2016-09-05

Dowsing and Remote Viewing with Paul H. Smith


source: New Thinking Allowed     2016年8月4日
Paul H. Smith, PhD, serves as president of the International Remote Viewing Association an organization of which he is a founder. A former Army intelligence officer, he served for seven years as part of the military’s top-secret remote viewing program. He is author of Reading the Enemy’s Mind and The Essential Guide to Remote Viewing. He currently serves as president and chief trainer for Remote Viewing Instructional Services. He is also the author of DVD courses on both dowsing and remote viewing.
Here he describes how his interest in dowsing developed during his time as a remote viewer for the Army at Fort Meade, Maryland. He discovered that dowsing was capable of providing information regarding locations that often proved to be elusive to the remote viewing process. As a result of his interest, he was eventually elected president of the local chapter of the American Society of Dowsers. He maintains that the ideomotor response associated with dowsing can be triggered by psi-mediated information. He notes that dowsing, combined with remote viewing, were particularly effective in locating drug traffickers at sea in the Caribbean. He cautioned, however, that these methods are never 100% effective.

New Thinking Allowed host, Jeffrey Mishlove, PhD, is author of The Roots of Consciousness, Psi Development Systems, and The PK Man. Between 1986 and 2002 he hosted and co-produced the original Thinking Allowed public television series. He is the recipient of the only doctoral diploma in "parapsychology" ever awarded by an accredited university (University of California, Berkeley, 1980). He is also past-president of the non-profit Intuition Network, an organization dedicated to creating a world in which all people are encouraged to cultivate and apply their inner, intuitive abilities.
(Recorded June 15, 2016)

A Journey through Western Christianity: from Persecuted Faith to Global Religion (200 - 1650)


source: YaleCourses    2016年8月25日
Titus Street Professor of Ecclesiastical History, Bruce Gordon, takes you on a journey through the history of Western Christianity from approximately 200 to 1650 CE. This MOOC, which will be offered on the Coursera platform will focus on central themes/questions that have shaped the emergence of the religion from the ancient world to the Scientific Revolution.

The course is divided into several themes in which participants engage with key written texts, visual material, music, and film, to explore moments transitional in the emergence of Christianity as a global religion. The themes include martyrdom and the body in Early Christianity; North African Christianity and the politics of persecution; Convivencia Christians, Jews, and Muslims in Medieval Spain; Martin Luther and the Freedom of the Conscience; The Jesuits in China and Ethiopia; and Kepler, Galileo and the Revolution in the Heavens.

Central to the MOOC is an emphasis on the connectedness of emerging European Christianity with cultures in Asia, Africa, and the Americas, with particular attention to the reciprocity of influence. Further, the lectures will illustrate ways in which literary theory, gender studies, and social sciences are central to contemporary ways of thinking about the history of Christianity. The background material provided with the course will provide participants a clear sense of the big picture while they focus on the more specific themes. The lectures balance attention to the particular issues raised by the topics and the broader significance of events and ideas.
Learners will be challenged to think about the nature of religious history, how Christianity has a diverse, global past and present, and to consider how the central questions that faced (and face) the Christian religion in particular cultural contexts.
This MOOC starts in September and can be found at coursera.org/yale.

The American Pragmatists - Cheryl Misak (New Books in Philosophy)


source: Philosophical Overdose     2015年6月13日
Pragmatism is American’s home-grown philosophy, but it is not widely understood. This partly is due to the fact that Pragmatism emerged out of deep philosophical disputes among its earliest proponents: Charles Sanders Peirce, William James, and John Dewey. Although it is agreed that they are the founders of Pragmatism, they also held opposing views about truth, meaning, reality, experience, and value. A further complication emerges in that it is widely believed that Pragmatism was purged from the philosophical mainstream and rendered dormant sometime around 1950, and then recovered only in the 1980s by Richard Rorty. In her new book, The American Pragmatists, Cheryl Misak presents a nuanced analysis of the origins, development, and prospects of Pragmatism. She shows that Pragmatism has always come in a variety of flavors, ranging from the highly objectivist and realist views of Peirce and C. I. Lewis to the more subjectivist and nominalist commitments of James and Rorty. More importantly, Misak demonstrates that Pragmatism has been a constantly evolving philosophical movement that has consistently shaped the landscape of English-language philosophy. On Misak’s account, Pragmatism is the philosophical thread that runs through the work of the most influential philosophers of the past century. Her book will be of interest to anyone with interest in Pragmatism or twentieth-century philosophy.
This interview is from the New Books in Philosophy podcast. For more information, go to www.newbooksinphilosophy.com.

