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Love and Lyme

Michael Crichton

Who Is My Neighbor?

Water

Another Point of View...

A Doctor Foooled No More!

Money Before Patients

War On Health

Rx Business

"Kickbacks" to my Doctor?

Doctors Who Say No!

Pharmed Out

Health Skepticism

Sugar Cold Hard Facts

Soil

Wheat is not Wheat!

Saturated Fat and Candles

Cholesterol is Good !

Engineered Food

The Prostate Business

Food Is The Best Medicine

Food and Mental Health

Oiling of America

Wise Traditions

Bone Broth and Health

Milk

Stress and Disease

Migraines and Food

Soil Mineral Depletion

Albert Schweitzer

Eric Hoffer

Encyclopaedia Brittanica 1911

The LoveToKnow Free Online Encyclopedia is based on what many consider to be the best encyclopedia ever written: the eleventh edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, first published in 1911. At a time when many encyclopedias have capsulated and condensed important knowledge, the 11th edition is generally much more in-depth and thorough on its topics.

It is not uncommon for its entries to be 5 to 10 times the length of other encyclopedias. As a research tool, this 11th edition is unparallelled - even today. LoveToKnow is now giving you all these thousands of entries, preserving the treasured entries that make it so unique, and where necessary and possible adding the current point of view. We hope that you enjoy and learn from the LoveToKnow Free Online Encyclopedia and that it becomes one of your favorite places for reference information.

The Eleventh Edition filled 29 volumes and contains over 44 million words. It contains over 40,000 articles written by over 1,500 authors within their various fields of expertise. What was particularly remarkable was that many of the entries were written by the most famous people of the age. As such, it was considered to represent the sum of human knowledge at the beginning of the 20th Century.

Sir Kenneth Clark, in Another Part of the Wood, wrote of the Eleventh Edition:

"One leaps from one subject to another, fascinated as much by the play of mind and idiosyncrasies of their authors as by the facts and dates. It must be the last encyclopedia in the tradition of Diderot which assumes that information can be made memorable only when it is slightly colored by prejudice. When T.S. Eliot wrote 'Soul curled up on the window seat reading the Encyclopedia' he was certainly thinking of the eleventh edition."

www.1911encyclopedia.org/Main_Page