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Dear Mike,

I can't understand your last message.

I'm still waiting for your and your colleagues article for the Yearbook.

Be so kind to send it as soon as possible.

All the best

Jerzy

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "McNamee, Michael" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Tuesday, June 12, 2007 2:24 PM
Subject: Re: Engineering the Gold, Royal Institution event, Sheffield 20 
June.


Nice one, but did you get the job at Luff?
m


Dr M J McNamee
Reader
Centre for Philosophy, Humanities and Law in Healthcare
Course Director
BSc Medical Sciences and Humanities
School of Health Science
University of Wales Swansea
tel: 01792 295611

Editor: Sport, Ethics and Philosophy
www.informaworld.com/rsep

Executive Member, International Council for Sport Science and Physical
Education
www.icsspe.org/

Executive Member, British Philosophy of Sport Association
http://www.philosophyofsport.org.uk/

Management Board, Wales Virtual Institute for Sport, Health and Exercise
Sciences (WISHES)
http://www.wishes-cymru.org/index.html


-----Original Message-----
From: British Philosophy of Sport Association
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Andy Miah
Sent: 12 June 2007 12:30
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Engineering the Gold, Royal Institution event, Sheffield 20
June.

Wednesday 20 June, 7.00pm-8.30pm

Engineering the gold: sport and technology in the future

Prof Kristan Bromley, Prof Steve Haake and Dr Martin Strangwood.

Chaired by Dr Andy Miah.

Imagine the ancient Greek Olympics, where athletes competed in the nude
using the same piece of equipment as their competitors. Now envisage a
modern day cyclist, complete with customised, lightweight bike and
stream lined helmet and we only begin to scratch the surface of the
impact that technology has had in the modern world of sport.

Human performance in modern elite sport is intertwined and underpinned
with technology and can often be the deciding factor between winning and
losing.
Not only that, but sports equipment is now so advanced that an athlete
with prosthetic limbs may be able to out run his able bodied competitor.

Join our experts, Prof Steve Haake, Dr Martin Strangwood and Prof
Kristan Bromley, four time gold medallist at the World Skeleton
Bobsleigh Series, as they talk us through the increasingly technological
world of sport. They will explore the new materials that have
transformed sports engineering into a multimillion pound industry and
some of the ethical issues surrounding their use.

A free wine reception will follow the event.

Venue: Showroom and Workstation, Paternoster Row, Sheffield S1 2BX
Tickets are free but booking is advised.
Book at www.rigb.org <http://www.rigb.org/>  or call the Events Team on
020
7409 2992.

The Royal Institution in association with EPSRC
**********************************



Dr Andy Miah | [log in to unmask] | http://www.andymiah.net Reader in
New Media & Bioethics School of Media, Language and Music University of
Paisley, UK

Editorial Board, Health Care Analysis: An International Journal of
Health Care, Philosophy and Policy
http://www.springerlink.com/content/1573-3394/

Editorial Board, Genomics, Society and Policy.
http://www.gspjournal.org

Co-Editor, Culture @ the Olympics: Issues, Trends and Perspectives
www.culturalolympics.org.uk

NanoBio-RAISE: http://nanobio-raise.org/

Fellow in Visions of Utopia and Dystopia Institute for Ethics and
Emerging Technologies (IEET) | http://ieet.org

University of Paisley, Ayr Campus, KA8 OSR, Scotland, UK.
[t] +44 7962 716 616  [f] +44 1292 886371  [e] [log in to unmask]


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