2016-11-21

Charles Jencks, “The Architecture of the Multiverse”


source: Harvard GSD    2016年10月24日
Charles Jencks AB ’61 BArch ’65 is a cultural theorist, landscape designer, and architecture historian. Among his many influential books are Meaning in Architecture (1969), The Language of Post-Modern Architecture (1977), Adhocism: The Case for Improvisation (with Nathan Silver, 1972), The Daydream Houses of Los Angeles (1978), Bizarre Architecture (1979), and The Architecture of the Jumping Universe (1997). He is also co-founder of the Maggie’s Cancer Care Centres, named for his late wife Maggie Keswick, and has written about this project in The Architecture of Hope (2015). Jencks has taught and lectured widely and served on numerous juries and selection committees; his work has been recognized with numerous awards and honorary degrees. As a landscape designer, Jencks has completed several projects in Scotland, including the Garden of Cosmic Speculation (2007) and Jupiter Artland (2010). In his lecture, he will speak about his ongoing project the Crawick Multiverse, about which he writes:The cosmos is almost the measure of all things and provides a referent and subject, a focus otherwise hard to find in present day society. With a few architects the patterns of nature and the architecture of the universe have partly reemerged as a shared meaning and iconography. At the same time the Multiverse has emerged on the agenda among scientists. Is this now a subject of thought and ultimate meaning? I have explored it in the architecture of the multiverse, an unfinished project. Where it leads, the imagination follows.

Math Mornings at Yale: Asher Auel - Wallpaper, Platonic Solids, and Symmetry


source: Yale University    2016年10月20日
The Platonic solids-the tetrahedron, cube, octahedron, dodecahedron, and icosahedron-are some of the most beautiful and symmetric geometrical objects in 3-dimensional space. Their mysteries started to be unraveled by the ancient Greeks and still fascinate us today. In 1872, the German geometer Felix Klein proposed the Erlangen program, which sought to unify the study of geometry through the study of symmetries. We will investigate instances, from crystals to wallpaper, when symmetry can lead to a more fruitful understanding of geometry and vice versa. Mathematics is patterns & logic, imagination and rigor. It is a way of seeing and a way of thinking. Math Mornings is a series of lectures and demonstrations aimed at bringing the joy and variety of mathematics to students and their families. Come play math games for 30 minutes and then listen to an engaging talk about Math! Talks are usually accessible to 7th graders and up, but bring the whole family! Refreshments will be served. This series occurs three times each semester. You can see more about Math Mornings at Yale here: http://math.yale.edu/math-mornings. For all science & math events for the public at Yale, please visit www.yale.edu/scienceoutreach.

Who Are We? Hate, Hostility and Human Rights in a Post-Brexit World


source: London School of Economics and Political Science     2016年10月25日
Date: Wednesday 19 October 2016
Time: 6.30-8pm
Venue: Sheikh Zayed Theatre, New Academic Building
Speaker: Martha Spurrier
Chair: Professor Conor Gearty
Over the last decade hostile political rhetoric has been mirrored by the entrenchment of discrimination in our laws and our policies and a sustained threat to our Human Rights Act. In 2016 politicians entered a race to the bottom on human rights and migration issues. Recent polling has found that more people think there are more tensions between communities than there were six months ago. Hate crime has spiked. Now more than ever human rights must be our unifying values. As the UK looks to its new future, this talk will reflect on how human rights – and human rights activists - can offer a national identity of tolerance, diversity and equality, and where the battle lines will be drawn in the months to come.
Martha Spurrier (@marthaspurrier) joined Liberty as Director in May 2016 having practiced law at Doughty Street Chambers.
Conor Gearty (@conorgearty) is Director of the Institute of Public Affairs and Professor of Human Rights Law at LSE.
LSE Law (@lselaw) is an integral part of the School's mission, plays a major role in policy debates & in the education of lawyers and law teachers from around the world.
Keep up to date with what Brexit means for the UK and the wider world at LSE Brexit blog (@lsebrexitvote).