Is God Perfect? (Closer to Truth)

# click the up-left corner to select videos from the playlist 

source: Closer To Truth     2016年8月3日
What does it mean for God to be perfect? Perfectly knowledgeable? Perfectly powerful? Perfectly good? Perfectly free? Did God create the 'perfect world'? That'd be hard to believe.
Click here to watch more interviews on God's perfection http://bit.ly/2b3r2BW
Click here to buy episodes or complete seasons of Closer To Truth http://bit.ly/1LUPlQS
For all of our video interviews please visit us at www.closertotruth.com

William Dembski - Is God Perfect? 5:37
Richard Swinburne - Is God Perfect? 3:37
J.P. Moreland - Is God Perfect? 3:47

Brian Kelly: "The Points Guy" | Talks at Google


source: Talks at Google     2016年8月23日
Brian Kelly, the Founder and CEO of The Points Guy, stops by Google for a wide-reaching conversation about frequent flying and mileage earning in today's age of standardization. He also speaks about his work with PeaceJam and TPTtv.
You can find the Points Guy throughout the internet at www.thepointsguy.com, and on YouTube, Twitter, & Instagram.
This talk was moderated by Cliff Redeker.

Tim Ferriss: "How to Cage the Monkey Mind" | Talks at Google


source: Talks at Google    2016年8月1日
Tim Ferriss will be joined us at Google to talk about his career, books, podcasts, and stoicism. Tim was asked the following questions:
What has been the most important Stoic teaching that I’ve come across?
How do I manage the many requests I receive?
What are the factors or elements that have led to the success of the podcast?
Where do I see myself in five years?
If I could pick three people — alive or dead — to be in my personal board of directors, who would they be?
How do I experiment with my dog training?
What are my recommendations for longevity?
How do I fight insomnia?
And much, much more…

Truly Terrible Advice: Find Your "True Self" and Be Authentic | Michael Puett


source: Big Think    2016年7月31日
Ancient teachings from the western tradition have impressed on us the importance of authenticity and being true to one's self. But what if those teachings set us on the wrong path? Michael Puett's latest book is "The Path: What Chinese Philosophers Can Teach Us About the Good Life" (http://goo.gl/Sltm1b).
Read more at BigThink.com: http://bigthink.com/videos/michael-pu...

Transcript - We tend to think we know what the good life is. So we tend to think basically to lead a good life you should look within, try to find yourself, find your true self and then spend your life being as sincere and authentic to that true self as you can. And if you do that the idea is you’ll live life on your own terms and sure you can’t control what will happen to you but at least you’ve lived your life as you were meant to live it and you’ll be true to yourself. Now that sounds great except suppose that all of it is wrong. Suppose as our philosophers here would say we’re a very, very messy selves. And we’re messy selves that fall into these patterns of responses in the world. And therefore what you’re finding when you look within are just these sets of patterned responses that you’ve fallen into. Now if that’s the problem that we face as humans then the notion of flourishing is very different. The way to live a flourishing good life is by breaking these patterns and creating worlds within which you and those around you can flourish. That’s a good life. And you’re not going to do it by looking within and finding yourself because again you’re probably just going to hit a bunch of patterns you’ve fallen into. And you’re focusing also on yourself whereas if we are patterned creatures much of what we are depends on these patterns we’re falling into with those around us. So the good life for these philosophers would mean you’re trying to create worlds within which you and those around you can flourish at a mundane level.
So immediate friendships, family at a larger societal level too. And that’s constant work. The idea is it’s constant work, working through these patterns we’re falling into, altering these patterns, breaking these patterns, creating different patterns and it’s an endless work of every situation from the very mundane to the very, very large scale of constantly trying to shift these patterns for the better. And the vision is that and really only that is what the good life is. The good life is a world in which as many of us as possible, ideally everyone is flourishing. And you’ll never get there but it’s a lifelong process of ever trying to create worlds within which we can flourish. Read Full Transcript Here: http://goo.gl/fvWyOR.

