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2018-03-23
English Common Law by Dame Hazel Genn & Adam Gearey at U of London
source: Jieun Jeong 2013年7月4日 / playlist compiled by CosmoLearning
1 1 Introduction 2:41
1 2 What is law 10:16
1 3 What is Common Law 25:41
1 4 Student chat, What should law do 2:08
1 5 Forum Feedback 7:47
1 6 Question Feedback 1 2:26
1 7 Question Feedback 2 1:40
1 8 Question Feedback 3 2:30
2 1 Introduction 0:50
2 2 Introduction to the Civil and Criminal Courts 7:49
2 3 The Civil Courts 5:39
2 4 The Criminal Courts 2:57
2 5 The Supreme Court and the European Courts 7:38
2 6 The Relationship of the Hierarchy of the courts to the Doctrine of Precedent 8:26
2 7 Common Law and Equity 19:02
2 8 A contemporary view of Common Law and Equity 19:40
2 9 Live Session 1:10:57
3 1 Introduction 0:46
3 2 Introduction to The Doctrine of Parliamentary Sovereignty 9:57
3 3 The Rise of Statute Law 11:11
3 4 Legal and Political Sovereignty 9:31
3 5 The European Union and Parliamentary Sovereignty 10:24
3 6 The Human Rights Act and Parliamentary Sovereignty 11:30
3 7 The Contemporary Reality of Parliamentary Sovereignty Judges Parliament and the Human Rights Act 16:56
4 1 Introduction 0:32
4 2 Overview of Judicial Precedent 9:50
4 3 Judicial precedent and the role of the Judges 8:16
4 4 Modern Practice of the House of Lords 12:25
4 5 Decisions of the Court of Appeal 7:44
4 6 Decisions of the Court of Appeal Further Developments 9:30
4 7 Judicial Law Making 7:23
4 8 Judicial Law Making and the Human Rights Act 6:16
4 9 The Doctrine of Precedent and the European Court of Human Rights 5:22
5 1 Introduction 0:35
5 2 Challenges of Statutory Interpretation 9:32
5 3 The Nature of Statutory Interpretation 9:20
5 4 The Presumptions of Statutory interpretation 4:05
5 5 The importance of Pepper v Hart 10:10
5 6 The Effect of Bulmer v Bollinger 7:40
5 7 New Methods of interpretation Some Case Law 10:14
5 8 Purposive Interpretation Outside of the European Court 5:25
5 9 Statutory Interpretation and the Human Rights Act 10:45
6 1 Introduction 0:34
6 2 EU Treaties and ECHR 13:42
6 3 Links between the present and past of the EU 4:57
6 4 Foundational Values 4:31
6 5 The Institutions of the EU 4:25
6 6 EU Law 5:29
6 7 EU Convention of Human Rights 13:35
6 8 Rights Contained in the European Convention 13:35
6 9 Rights Contained within the European Convention 6:00
History of Architecture I (Fall 2014) with Jacqueline Gargus at Ohio State U
source: CosmoLearning 2017年8月22日
https://knowlton.osu.edu/people/gargus
https://itunes.apple.com/us/course/history-of-architecture-i/id570008367
Prof. Jacqueline Gargus, Knowlton School of Architecture, Ohio State University.
History of Architecture I (Arch 5110) is aimed at an audience of architecture students and traces thematic arcs to provide a conceptual overview of architectural history from pre-history through the nineteenth century. The intent is not to develop an historical or art historical argument, but rather to provide insight into the formal structure and technological challenges of the built environment. The ambition is to develop strategies that will help young architects make design decisions and better appreciate the richness of the material world as well as to understand the political and social implications of every architectural act.
45:07 01 Why Architects Should Study Architectural History
40:54 02 Introduction and Syllabus Discussion
41:53 03 Egyptian Architecture Part 1
42:29 04 Egyptian Architecture Part 2
18:58 05 Minoan & Mycenean compressed file
46:10 06 Greek Architecture Part 1
31:44 07 Greek Architecture Part 2
48:01 08 Roman Architecture Part 1
53:40 09 Roman Architecture Part 2
45:05 10 Early Christian Architecture
41:58 11 Byzantine Architecture
36:45 12 Islamic Architecture
34:19 13 Carolingian Architecture
38:38 14 Romanesque Architecture
38:32 15 Gothic Architecture Part 1 Early French Gothic
41:27 16 Gothic Architecture Part 2 High Gothic
30:21 17 Gothic Architecture Part 3 English Gothic
46:03 18 Gothic Architecture Part 4 Italian Gothic
49:43 19 Advent of the Renaissance
41:25 20 Brunelleschi
44:34 21 Alberti
49:05 22 Ideal Renaissance Towns
47:01 24 Rome Under Julius II
48:04 25 Michelangelo
47:43 26 Mannerist Gardens Part 1
48:13 27 Mannerist Gardens Part 2
44:47 28 Palladio Part 1 Villas
41:51 29 Palladio Part 2 Churches and Urban Buildings
38:31 30 Italian Baroque Part 1 Introduction
34:47 31 Italian Baroque Part 2 Sixtus V
49:02 32 Baroque Part 3 Borromini & Bernini
45:31 33 Baroque 4 Urbanism
50:04 34 Baroque 5 Guarini
45:01 35 Central Europe Late Baroque
42:33 36 German Rococo
43:24 37 Baroque France
34:29 38 England Inigo Jones & Christopher Wren
29:53 39 England Hawksmoor and Vanbrugh
36:09 40 The Enlightenment
26:28 41 The Picturesque
45:43 42 English Romantic Gardens
44:56 43 Revival styles
42:02 44 John Soane
48:15 45 Architecture Parlante
49:08 46 18th c USA
41:09 47 German Romantic Classicism
Evolutionary Biology by Ashley Carter at California State University
source: carterlabcsulb 2016年8月19日
This course is Bio 312 Evolutionary Biology, a course designed for upper level biology students.