The Role of Spiritism in the Mexican Revolution, Part One: Madero’s Secret Book, with C. M. Mayo


source: New Thinking Allowed    2016年3月7日
C. M. Mayo is a literary journalist, novelist, memoirist, short story writer, and noted literary translator of contemporary Mexican fiction and poetry. Her books include Metaphysical Odyssey into the Mexican Revolution: Francisco I. Madero and His Secret Book, Spiritist Manual; The Last Prince of the Mexican Empire; Mexico: A Traveler’s Literary Companion; Miraculous Air; and Sky Over El Nido.
Here she describes how she discovered and translated into English the Spiritist Manual written by Francisco I. Madero, the founder of Mexico’s 1910 revolution. In so doing, she came to appreciate the rich, intellectual background of early twentieth century spiritism – with roots reaching to Allan Kardec in France, the American transcendentalists, and the Theosophical Society. She points out that Madero considered himself to be a medium and he produced automatic writing. His political career and his Spiritist activities and beliefs were almost inseparable.

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 serves as dean of transformational psychology at the University of Philosophical Research. He teaches parapsychology for ministers in training with the Centers for Spiritual Living through the Holmes Institute. He has served as vice-president of the Association for Humanistic Psychology, and is the recipient of its Pathfinder Award for outstanding contributions to the field of human consciousness. 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 on February 26, 2016)

How do US Supreme Court justices get appointed? - Peter Paccone


source: TED-Ed     2016年11月17日
View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/how-do-us-s...
There’s a job out there with a great deal of power, pay, prestige, and near-perfect job-security. And there’s only one way to be hired: get appointed to the US Supreme Court. But how do US Supreme Court Justices actually get that honor? Peter Paccone outlines the difficult process of getting a seat on the highest bench in the country.
Lesson by Peter Paccone, animation by Globizco.

CNST Nanotechnology Workshop (2013-2016)

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source: NanoBio Node    2013年5月21日
Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology Workshop

Highlighting cross-campus and industry collaborations in:
Bionanotechnology and nanomedicine,
Nanoelectronics and nanophotonics,
Nanomaterials and nanomanufacturing
http://www.nano.illinois.edu/nanoworkshop2013/index.html

CNST Plenary Session I 11:30
[private video]
Heterogeneous Integration of III-V Semiconductor Nanowires with Si and Graphene for Photovoltaics 21:52
High Power Lithium Ion Microbatteries from Interdigitated Three-Dimensional Nanoporous Electrodes 19:21
Large-Scale Growth, Clean Transfer, and Nanosandwiching of Low-Dimensional Nanomaterials 22:40
Selective Mode Coupling in Microring Resonators 20:20
Detecting Protein and miRNA Cancer Biomarkers 20:20
Photonic Crystal Enhanced Microscopy for the Study of Cell Attachment 16:23
Integrating Mechanical Cues and Biomolecular Patterns for Tendon-Bone Junction Repair 18:01
The Effect of Substrate Stiffness on the Apparent Stress Cells Experience during Cyclic Strain
16:40
Development of a Click Chemistry Approach to Evaluate the Effect of Protein Corona 16:40
Cancer Metastasis, Motility and Matrix Mechanics 14:46
Detection of miRNA and Proteins Using Silicon Nanowire Biosensors 15:02
CNST 2013 Panel Discussion 1:00:23
Improving the Pulse Stability of Mode-Locked Diode Lasers 21:19
Technology Scaling in the Mobility Era 49:03
Single Molecule and Single Cell Sensing with Nanoelectromechanical Systems (NEMS) 49:11
The Transistor-Injected Quantum Transition Laser: A Novel Mid-IR Source 24:25
Brillouin Optomechanics 16:46
Computing in the Nanoscale Era 22:54
Nanostructured Battery Electrodes for High Power and Energy Density Energy Storage 18:28
Plenary Session One: Opening Remarks 13:18
Promises and Challenges of Using Nanotechnology in Medicine 1:16:41
Nano-enabled Systems: From Materials to Devices to Systems 55:41
Nanotechnology at NIST: Measurements, Standards, and Shared Resources 47:48
Nanotechnology at NIST: Measurements, Standards, and Shared Resources 47:48
CNST Panel Discussion 1:24:26
Properties of Nanosilicon as a Platform for Functional Devices 24:42
Making Mid-Infrared Photonics Nano with Plasmonics and Metamaterials 20:18
III-V Semiconductor Nanowire Arraybased Transistors 23:36
Imparting Electrical Connectivity into 3D Micro/Nanostructures with Additive Nanomanufacturing 22:00
Applied Nanotechnology for Foodborne Pathogen and Toxin Detection 22:39
Physicochemical Property and (ROS)-generating Capacity Relationship 23:47
Nanotechnology-mediated Sensing of Angiogenesis 26:06
Gold Nanoparticles In, On, and Around Cells25:53
Nanostructured Silicon Optical Materials as Multifunctional Cell Culture Substrates26:59
Translational Research on Micro and Nanobionics Devices for Mobile and Social Sensing Applications 27:03
Opportunities for Nanotechnology in Animal Health 23:20
Concluding Session 15:20
Nanotechnology meets Biology in the Cancer Cell... (Mostafa El-Sayed) 1:06:04
Rare Events with Large-Impact: Bioengineering & Clinical Applications of... (Mehmet Toner)51:18

