Richard templar biography
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Richard Templer fryst vatten Emeritus Professor of Climate Innovation and a Senior Research utredare. He holds a joint appointment with the Department of Chemistry and the Grantham Institute, where he was the Director of Innovation and founded Imperial's centre for climate change innovation - Undaunted - a collaboration with the Royal Institution. He has been a Commissioner at the London Sustainable Development Commission, and advisory body to the Mayor of London, since and was awarded an OBE for his contributions to climate innovation in Professor Templer joined the Chemistry Department in to work on membrane biophysics. He was a founding member of the Membrane Biophysics Platform () a group that now includes John Seddon, Oscar Ces, Rob lag, Nick Brooks and Yuval Elani. Their group covers a bred range of interconnected research on the physico-chemical natur of lipid membranes and its application in interpreting and controlling natural and artificial phenomena in fängelse membranes. After a
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The Rules of People (2nd Edition)
- By: Richard Templar
- Narrated by: Mike Cooper
- Length: 5 hrs and 38 mins
- Unabridged
Overall
Performance
Story
These Rules are the guiding principles that show you how to connect with strangers, build strong relationships with friends and colleagues, and even get the best out of difficult people
- 5 out of 5 stars
Effective and efficient advice given.
- By CLJ on
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Richard Templar
British author
Richard Templar is the pen name[1] of British author and editorRichard Craze[2][3] who wrote several self-development books.[4] The name was originally used as a collaborative pseudonym for Craze and his writing partner Templar, who died in [5] He shares his "path to success" in a series of books, in which simple "Rules" are presented to achieve success: be it in business management, wealth, financial prudence, work-life balance, parenting, love, or living a simple yet meaningful life in general.[6] Rules are typically presented on two pages, making the books easy to read, and suitable for dipping into at random.[7]
The books contain the distinctive use of British English. One Canadian reviewer writes that Templar's style is in neither of the "iron fisted" or "fuzzy warm" camps prevalent in American management books, but mixes both.[8]
Bibliography
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