Anupam Saxena: Engineering Drawing (IIT Kanpur)

# playlist of the 40 videos (click the up-left corner of the video)

source: nptelhrd    2014年9月29日
Mechanical - Engineering Drawing by Dr. Anupam Saxena, Department of Mechanical Engineering, IIT Kanpur. For more details on NPTEL visit http://nptel.ac.in

01 Technical Arts 101 43:04
02 Technical Arts 101 52:29
03 Technical Arts 101 37:14
04 Technical Arts 101 28:42
05 Technical Arts 101 51:06
06 Technical Arts 101 44:19
07 Technical Arts 101 40:00
08 Technical Arts 101 42:54
09 Technical Arts 101 46:57
10 Technical Arts 101 38:55
11 Technical Arts 101 48:15
12 Technical Arts 101 51:09
13 Technical Arts 101 53:02
14 Technical Arts 101 45:10
15 Technical Arts 101 59:00
16 Technical Arts 101 40:59
17 Technical Arts 101 46:36
18 Technical Arts 101 56:12
19 Technical Arts 101 47:15
20 Technical Arts 101 54:57
21 Technical Arts 101 43:24
22 Technical Arts 101 41:32
23 Technical Arts 101 35:02
24 Technical Arts 101 42:43
25 Technical Arts 101 50:16
26 Technical Arts 101 49:02
27 Technical Arts 101 47:20
28 Technical Arts 101 30:48
29 Technical Arts 101 1:31:32
30 Technical Arts 101 1:27:28
31 Lab Session-03 1:08:38
32 Lab Session-04 54:45
33 Lab Session-05 48:40
34 Lab Session-06 1:27:40
35 Lab Session-07 41:28
36 Technical Arts 101 50:50
37 Lab Session-09 1:00:47
38 Lab Session-10 1:19:42
39 Lab Session-11 1:05:10
40 Technical Arts 101 1:04:06

S. Lakshmi Bala: Quantum Mechanics I (IIT Madras)

# playlist of the 41 videos (click the up-left corner of the video)

source: nptelhrd    2013年3月4日
Physics - Quantum Mechanics I by Prof. S. Lakshmi Bala, Department of Physics, IIT Madras. For more details on NPTEL visit http://nptel.iitm.ac.in

01 Quantum Mechanics -- An Introduction 49:33
02 Linear Vector Spaces - I 1:04:15
03 Linear Vector Spaces - II: The two-level atom 47:31
04 Linear Vector Spaces - III: The three-level atom 50:26
05 Postulates of Quantum Mechanics - I 50:50
06 Postulates of Quantum Mechanics - II 52:29
07 The Uncertainty Principle 50:33
08 The Linear Harmonic Oscillator 52:18
09 Introducing Quantum Optics 50:28
10 An Interesting Quantum Superposition: The Coherent State 52:44
11 The Displacement and Squeezing Operators 51:51
12 Exercises in Finite Dimensional Linear Vector Spaces 57:28
13 Exercises on Angular Momentum Operators and their algebra 49:31
14 Exercises on Quantum Expectation Values 50:23
15 Composite Systems 50:09
16 The Quantum Beam Splitter 49:09
17 Addition of Angular Momenta - I 53:54
18 Addition of Angular Momenta - II 50:48
19 Addition of Angular Momenta - III 54:20
20 Infinite Dimensional Linear Vector Spaces 52:31
21 Square-Integrable Functions 47:53
22 Ingredients of Wave Mechanics 50:19
23 The Schrodinger equation 49:05
24 Wave Mechanics of the Simple Harmonic Oscillator 49:18
25 One-Dimensional Square Well Potential: The Bound State Problem 51:07
26 The Square Well and the Square Potential Barrier 56:33
27 The Particle in a one-dimensional Box 47:55
28 A Charged Particle in a Uniform Magnetic Field 54:43
29 The Wavefunction: Its Single-valuedness and its Phase 1:00:19
30 The Central Potential 56:24
31 The Spherical Harmonics 55:38
32 Central Potential: The Radial Equation 52:36
33 Illustrative Exercises -I 56:37
34 Illustrative Exercises -II 1:00:24
35 Ehrenfest's Theorem 56:10
36 Perturbation Theory - I 52:51
37 Perturbation Theory - II 46:16
38 Perturbation Theory - III 47:32
39 Perturbation Theory - IV 55:22
40 Time-dependent Hamiltonians 50:26
41 The Jaynes-Cummings model 52:50