Human Capital by Gary Becker (Spring 2010, U of Chicago)

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source: The University of Chicago      2011年1月6日
This series of lectures recorded during the Spring of 2010 are from ECON 343 -- Human Capital, a class taught every year by Gary Becker at the University of Chicago. In this class, Becker expounds upon the theory of Human Capital that he helped create and for which he won the Nobel Prize.

In total, there are 19 lectures. Each lecture includes a short description of topics covered as well as topical keywords. The interested viewer is also provided with references to books and journal articles from Gary Becker's own original research that bear on the topics discussed in each lecture. Additionally, the viewer is also referred to the appropriate section of a freely available and informal set of student notes. These lecture notes are provided as-is and the author, Salvador Navarro Lozano cannot accept responsibility for any typos or errors. Much of the lecture material already appears in one of Gary Becker's academic books and those remain the best source of information in case of any doubts.
Over the years, thousands of graduate students in Economics, Sociology, Public Policy, and other fields have benefited from the teachings of Gary Becker in his Human Capital class. We hope that by providing these lecture videos and notes that people around the world can increase their own human capital and enjoy studying this fascinating subject of human capital as taught by Gary Becker.
Filmed by: Joey Brown
Lecture Summaries: Jorge L. Garcia
Lecture Notes: Salvador Navarro Lozano
Supported by: The Becker Center at the Booth School of Business at the University of Chicago
Lecture Notes: https://mindonline.uchicago.edu/media...
Reading List: https://mindonline.uchicago.edu/media...
Video Annotations: https://mindonline.uchicago.edu/media...

