fox, MD, PhD, an investigator in the Berenson - Allen Center for Noninvasive Brain Stimulation and in the Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders Center at BIDMC.
The
authors believe that this may be due to «reverse causation bias» because indomethacin was dispensed at the end of pregnancy, likely to
treat preterm labour, an indication
different than that for other NSAIDS.
Most of the mothers lived near fields
treated with several
different pesticides over their pregnancies, so it's difficult to tease apart the potential risk of individual chemicals, said epidemiologist Janie Shelton, the lead study
author.
The
author's next novel, Chinchilla Girl in Exile (see this blog post for more information), is about «how people
treat you if you're
different.»
Look, I read a lot of
different authors; some traditionally published, some published by e-book houses, some independently published and to me they are all the same and should all be
treated with the same courtesy and respect.
Thing is, my layman's view is that it's unfortunate that the Fletchers of the world don't put the same amount of effort into doing something
different in the small press publishing arena, but designed to
treat an
author RIGHT.
Publishers will need to learn how to balance the competing demands of the
different types of
authors they will have to manage... But publishers won't do this if they give the impression of wanting to
treat these
authors as second - class citizens.