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John Logan Campbell was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, on 3 November 1817, a son of the Edinburgh surgeon John Campbell and his wife Catherine and grandson of the 3rd baronet of Aberuchill and Kilbryde and Kilbryde castle near Dunblane, Perthshire. He had four sisters but his two elder brothers had died by the time he reached the age of two, and ...
The China Study: The Most Comprehensive Study of Nutrition Ever Conducted and the Startling Implications for Diet, Weight Loss and Long-term Health is a book by T. Colin Campbell and his son, Thomas M. Campbell II. The book argues for health benefits of a whole food plant-based diet.
John McLeod Campbell (4 May 1800 – 27 February 1872) was a Scottish minister and Reformed theologian. In the opinion of one German church historian, contemporaneous with Campbell, his theology was a highpoint of British theology during the nineteenth century. [1] James B. Torrance ranked him highly on the doctrine of the atonement, placing ...
John Archibald Campbell (June 24, 1811 – March 12, 1889) was an American jurist. He was a successful lawyer in Georgia and Alabama , where he served in the state legislature. Appointed by Franklin Pierce to the United States Supreme Court in 1853, he resigned at the beginning of the American Civil War , traveled south and became an official ...
Campbell earned a BA at the University of Stirling, UK in 1978; an MA at the University of Calgary, Canada in 1979; and a DPhil from Christ Church, Oxford in 1983 with a thesis under the title Spatiotemporal Thinking. Before moving to Berkeley, Campbell taught at Oxford University for a number of years. He was a Fellow of New College.
John Campbell (8 March 1708 – 28 December 1775) was a Scottish author. He contributed to George Sale 's Universal History , and wrote a Political Survey of Britain (1774). He was both prolific and well paid: according to James Boswell , Samuel Johnson spoke of Campbell to Joseph Warton as 'the richest author that ever grazed the common of ...
Jacquelyn Campbell. Jacquelyn C. Campbell, PhD, MSN, RN, (born August 26, 1946) [1] is an American academic nurse known for her research on domestic violence and violence against women, especially cases of such violence that end in homicide. [2] She is professor and the Anna D. Wolf Chair at the Johns Hopkins School of Nursing.
Donna Sue Campbell (née Burrows; born September 9, 1954) is an American politician and physician who is the 25th District member of the Texas Senate. On July 31, 2012, she became the first person in Texas history to defeat an incumbent Republican senator, Jeff Wentworth of San Antonio , in a primary election.