1of19  - Human Capital and Intergeneration Mobility - Introduction 1:06:34
2of19  - Human Capital, and Intergenerational Mobility - The basic model (1of2) 1:21:29
3of19  - Human Capital, and Intergenerational Mobility - The basic model (2of2) 1:22:01
4of19  - Human Capital, and Intergenerational Mobility - Human capital transmission in the family 1:16:33
5of19  - Human Capital, and Intergenerational Mobility - Inheritance of ability 1:25:33
6of19  - Human Capital, and Intergenerational Mobility - Bequests and other topics of the household 1:24:01
7of19  - Human Capital, and Intergenerational Mobility - Overlapping generations model 1:19:24
8of19  - Investment in Schooling and Training - Transmitting preferences to children 1:21:19
9of19  - Investment in Schooling and Training - The Labor Market 1:24:31
10of19  - Investment in Schooling and Training - Higher education and College 1:28:12
11of19  - Investment in Schooling and Training - Non-monetary benefits of human capital (1of2) 1:21:44
12of19  - Investment in Schooling and Training - Non-monetary benefits of human capital (2of2) 1:19:47
13of19  - The New Economics of Mortality - Investments in health 1:22:22
14of19  - The New Economics of Mortality - Statistical value of life framework and Health 1:20:46
15of19  - The New Economics of Mortality - Health and Marriage Markets 1:19:57
16of19  - Human Capital and Specialization - On-the-job training and learning by doing 1:18:48
17of19  - Human Capital and Specialization - Comparison with the Roy Model 1:22:03
18of19  - Human Capital and Specialization - Teams and coordination 1:21:16
19of19  - Human Capital, Fertility, and Growth 1:20:17

Plasmonics and Its Applications Conference 2016

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source: NanoBio Node     2016年4月21日
Plasmonics and Its Applications Conference 2016

Colloidal Quantum Dots and Plasmonics Particles I (Jao van de Lagemaat) 26:56
Colloidal Quantum Dots and Plasmonics Particles II (Jao van de Lagemaat) 22:19
P&A Workshop 2016: Surface enhanced spectroscopy and chemistry (G.Schatz) 21:36
[已刪除的影片]
[已刪除的影片]
Small scale Structure Engineering for New Function (Jennifer Hollingsworth) 29:55
Hybrid Molecular-Scale Material (Maiken Mikkelsen) 26:45
Measuring Cellular Processes with Plasmonic Nanoparticles (Bjorn Reinhard) 26:50
Nanoscale Optics and Plasmonics: Light, Electron, Plasmon! (Parshant Nagpal) 30:52
Plasmonic Arrays (George Schatz) 25:17
Laser Assisted Nanofabrication of Plasmonic Biomic Functional Surfaces (Anatoliy Pinchuk) 21:51
Super-resolution imaging in plasmonics (Katherine Willets) 26:40
nanoDDSCAT+: Build your own plasmonics sensor, a hands-on session I (Jeremy Smith) 29:03
nanoDDSCAT+: Build your own plasmonics sensor, a hands-on - Session II (Abderrahman Sobh) 29:09

ZHdK Lectures on Global Culture

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source: Zürcher Hochschule der Künste    2016年1月15日

CCAA | Chinese Contemporary Art Award - Preview Trailer - iversity.org 2:34
ZHdK Lectures on Global Culture mit Uli Sigg: The Sigg Collection and its Public Intermediation 1:22:35
ZHdK Lectures on Global Culture mit Lars Nittve: M+ – About Creating “The Museum Asia Does Not Have” 1:30:22
ZHdK Lectures on Global Culture: Kulturpolitik in und aus der Schweiz: Phantom oder Möglichkeit? 25:40
ZHdK Lectures on Global Culture: The Human Compass 1:41:41
ZHdK Lectures on Global Culture: Culture and development cooperation … 1:32:05
ZHdK Lectures on Global Culture: The Disappearance of Architecture 1:29:33
ZHdK Lectures on Global Culture: The Globalization of Education 1:55:43
ZHdK Lectures on Global Culture: Curating and Collecting in a Global Art Context 1:30:15
ZHdK Lectures on Global Culture: Rem Koolhaas zur Venice Biennale 2014 1:31:46
ZHdK Lectures on Global Culture: What can we learn from smart inner cities? 1:25:12
ZHDK Lectures On Global Culture: Soft Power der aufstrebenden Mächte China und Indien 1:40:14
ZHdK Lectures on Global Culture: Between Dream and Reality 43:04
ZHdK Lectures on Global Culture: The City as Real-Time Experience 1:24:44
ZHdK Lectures on Global Culture: Das Unbehagen an der globalen Kultur 1:31:33
ZHdK Lectures on Global Culture: Shaping Global Culture 1:43:42
ZHdK Lectures on Global Culture: Die Erzählung der chinesischen Gegenwartskunst 1:29:14