Artificial Intelligence by P. Dasgupta (IIT Kharagpur)

# click the upper-left icon to select videos from the playlist

source: nptelhrd    2008年4月29日
Computer Sc - Artificial Intelligence by Prof. P. Dasgupta, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, IIT Kharagpur.

Lecture - 1 Introduction 59:46
Lecture - 2 Problem Solving by Search 59:52
Lecture - 3 Searching with Costs 59:55
Lecture - 4 Informed State Space Search 59:55
Lecture - 5 Heuristic Search: A* and Beyond 59:56
Lecture - 6 Problem Reduction Search: AND/OR Graphs 59:52
Lecture - 7 Searching Game Trees 59:56
Lecture - 8 Knowledge Based Systems: Logic and Deduction 59:55
Lecture - 9 First Order Logic 59:50
Lecture - 10 Inference in First Order Logic 59:56
Lecture - 11 Resolution - Refutation Proofs 59:56
Lecture - 12 Resolution Refutation Proofs 1:00:00
Lecture - 13 Logic Programming: Prolog 59:50
Lecture - 14 Prolog Programming 59:44
Lecture - 15 Prolog: Exercising Control 59:49
Lecture - 16 Additional Topics 59:53
Lecture - 17 Introduction to Planning 59:54
Lecture - 18 Partial Order Planning 59:59
Lecture - 19 GraphPLAN and SATPlan 59:56
Lecture - 20 SATPlan 59:56
Lecture - 21 Reasoning Under Uncertainty 59:47
Lecture - 22 Bayesian Networks 59:54
Lecture - 23 Reasoning with Bayes Networks 59:56
Lecture - 24 Reasoning with Bayes networks (Contd.) 59:50
Lecture - 25 Reasoning Under Uncertainty: Issues 59:54
Lecture - 26 Learning : Decision Trees 59:50
Lecture - 27 Learning : Neural Networks 59:55
Lecture - 28 Back Propagation Learning 59:48

Introduction To Problem Solving & Programming by Deepak Gupta (IIT Kanpur)

# click the upper-left icon to select videos from the playlist

source: nptelhrd    2008年1月29日
Computer Sc - Introduction To Problem Solving & Programming by Prof. Deepak Gupta.
Department of Computer Science and Engineering. IIT Kanpur

Lec 1  20:21
Lec 2 37:35
Lec 3 18:04
lec 4 40:41
Lec 5 26:21
Lec 6 37:28
Lec 7 33:00
Lec 8 30:56
Lec 9 40:13
Lec 10 30:46
Lec 11 29:12
Lec 12 33:47
Lec 13 28:35
Lec 14 28:35
Lec 15 26:17
Lec 16 35:27
Lec 17 25:45
Lec 18 38:22
Lec 19 26:45
Lec 20 24:32
Lec 21 26:16
Lec 22 28:02
Lec 23 32:10
Lec 24 37:09