From: http://web.csulb.edu/~acarter3/course-evolution/lectures....
1: course overview Introduction to the semester's topics. 4:25
2: why we study evolution 9:17
3: philosophy of science 18:19
4: Lines of evidence for evolution, introduction 3:56
5: Lines of evidence for evolution, homology versus analogy 8:47
6 Lines of evidence for evolution, vestigial traits 8:18
7: Lines of evidence for evolution, geological record 8:10
8: Lines of evidence for evolution, geographic distribution 3:01
9: Lines of evidence for evolution, fluidity of the species barrier 4:15
10: Lines of evidence for evolution, direct observation 4:36
11: Lines of evidence for evolution, artificial selection 11:03
12: Lines of evidence for evolution, logical and mathematical argument 5:52
13: Phylogenetics 1, introduction 12:41
14: Phylogenetics 2, using trees to understand biology 16:48
15: Phylogenetics 3, how do we make and compare trees 20:13
16: Phylogenetics 4, examples of phylogenetic studies 9:02
17: Origin of life 8:19
18: History of life 15:25
19: History of science 1, antiquity to the scientific revolution (1543) 18:36
20: History of science 2, Newton (1600s) to Lamarck (1800s) 9:52
21: History of science 3, Darwin (1809-1882) 14:38
2: History of science 4, Darwin (1882) to WWI (1918) 13:36
23: History of science 5, WWI (1918) to WWII (1945) 9:43
24: History of science 6, post-WWII (1945+) 14:15
25: Diversity of life 1 9:28
26: Diversity of life 2 4:32
27: Diversity of life 3 3:59
28: Diversity of life 4 8:48
29: Diversity of life 5 3:38
30: Diversity of life 6 7:41
31: Diversity of life 7 6:59
32: Diversity of life 8 3:21
33: Diversity of life 9 5:18
34: Studying adaptation 1, introduction. 12:11
35: Studying adaptation 2, optimality/observation method. 20:38
36: Studying adaptation 3, experimental method. 20:10
37: Studying adaptation 4, comparative method. 13:58
38: Sexual selection 1, introduction. 10:44
39: Sexual selection 2, males 1. 14:41
40: Sexual selection 3, males 2. 12:01
41: Sexual selection 4, females 1. 12:17
42: Sexual selection 5, females 2. 9:30
43: Sexual selection 6, miscellaneous. 13:51
44: Life history theory 1, introduction. 15:35
45: Life history theory 2, senescence. 17:53
46: Life history theory 3, Cole's model. 15:12
47: Life history theory 4, optimal clutch size. 9:40
48: Life history theory 5, fitness conflicts. 10:33
49: Life history theory 6, inclusive fitness. 21:51
50: Game theory 1, prisoner's dilemma. 13:35
51: Game theory 2, the hawk:dove model. 12:29
52: Game theory 3, more complicated strategies and equilibria. 9:24
53: Game theory 4, evolution and economics. 9:44
54: Levels of selection 1, introduction. 4:34
55: Levels of selection 2, two examples. 12:20
56: Levels of selection 3, the evolution of sex. 18:56
57: Speciation 1, introduction. 10:57
58: Speciation 2, species definitions. 18:58
59: Speciation 3, speciation processes. 15:10
60: Evolutionary constraints 1, introduction. 3:17
61: Evolutionary constraints 2, examples. 20:51
62: Population genetics 1, introduction. 12:44
63: Population genetics 2, Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. 13:11
64: Selection 1, Introduction. 13:22
65: Selection 2, an example and implication. 14:57
66: Selection 3, dominant advantageous alleles. 7:51
67: Selection 4, overdominance and equilibria. 6:31
68: Selection 5, perturbation analysis. 9:05
69: Mutation 1, introduction. 14:37
70: Mutation 2, an example and implication. 9:04
71: Mutation 3, genetic load. 8:28
72: Migration 1, introduction. 9:49
73: Migration 2, practical example. 13:07
74: Non-random mating 1, introduction. 12:58
75: Non-random mating 2, F calculations. 9:40
76: Non-random mating 3, the effects of inbreeding. 6:43
77: Finite population size 1, introduction. 15:08
78: Finite population size 2, effective population size. 15:57
79: Stochasticity 1, loss of alleles. 11:32
80: Stochasticity 2, fixation probability. 7:37
81: Stochasticity 3, selection versus drift. 10:43
82: Multiple loci 1, linkage disequilibrium. 13:09
83: Multiple loci 2, hitchhiking. 11:49
84: Multiple loci 3, multiple alleles. 11:04
85: Multiple loci 4, quantitative genetics. 14:02
86: Multiple loci 5, quantitative trait loci (QTL). 14:12
87: Molecular evolution 1, introduction. 17:43
88: Molecular evolution 2, substitution rates. 15:44
89: Molecular evolution 3, types of mutations. 16:01
90: Evo Devo 1, introduction. 5:04
91: Evo Devo 2, comparative embryology. 4:02
92: Evo Devo 3, allometric studies. 15:34
93: Evo Devo 4, molecular approaches. 18:01
94: Evolutionary psychology 1, introduction. 12:38
95: Evolutionary psychology 2, survival. 11:46
Born good? Babies help unlock the origins of morality [CBS News] 13:33
97: Evolutionary psychology 4, reproduction. 15:04
98: Evolutionary psychology 5, offspring care. 15:35
99: Human evolution 1, Introduction. 13:43
100: Human evolution 2, overview of methods. 10:33
101: Human evolution 3, history of humanity. 13:43
102: Miscellaneous. 11:35
103: Course review. 16:51
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