Probabilistic Graphical Models (2014 Spring) by Eric Xing at Carnegie Mellon U

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source: Sailing Lab     2016年6月16日
course materials: http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~epxing/Class/10708-14/lecture.html

Lecture 27 1:18:35
Lecture 28 1:20:31
Lecture 26 1:05:52
Lecture 29 1:19:12
Lecture 25 1:19:27
Lecture 24 1:18:30
Lecture 23 1:20:40
Lecture 20 1:21:36
Lecture 22 1:20:27
Lecture 21 1:13:59
Lecture 17 1:19:05
Lecture 19 1:21:58
Lecture 13 1:18:17
Lecture 18 1:16:52
Lecture 11 1:14:38
Lecture 12 1:17:13
Lecture 10 1:13:52
Lecture 16 1:22:52
Lecture 15 1:18:48
Lecture 14 1:17:38
Lecture 8 1:20:35
Lecture 9 1:12:41
Lecture 5 1:21:26
Lecture 6 1:18:29
Lecture 7 1:19:24
Lecture 4 1:13:29
Lecture 2 1:18:37
Lecture 3 1:22:01
Lecture 1 1:15:25

Graduate Artificial Intelligence (Spring 2014) by Zico Kolter at Carnegie Mellon U

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source: Zico Kolter    2014年1月14日
Graduate Artificial Intelligence taught by Prof. Zico Kolter at Carnegie Mellon University's School of Computer Science
Information about the course is available at http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~zkolter/course...

Lecture 1: Intro 1:18:19
Lecture 2: Intelligent agents and paradigms for AI 2:16:38
Lecture 3: Search 1:18:36
Lecture 4: Optimization 1 1:20:11
Lecture 5: Optimization 2 1:20:38
Lecture 6: Informed search 1:19:13
Lecture 7: Local Search 1:16:46
Lecture 8: Constraint satisfaction 1:19:04
Lecture 9: Mixed integer programming 1:17:37
Lecture 10: Machine Learning 1 1:20:14
Lecture 11: Machine learning 2 1:20:06
Lecture 13: Planning 2 1:17:28
Lecture 14: Probabilistic modeling 1:11:48
Lecture 15: Probabilistic inference 1:22:00
Lecture 16: Planning under uncertainty 1:02:04
Lecture 17: Reinforcement learning 1:19:57
Lecture 18: Computer vision 1 1:00:08
Lecture 19: Computer vision 2 1:21:55
Lecture 20: Scheduling 1:17:31
Lecture 21: Robotics 1 1:10:29
Lecture 22: Robotics 2 1:16:08
Lecture 23: Natural language processing 1:15:27
Lecture 25: Computational Game Theory 1:20:31

Marx & Morality (Minerva)


source: Philosophical Overdose    2016年10月10日
Morality is often considered to be ahistorical. In this episode of the Minerva podcast, the focus is on Marx, who, following Hegel, disagrees with this conception of morality. The guest is David Marjoribanks. His research focuses on the theories of ideology and the implications for morality in Marx and post-Marxism. He argues that ethical norms are not transcendent, but are already there, embodied within our social practice. Critique, he thinks, is the holding to account of practice to its professed ideals.
Joshi Gottlieb discusses Marx and Morality with David Marjoribanks. This is from the Minerva Podcast. http://www.minerva-podcast.com

Gray Cook: "Movement Search: Connecting You to Your Movement Path" | Tal...


