Developed by longtime sports trainer and certified shooting instructor Michael Mansfield, using the innovative techniques illustrated in Triggercise, shooters will improve their shooting skills in just minutes a day!
In Philosophical Investigations, Ludwig Wittgenstein presents a radical
approach to the philosophy of language and the mind, setting out a startlingly
fresh conception of philosophy itself. Wittgenstein begins from the insight
that most philosophical problems trace back to incorrect assumptions about the
nature of language.
In this provocative 1949 work, Ryle proposes that what we think of as the mind
is little more than an illusion. Rene Descartes, one of the fathers of
philosophy, imagined the mind and body as separate entities, a concept known
as mind-body dualism.
Excited by the scientific breakthroughs of the day, David Hume set out to
construct a science of the mind. 1748's An Enquiry Concerning Human
Understanding is the result. A work that had a huge influence on great
thinkers, including Kant, An Enquiry is Hume's examination of how we obtain
information and form beliefs.
More than two centuries after its initial publication in 1781, Kant's Critique
of Pure Reason remains perhaps the most influential text in modern philosophy.
Kant wanted metaphysicians to move away from their endless battles about
whether or not human knowledge must conform to independently given objects.
Michael Mansfield, QC, is Britain's most high-profile defence lawyer, whose unparalleled commitment to his clients and radical approach to forensics, evidence and disclosure have made him a scourge of the establishment and a champion of the individual in many miscarriages of justice cases. Passionate about unveiling corruption and unafraid to challenge received wisdom, he has taken on many of the most controversial cases of our times, including the Bloody Sunday Inquiry, Angela Cannings, Jill Dando and Barry George, Dodi Fayed and Princess Diana, Stephen Lawrence, Arthur Scargill and the miners and, most recently, the tragic death of Jean Charles de Menezes. Dissecting these cases with incisive intelligence, subtlety and humour, and interspersing revealing personal reminiscences he offers a fascinating insight into the idiosyncrasies of the English legal system and how it has changed from the late 1960s to the present.