Robert Haas
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Field Guide
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Permanent Remissions : Life-Extending Diet Stategies That Can Help Prevent and Reverse Cancer, Heart Disease, Diabets, and Osteoporosis
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published
1998
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3 editions
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Robert Haas: Framing Two Worlds
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Dorfen CityGuide
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published
2014
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Special Effects in Photography
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published
1985
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2 editions
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The Maxi Lifespan Diet for Dogs: A Scientific Feeding Plan That Will Extend the Maximum Lifespan of Your Dog
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published
2000
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Ultra Slim-Fast Lifetime Health Plan
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Nutritional Guide to Fast Foods
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published
1982
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Recht und Rechnungswesen
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published
1949
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Anton Bruckner
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“The way in which art creates desire, I guess that’s everywhere. Is there anyone who hasn’t come out of a movie or a play or a concert filled with an unnameable hunger? … To stand in front of one of [Louis Sullivan’s] buildings and look up, or in front, say, of the facade of Notre Dame, is both to have a hunger satisfied that you maybe didn’t know you had, and also to have a new hunger awakened in you. I say “unnameable,” but there’s a certain kind of balance achieved in certain works of art that feels like satiety, a place to rest, and there are others that are like a tear in the cosmos, that open up something raw in us, wonder or terror or longing. I suppose that’s why people who write about aesthetics want to distinguish between the beautiful and sublime… Beauty sends out ripples, like a pebble tossed in a pond, and the ripples as they spread seem to evoke among other things a stirring of curiosity. The aesthetic effect of a Vermeer painting is a bit like that. Some paradox of stillness and motion. Desire appeased and awakened.”
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