Although Two-Thirds is in part science-based, drawing on physics and astronomy, it is also deeply philosophical in its exegesis of ideas. This book demonstrates how the secrets of our ancient structures such as the Great Pyramids in Egypt, the city of Teotihuacán in Mexico and Stonehenge in England. hold the key to the development of new energy and propulsion sources for the next millennium. Two-Thirds contains much that is not even recognised by science today, but which can be verified. We learn for example that the speed of light is not constant -- it moves at three different speeds throughout the universe. Age old mysteries are discussed ranging in topic as wide as the Moon's essential role in the creation of life on Earth, the significance of the 'Face' on Mars and the relevance of meditation.
'The Forgotten Third' is a provocative collection of essays which poses the fundamental question: 'Do a third of school students have to fail so that two-thirds can pass?'Roy Blatchford has brought together a group of leading thinkers and influencers in UK education to address this question - and pose some answers.Featuring contributions from: Caroline Barlow, Geoff Barton, Rebecca Boomer-Clark, Peter Collins, Tim Coulson, Kiran Gill, Miranda Green, Peter Hyman, David Laws, Rachel Macfarlane, Rupert Moreton, Harmer Parr, Marc Rowland, Catherine Sezen, Richard Sheriff, Nic Taylor-Mullins and Iain Veitch.'The Forgotten Third' challenges orthodoxies to shape a 'levelled up' education system.
Publisher Tony Kane and his wife host a party in honor of best-selling author Amos Cottle at their Connecticut home. But all eyes are on the guests when an unseen hand slips cyanide into Cottle's drink. Also present at the party is Basil Willing, a psychiatrist-sleuth who soon figures out that Cottle was not the man that his jacket-flap blurb said he was. Willing embarks on a course of literary detection, scouting for clues in book reviews, publisher correspondence, and other documents related to this rather ghostly writer ...