Education
University of Glasgow.
(THE VISIONS OF JOHN W. CAMPBELL Here are the finest stori...)
THE VISIONS OF JOHN W. CAMPBELL Here are the finest stories by the man who almost single-handedly created modern science fiction--the writer who taught a generation to dream...and to write of all possible futures. TWILIGHT He was a mere hitchhiker now, but he had once seen the far, far future...and had returned to mourn what he had seen! THE MACHINE The machine was ultimately benevolent...so benevolent that it gave mankind the ultimate but most unwanted gift! FORGETFULNESS They were like children in the museum of Earth's glorious past...children who had forgotten so much, but whose powers were those of gods! And the classic that was to become the movie THE THING: WHO GOES THERE? The Thing was the most dreadful threat men had ever faced...a creature that could be any one--or all--of them! And many more!
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(Experimental and Quasi-Experimental Designs for Generaliz...)
Experimental and Quasi-Experimental Designs for Generalized Causal Inference PaperbackWilliam R. Shadish (Author) , Thomas D. Cook (Author), Donald T. Campbell (Author)
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甘為霖
University of Glasgow.
He wrote extensively on topics related to Taiwan and was also responsible for founding the island"s first school for the blind. Interested in the early history of the island (particularly the Dutch era), his knowledge of the time was such that he was called "without doubt the greatest authority on this subject living". He was probably the first European to see Sun-Moon Lake, which he named Lake Candidius in honour of the seventeenth century Dutch missionary George Candidius.
Campbell arrived in Qing-era Taiwan in 1871 to begin his mission in southern Taiwan, being stationed in Tainan (then Taiwan-fu, the capital of Taiwan Prefecture) and serving both Han Chinese and Taiwanese aborigines in the area.
He was a contemporary of Thomas Barclay, James Laidlaw Maxwell and George Leslie Mackay, who were all engaged in missionary work in Taiwan. A strong supporter of "native ministers" (ie Han and aborigine clergy), Campbell wrote concerning one particular incident that
He seemed to have great power in speaking to them at our forenoon service.
Whilst listening to him, one could not but feel the importance of having an educated native ministry in every part of China. Men like Pastor Iap are able to adapt themselves in a way the missionary can never do, and to overcome difficulties which must always hamper any mere sojourner in the country.
Campbell witnessed Taiwan"s transition to Japanese rule.
His mission lasted for forty-six years, until he left Taiwan for the last time in 1917 to return to his native Scotland, where he died in 1921.
(Experimental and Quasi-Experimental Designs for Generaliz...)
(London published Fiction)
(THE VISIONS OF JOHN W. CAMPBELL Here are the finest stori...)