Poems from the Rainbow's Bow

Poems from the Rainbow's Bow

Come to see imagination untamed and running loose in the wild, beautiful, tragic forests of the human heart and mind. Poems from the Rainbow's Bow offers compelling and provocative openings for a poetry book club discussion, or for any gathering...

The Rainbow becomes an Archer's bow that shoots arrow poems into the sky. Imagination breaks free of civilization's reach: Here we find

--the origins of fire, cooking, and dogs,

--the flight of a bumblebee, and

--love in a circus performance of two trapeze artists engaged in juggling while in an aerial exchange.

Poems from the Rainbows Bow Cover

Come to see imagination untamed and running loose in the wild, beautiful, tragic forests of the human heart and mind.

Poems from the Rainbow's Bow offers compelling and provocative openings for a poetry book club discussion, or for any gathering.


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The Created Self: Reinventing Body, Persona, Spirit

The Created Self: Reinventing Body, Persona, Spirit

The Created Self takes readers to as-yet-unexplored regions in the modern psyche’s preoccupation with self-invention... Using the insights of William James and evolutionary psychology as a springboard, Robert Weber explores the nature and meaning of our shifting selves...

The Created Self takes readers to as-yet-unexplored regions in the modern psyche’s preoccupation with self-invention.

The Created Self: Reinventing Body, Persona, Spirit Cover

In today’s culture the self is considered largely a work in progress, and as we constantly reinvent ourselves, the challenge becomes one of coordinating change with the integrity and unity of the self. Using the insights of William James and evolutionary psychology as a springboard, Robert Weber explores the nature and meaning of our shifting selves.

He proposes an ecology of the self based on three distinct but interdependent spheres: the body, the persona, and the spirit. 

Our bodily selves can be cosmetically nipped and tucked, and through new reproductive technologies extended in ways previously undreamed of.

Our personas, comprising both our self-image and the image we present to others, are constantly assuming multiple roles in the course of our daily lives.

And finally the modern changing self finds spiritual fulfillment in myriad traditional and nontraditional cultures, both sacred and secular, as we craft beliefs to suit our individual and communal needs.


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Forks, Phonographs, and Hot Air Balloons: A Field Guide to Inventive Thinking

Forks, Phonographs, and Hot Air Balloons: A Field Guide to Inventive Thinking

Using everyday objects most of us take for granted--from forks and Velcro to safety pins and doorknobs--noted cognitive psychologist Robert Weber takes a fascinating look at how our world of inventions came into being, and how the mind's problem-solving abilities gave them the forms they have...

How do inventions take shape? How did the inventors of the sewing needle, the hammer, or the wheel find their ideas? Are these creations the result of random events, or are hidden principles at work?

Forks, Phonographs, and Hot Air Balloons: A Field Guide to Inventive Thinking Hardcover Cover

Using everyday objects most of us take for granted--from forks and Velcro to safety pins and doorknobs--noted cognitive psychologist Robert Weber takes a fascinating look at how our world of inventions came into being, and how the mind's problem-solving abilities gave them the forms they have. As an archaeologist studies shards of pottery for clues about an ancient culture, Weber examines the many forms of inventions, from stone knives to genetically engineered mice, and finds a rich record of the work of many minds over time--a record of human creativity and problem-solving handed down through the centuries. 

He offers various methods for analyzing what mental paths might have been taken by these inventive minds. In the test for design, for example, he ponders how an item would work if various components were shuffled or constructed differently, revealing how the optimal shape of the invention was discovered. He challenges the reader to engage in thought experiments to explore how the horse-drawn cart, the water screw, or the fork might have taken shape over many years, through the efforts of successive inventors and adapters.

In stripping these simple artifacts to the bone, Weber finds a hidden intelligence at work in everyday objects as well as recurrent heuristics (basic principles or rules of thumb) that are common among many of our most successful inventions--heuristics powerful enough to generate endless new ideas.

Weber ranges across the work of Archimedes, Leonardo da Vinci, the Wright brothers, as well as grade-school children who have won national awards for their inventions, revealing that the same principles are at work in the discoveries of all of them. Basic principles of invention, he writes, govern how we think, solve, and manipulate ideas, whether mechanical or mental, real or mythological.

Weber's playful, original, and insightful look at the inventions around us reveals a hidden intelligence in everything from screws to tea bags to synthesizers--an intelligence based on principles of creativity and problem-solving. His fascinating account sheds light on how the mind hones its most original thoughts and products, and provides a field guide for how we can tap into our own creativity.


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Inventive Minds: Creativity in Technology Edition

Inventive Minds: Creativity in Technology Edition

Is invention really "99 percent" perspiration and "one percent inspiration" as Thomas Edison assured us? Inventive Minds assembles a group of authors well equipped to address this question...

Is invention really "99 percent" perspiration and "one percent inspiration" as Thomas Edison assured us? Inventive Minds assembles a group of authors well equipped to address this question: contemporary inventors of important new technologies, historians of science and industry, and cognitive psychologists interested in the process of creativity. 

Inventive Minds: Creativity in Technology 1st Edition Cover

In telling their stories, the inventors describe the origins of such remarkable devices as ultrasound, the electron microscope, and artificial diamonds. The historians help us look into the minds of innovators like Thomas Edison, Alexander Graham Bell, Michael Faraday, and the Wright brothers, drawing on original notebooks and other sources to show how they made their key discoveries.

Finally, cognitive psychologists explore the mental processes that figure in creative thinking. Contributing to the authors' insight is their special focus on the "front end" of invention -- where ideas come from and how they are transformed into physical prototypes. They answer three questions: How does invention happen? How does invention contrast with other commonly creative pursuits such as scientific inquiry, musical composition, or painting? And how might invention best happen -- that is, what kinds of settings, conditions, and strategies appear to foster inventive activity?

The book yields a wealth of information that will make absorbing reading for cognitive and social psychologists, social historians, and many working scientists and general readers who are interested in the psychology of personality and the roots of ingenuity.


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