You may have to register before you can download all our books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
As a child, Angela Mathers was the victim of a top-secret experimental program that implanted neural chips in children to correct disorders and enhance intelligence. Shunned by society, she, and others like her were locked away in camps. Now an adult Luman, she is both brilliant and calculating. Her quest for redemption brings her to D.C. where she works to get a government bill that would free the Lumans passed into law. Isabella Dodge works for Control, the agency tasked with tracking and imprisoning the remaining Lumans. But Isabella has one secret. She’s a Solo—an undocumented Luman who fled the camps years ago. When their paths cross, an innocent touch sparks something in both women. But is it love, or simply their neural programming? When Control finds out Isabella is a Solo and captures her, Angela finds her answer—she will risk everything to save Isabella, even her own freedom.
The Ninth Child describes: 1. My family background dating back to the year 1870. 2. My life experiences as a Black child growing up in a family of 12 children, in Texas. 3. My experiences as a teacher and drug prevention counselor in the schools located in South Central Los Angeles and Gardena, CA. 4. The incidents that I witnessed, or was involved in, as a resident of South Central Los Angeles for 23 years. 5. My religious experiences
This book explores the impact of neuroscience research over the past 20 or more years on brain function as it affects moral decisions. It sets out the historical framework of the transition from 'mentalism' to 'physicalism', shows how the physical brain works in moral decisions and then examines three broad areas of moral decision-making - the brain in 'bad' acts, the brain in decisions involving sexual relations, and the brain in money decision-making.
description not available right now.
John Flanary was born in about 1756. He lived in Virginia and North Carolina. He married Phoebe Boggs and they had at least eight children. He died in about 1842. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Virginia, Kentucky and Missouri.
Edward Willett (1658-1744) immigrated from England to Prince George's County, Maryland before 1692. Descendants lived in Maryland, Kentucky, Ohio, Illinois, Texas, California and elsewhere.