-
Aesthetic Complications and Other Interesting Cases
Within the past twenty years, facial soft-tissue augmentation with dermal filler products have become extremely popular. These products are usually considered safe, having mostly mild and transient adverse effects. However, serious complications related to injection injuries to relevant anatomic structures, such as nerves and vessels, can occur even in the hands of experienced injectors.
The author was one of the first doctors in the world to reverse these changes by establishing a hyaluronidase protocol in 2005. Since then, he has developed both the award-winning HELPIR and PLUS procedures to heal this damaged tissue. Complications associated with injections arise in most cases from injector inexperience or the use of unapproved products. In this book, the author reviews almost a hundred interesting aesthetic cases that have been referred to him from all over the world and he gives his methods of dealing with these complications. It also includes his methods of using botulinum toxin to treat blepharospasm, trigeminal neuralgia, migraine, and blushing. This text provides an invaluable source of information for any medical personnel looking for a career in aesthetic medicine.
£36.99 -
Bird Painting Between Art and Science
Have you ever wondered why so many scientific handbooks on birds use paintings rather than photographs, or why the painters Killian Mullarney and Lars Johnson are such significant figures in ornithology? This book gives an account of the 500 years during which bird-painting reached such heights, and it traces the growth of scientific realism in this field. It shows how scientific understanding has shaped the art, and how artistic style has left its mark on the science. Birds cross frontiers unhindered, and the language of painting too knows no national barriers. This book explores the huge contribution of German painting to the international tradition. It looks at the work of great artists – Dürer and Rembrandt. It introduces the fascinating but neglected artists who made the landmark handbooks of the past. It pays tribute to those major figures of the last 150 years who brought the art to its perfection: Josef Wolf and Bruno Liljefors, and looks briefly at the competition with photography at the start of the twentieth century. It reveals the interlocking of art with the science of ornithology, as it was developed by figures such as Buffon and Darwin.
£16.99 -
Everything Is Living Energy
What is it to be alive?
Most definitions of life describe a virus as non-living, yet the coronavirus that caused so many world deaths was a structure that benefited from and replicated itself by taking control of and using the energy and structure of human cells.
Not all structures can replicate themselves but all structures have a desire for the energy of their surroundings. Their atomic particles always seek to create more efficient ways of getting such energy. It is why structures like us evolved.
The atomic particles that make for structures are alive. They are composed of energy, have roles to play and they communicate and interact via light-speed energy with other atomic particle energies in their environment.
Science struggles to explain gravity, calls it a force but knows it is not a force. It is the motion of energy-desiring particle structures toward energy-releasing structures; it is why we are drawn toward the earth and why the earth is drawn toward the sun.
The thing to understand is: everything is living energy.
£12.99 -
Consciousness Redefined
Is extrasensory perception fictitious or can it be more real than we can even imagine? This question is being asked not only by the public, but also by scientists. Recent breakthroughs in quantum physics and neuroscience might finally provide the answer. Only when we put all the pieces together can we uncover the biggest mystery of our nature: the human consciousness.
£8.99 -
Every Picture Tells...
“How can I memorise these bio-cell structures?” a cancer research student asked. I explained visualisation and storytelling methods. As a result, the student reported spending less time at study, stronger recall from long-term memory and good exam results.The benefits of thinking in pictures can be powerful: pictures can transcend language barriers, they can convey a mass of information in mere seconds and they can be universally recognised.The story – Every Picture Tells – sets out to encourage improvement by thinking in pictures.
£11.99 -
The Fountain of Youth, A Fountain of Good Health and Youthfulness, A Fountain of Independence and Happiness
My book here can be spoken for by three mindsets in the mother book of my writings, my book, ENOS.A 25-foot living brain in a flying saucer like shell craft from ENOS who suddenly speaks…“…this age of Christendom is coming to an end … it is not because the Christian ideal has been faulted … Jesus is still the newest saviour for humanity … his life has been your life … for your renewal … but there is not much more time for this now … you will have to find a new understanding of God soon … at this time, and in this critical period of your life in the universe … so that you can go on …”From a long poem in ENOS, “The Earth Spirit in 1969 is mad…”“Soon you will find out just why you are here, and why you are not of this earth.This is something you are afraid to know.It is something that you have always wanted to know and are afraid to actually realize.”I have a say by the Devil in ENOS…“Egoismo Pensas Nur Pri Si Same Kiel Egotismo”This is definitely a complete sentence—a language—and it has the energy of a definite being.
£7.99 -
What Are They On About?
Find science hard? Not sure what to believe with different headlines all the time? This book will inform you of the science behind current issues such as the environment and alternative medicine, without any maths or scientific equations!
£12.99 -
Worlds Of Motion: Why And How Things Move
Modern physics is one of the most exciting subjects studied by humanity, but popular books on the subject usually either over-simplify their content or assume prior knowledge of mathematical theory. Worlds of Motion attempts to cross this bridge by tackling the mathematics in an accessible way, introducing each equation step-by-step and justifying why it is necessary. The book begins with an extended discussion of classical mechanics and then moves on to relativity theory and quantum mechanics, covering all the main principles of modern physics. It covers a huge range of topics in physics, astronomy and pure mathematics to give the reader a greater understanding of the universe. In particular, we treat mathematics as something which is intrinsically exciting in itself and not something to be feared. The book includes entertaining treatments of symmetry groups and topology based in popular culture.
£15.99 -
Sunlight and Us
Sunlight and Us by Professor John Hawk offers an enlightening journey into the profound and diverse effects of sunlight on human health and the environment. Drawing from his extensive career in dermatological photobiology, Hawk delves into the origins of sunlight, its vital role in our lives, and its dual nature as both a giver of life and a potential hazard.
Through engaging narratives and scientific insights, Hawk navigates the complexities of sunlight’s impact on skin health, the intricacies of Vitamin D synthesis, and the global challenge of climate change. This work not only pays homage to the sun’s omnipresent influence but also underscores the delicate balance humanity must maintain with this powerful star.
£6.99 -
The Exoplanets
Where is ET and how does he look like? The fast rate of discovery of exoplanets is telling us that millions of planets in the universe are most probably teeming with life.
But the extremely small probability that life, once born, evolves into homo sapiens tells us that ET is most probably just a bacterium.
A possible answer to the Fermi paradox (‘where is everybody?’) is therefore: they are all out there, on millions of planets, but bacteria do not build spaceships.
Homo sapiens is alone in a universe teeming with life.
£16.99 -
Hypnosis, Psychosis and the Consciousness Conundrum
Have you ever wondered how your brain works, how it makes sense of what you hear and see? Many people do, but then shrug their shoulders and simply get on with using their brain. That’s sad; they are missing such a lot! This book is full of fascinating facts and details about the senses, and also covers what happens when things ‘go wrong’, such as when someone hypnotised sees their friend in two places at once. It also covers more distressing errors, like the PTSD victim who vividly re-experiences their trauma, seeing, hearing and even smelling all the terrifying details again.
However, through all these anecdotes and explanations, the book moves inexorably towards the most tantalising question of all: How do we know that we are seeing and hearing things? In these days of ‘Alexa’ we are familiar with machines that respond to speech, but they don’t know that they are. They are merely a particularly sophisticated light switch! So, what do we have that Alexa doesn’t? This book takes you on a truly fascinating journey of exploration, in search of the exotic entity that is consciousness.
£16.99