source: Talks at Google    2016年10月21日
Gray Cook is an internationally recognized physical therapist, orthopedic certified specialist and certified strength and conditioning specialist. Cook is the founder of Functional Movement Systems, a company that has developed movement screens and assessments used in professional sports, Olympic sports and elite military teams. He is the author of "Athletic Body in Balance" and "Movement". By revisiting the natural developmental principles, Cook forces us to rethink motor learning, exercise and modern conditioning practices. Gray’s talent for making the complex seem simple and for translating good theory into practice has led to his popularity as a speaker on healthy movement.
We deconstruct human movement, like some software engineers do with code. We identify mistakes in personal fitness, physical education, physical rehabilitation and athletic development.
These are simply programming errors.
Everyone living with broken movement has already been on a program or had an opportunity to be programmed. They failed and they’ve been failed.
The number one predictor of a future injury is a previous injury. That statistic tells us that exercise and rehabilitation are unable to restore the original operating program using its authentic programming language—because the language of movement isn't written in words or pictures or some type of schematic.
The language of movement is written in feel.
We often set ourselves up for failure when we try to reprogram (develop, correct or rehabilitate) our own movement. We simply haven't taken the time to learn the language.
When my colleagues and I had an opportunity to develop a screening process for broken movement and painful movement—dysfunctional movement—we used the language of movement to build it. Our screens are user-friendly measuring sticks for movement that search you for programming errors.
If your body is broken,
If your exercise is broken,
If your lifestyle is broken,
If your culture's physical expression is broken...
We're here to identify the mistakes and measure how broken it is. That’s what we do.
We don't make, create or produce better movement. We can't sell it to you.
We show you how to tap into your original movement operating system.
Then, you grow movement.
For more information: http://graycook.com/
Movement Food: http://graycook.com/?p=2742
http://www.functionalmovement.com/

Bill Nye: 3D Printing is Awesome, but It’s Nothing Compared to What’s Co...


source: Big Think     2016年10月19日
Bill Nye casts his mind to the future to give us a picture of how the descendants of our current 3D printing technology will change our ways and our world.
Read more at BigThink.com: http://bigthink.com/videos/bill-nye-o...

Transcript - 3D printing technology is I won’t say the greatest thing ever but it’s pretty great. So the other word you’re going to start seeing a lot more of I think is additive manufacture. 3D printing is kind of a specific style where you do layers. But I think you’ll see other additive manufacturing schemes following different fluids and materials that are buoyant in those fluids and then extracted and shapes can be created that are not possible, impossible to create by subtractive manufacture which is what I was brought up with as an engineer. You cut threads in a piece of metal or plastic to get a threaded fastener. You hollow something out. I often think about the astronauts rock boxes so they took boxes to the moon to put rocks in and bring them back to the Earth in a hermetically sealed fashion. And in order to get the boxes to be lightweight the machinist’s term is they were hogged out. So they started with a piece of aluminum this big, hollowed the whole thing out with a milling machine.
Chips of aluminum just go on the shop floor to get this thin but yet very, very strong final shape. Well in the future or maybe this afternoon very few of us will manufacture objects like that subtractively. Instead this will be made additively. And it will be lighter weight, cheaper, less waste and it will enable many, many people to participate in the additive manufactured process. And then if you have a problem at home where something’s broken, pick a thing. Your toaster. You’ll go online, find a new toaster control knob, maybe a family of designs. You’ll pick the one that you like. You’ll go to the spiritual equivalent of FedEx/Kinkos and they’ll have an additive manufacturing machine there. If you need a really sophisticated you’ll call a more sophisticated additive manufacturing machine shop. And they’ll make the thing for you. And you will not waste the toaster. You will not throw it away. You will not waste nearly as much material, hardly any material if you hadn’t manufactured the new knob or a piece or a heater wire. And this will allow us to do more with less. Read Full Transcript Here: https://goo.gl/mocoaG.

Myths of the American Mind: Exceptionalism by Wesley Cecil


source: Wes Cecil    2015年4月17日
A lecture by Wesley Cecil PhD. delivered at Peninsula College. This talk explores the history and influence of the idea of American Exceptionalism on the American world view.

Languages of the Cosmos, Part One: Exolinguistics, with Nancy du Tertre


source: New Thinking Allowed     2015年12月14日
Nancy du Tertre, JD, is a corporate lawyer specializing in securities litigation. She is also a psychic detective, spiritual medium, medical intuitive, and remote viewer. She is author of Psychic Intuition: Everything You Wanted to Ask But Were Afraid to Know. She has also written How to Talk to an Alien: Can They Speak Our Languages, Can They Read Our Minds, What Are They Trying to Tell Us? In addition she is certified in the Intuitive Gestalt Dialogue Method.
Here she describes her efforts to establish the discipline of exolinguistics. She explains that her approach is to survey the widest range of possibilities: trance communications, reports of contactees and abductees, crop circles, angelic and demonic scripts, dream experiences, and ostensible telepathy. She even goes so far as to suggest that cases of deliberate fraud may be viewed as attempts to communicate through subconscious manipulation. At the same time, she acknowledges that the field of UFOlogy is filled with misinformation. Nevertheless, in her survey of various language descriptions she finds certain similarities from diverse sources. She feels that further study of these potential links might eventually result in the equivalent of a Rosetta Stone and enable higher level communication to commence.

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 serves as dean of transformational psychology at the University of Philosophical Research. He teaches parapsychology for ministers in training with the Centers for Spiritual Living through the Holmes Institute. He has served as vice-president of the Association for Humanistic Psychology, and is the recipient of its Pathfinder Award for outstanding contributions to the field of human consciousness. 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 November 17, 2015)

Advanced Materials and Processes by B. S. Murty (IIT Kharagpur)

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source: nptelhrd    2010年8月15日
Mechanical - Advanced Materials and Processes by Prof. B. S. Murty, Department of Metallurgical Engineering, IIT Kharagpur. For more details on NPTEL visit http://nptel.iitm.ac.in

Lec-1 Structure of Materials Part-I 59:40
Lec-2 Structure of Materials Part-II 59:46
Lec-3 Nano Crystalline Materials Part-I 42:13
Lec-4 Nano Crystalline Materials Part-II 53:45
Lec-5 Nano Crystalline Materials Part-III 57:24
Lec-6 Nano Crystalline Materials Part-IV 57:05
Lec-7 Amorphous Materials Part-I 54:42
Lec-8 Amorphous Materials Part-II 37:49
Lec-9 Amorphous Materials Part-III 53:41
Lec-10 Amorphous Materials Part-IV 55:03
Lec-11 Amorphous Materials Part-V 53:35
Lec-12 Quasicrystals Part-I 55:12
Lec-13 Quasicrystals Part-II 53:47
Lec-14 Nano Quasicrystals Part-I 55:27
Lec-15 Nano Quasicrystals Part-II 54:58
Lec-16 Rapid Solidification Processing 54:19
Lec-17 Mechanical Alloying 52:31
Lec-18 Advanced AI Alloys Part-I 42:24
Lec-19 Advanced AI Alloys Part-II 54:02
Lec-20 Advanced AI Alloys Part-III 53:52
Lec-21 Advanced AI Alloys Part-IV and Ti Alloys 51:17
Lec-22 Shape Memory Alloys 50:18
Lec-23 Strengthening Mechanisms Part-I 53:15
Lec-24 Strengthening Mechanisms Part-I 59:28
Lec-25 Superalloys 51:33
Lec-26 In-Situ Composites Part-I 53:08

Rajesh Srivastava: Water Resources Engineering (IIT Kanpur)

# playlist of the 29 videos (click the up-left corner of the video)

source: nptelhrd    2008年2月5日
Civil - Water Resources Engineering by Prof. Rajesh Srivastava, Department of Civil Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur

Lecture 1 - Water Resources Engineering 39:58
Lecture 02 57:29
Lecture 03 57:56
Lecture 04 53:58
Lecture 05 54:38
Lecture 06 54:34
Lecture 07 1:00:37
Lecture 08 58:21
Lecture 09 1:01:53
Lecture 10 57:42
Lecture 11 59:02
Lecture 12 55:40
Lecture 13 1:01:08
Lecture 14 1:00:53
Lecture 15 56:22
Lecture 16 55:36
Lecture 17 59:37
Lecture 18 58:50
Lecture 19 48:39
Lecture 20 1:00:31
Lecture 21 1:01:56
Lecture 22 1:02:30
Lecture 23 59:01
Lecture 24 50:34
Lecture 25 40:36
Lecture 26 54:13
Lecture 27 52:26
Lecture 28 52:29
Lecture 29 - Water Resources Engineering 52:29

T. I .Eldho: Fluid Mechanics (IIT Bombay)

# playlist of the 42 videos (click the up-left corner of the video)

source: nptelhrd    2008年1月28日
Civil - Fluid Mechanics by Prof. T. I .Eldho Dept. of Civil Engineering IIT Bombay.

Lec-1 Fluid Mechanics 51:06
Lec-2 Fundamental Concepts of Fluid Flow & Fluid Statics 53:35
Lec-3 Fluid Statics 52:09
Lec-4 Fluid Statics 51:43
Lec-5 Fluid Statics 52:14
Lec-6 Kinematics of Fluid Flow 51:10
Lec-7 Kinematics of Fluid Flow 57:32
Lec-8 Kinematics of Fluid Flow 55:01
Lec-9 Kinematics of Fluid Flow 52:58
Lec-10 Kinematics of Fluid Flow 56:33
Lec-11 Kinematics and Dynamics of Fluid Flow 56:26
Lec-12 Dynamics of Fluid Flow 56:09
Lec-13 Dynamics of Fluid Flow 54:47
Lec-14 Dynamics of Fluid Flow 55:22
Lec-15 Dynamics of Fluid Flow 55:37
Lec-16 Dynamics of Fluid Flow 46:59
Lec-17 Laminar and Turbulent Flows 54:41
Lec-18 Laminar and Turbulent Flows 54:46
Lec-19 Laminar and Turbulent Flows 52:55
Lec-20 Laminar and Turbulent Flows 52:49
Lec-21 Laminar and Turbulent Flows 56:24
Lec-22 Laminar and Turbulent Flows 52:00
Lec-23 Dimensional Analysis 52:35
Lec-24 Dimensional Analysis 50:14
Lec-25 Dimensional Analysis 53:01
Lec-26 Navier Stocks Equations and Applications 52:11
Lec-27 Navier Stocks Equations and Applications 57:29
Lec-28 Navier Stocks Equations and Applications 50:37
Lec-29 Navier Stocks Equations and Applications 51:48
Lec-30 Boundary Layer Theory and Applications 53:04
Lec-31 Boundary Layer Theory and Applications 51:48
Lec-32 Boundary Layer Theory and Applications 47:27
Lec-33 Boundary Layer Theory and Applications 51:29
Lec-34 Boundary Layer Theory and Applications 52:44
Lec - 35 Boundary Layer Theory and Applications 54:47
Lec - 36 Pipe Flow Systems 49:55
Lec-37 Pipe Flow Systems 53:38
Lec-38 Pipe Flow Systems 53:50
Lec-39 Pipe Flow Systems 51:53
Lec-40 Pipe Flow Systems 50:36
Lec-41 Pipe Flow Systems 52:49
Lec-42 Pipe Flow Systems 1:00:30

The Paradoxes of Empathy — Lecture 1 | Mahindra Humanit...


source: Harvard University    2014年4月15日
The Tanner Lectures on Human Values April 8 - 10, 2014
LECTURE 1
"The Other as Myself: Empathy and Power"
Tuesday, April 8, 4:00pm
Paine Hall, Music Building
Introductions:
Drew G. Faust
President, Harvard University
Homi K. Bhabha
Director, Mahindra Humanities Center
Respondent:
David W. Tracy
Andrew Thomas Greeley and Grace McNichols Greeley Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus of Catholic Studies, University of Chicago Divinity School