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Mark reconnects with Gabor Maté to discuss Trauma and its recent popularity. As our most talked about guest from the world renowned Embodiment Conference. Mark first and foremost passed on the Embodiment Unlimited's community gratitude and appreciation. Then Mark and Gabor traverse how and why trauma conversations have touched so many people globally, beginning at the beginning with aspects of Gabor's life story. You can pre order Gabor's new book 'The Myth of Normal' here : https://www.amazon.co.uk/Myth-Normal-Illness-Healing-Culture/dp/1785042718 The Myth of Normal will be released in September 2022!
Special Guest Bec Kachan of KSTP discusses upcoming trip to the USA Guests Joanna and Emily talk about how sharing food is a key step toward belonging Ardin and Jonathan Exchanges Baptism Stories Ardin asks for Jonathan's reflections on the overturning of Roe v. Wade Here's a link to Tish Warren's article in the NYT on 'The Myth of Body Autonomy'Visit our church at wdbc.org.au
In this podcast Luisma talks with Idoia Salazar, founder and president of the Observatory of the Social and Ethical Impact of Artificial Intelligence (OdiseIA). Specialist in Ethics and legislation in Artificial Intelligence. She is in the list of experts to assist the European Parliament´s Artificial Intelligence Observatory (EPAIO). Principal Investigator of the SIMPAIR Research Group (Social Impact of Artificial Intelligence and Robotics), focusing mainly on the need for a multicultural approach to Ethics in AI. Professor in international degrees at CEU San Pablo University. Author of 4 books about AI and it´s impact. The last one: ‘The Algorithm and I: guide to coexistence between human and artificial beings'; 'The Myth of the Algorithm: Tales and truths of Artificial Intelligence'; The Revolution of robots: How Artificial Intelligence and robotics affect our future 'and' The depths of the Internet: Access information that search engines cannot find and discover the intelligent future of the Internet ' (written in spanish), as well as scientific and informative articles oriented to investigate and raise awareness about the impact of Artificial Intelligence. She is founding member of Springer ‘AI and Ethics' journal and member of the Global AI Ethics Consortium. (GAIEC). She is advisor for Spain in the Advisory Council of the International Group of Artificial Intelligence (IGOAI).
How do we remember our heroes and our nation's greatest victories? And what lessons do we learn from history? A provocative recent book examines the story of what's become known as "the Greatest Generation" and its impact on America's wars ever since. Jeffrey Brown has the story for our arts and culture series, "CANVAS." PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
Is it neo-colonialism? Ignorance? A combination of the two? Let's discuss. Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/whatsbotheringmetoday Twitter: https://twitter.com/BotheredBoy Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/whatsbotheringmetoday Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/WhatsBotheringMeToday Ponderful's channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/PonderfulYT Medium article: 'The Myth of French Stereotypes' https://medium.com/@NinoSeccato/the-m... All music by Prod. Riddiman. Go subscribe to their channel! https://www.youtube.com/c/ProdRiddiman
https://rashmasblogtounblock.blogspot.com/ https://rashmasblogtounblock.blogspot.com/ A post from my blog.
Biffy Clyro frontman Simon Neil joins us to talk through the new album 'The Myth Of The Happily Ever After', featuring the singles 'A Hunger In Your Haunt' and 'Unknown Male 01'. He tells us how the record evolved out of sessions for 'A Celebration Of Endings' to become something new, progressive and lyrically reflecting life during the pandemic. We also look back on debut album 'Blackened Sky' which celebrates its twentieth anniversary next year. Plus, we reflect on the band's headline slot at Reading & Leeds Festival, their recent cover of Metallica's 'Holier Than Thou' and Simon's collaborations with Architects and While She Sleeps.
Dave Crenshaw (https://amzn.to/3h6bGR0) is the author of 'The Myth of Multitasking: How “Doing It All” Gets Nothing Done (https://amzn.to/3h6bGR0)'. His courses on LinkedIn Learning have been viewed tens of millions of times. His five books have been published in eight languages, the most popular of which is The Myth of Multitasking (https://amzn.to/3h6bGR0)—a time management bestseller. In this conversation Dave talks with Erik about how and why multitasking doesn’t work and how to be more effective by doing one thing at a time. This episode is brought to you by: * OTIS (http://meetotis.com/beyond) * Textexpander (https://textexpander.com/podcast?utm_source=beyond-the-to-do-list&utm_medium=podcast&utm_campa ign=textexpander-May-2021)
In this episode, I'll be talking all about writer and philosopher Albert Camus, including some of his most famous texts like 'The Plague' and 'The Myth of Sisyphus'. Enjoy!
With last month's grand jury announcement that no charges will be filed against the IMPD officer (Dejoure Mercer) who killed Dreasjon Reed, members of the Indiana Racial Justice Alliance (Nabeela Virjee & Nigel Long ) join us for a conversation on how police bury victims through the bureaucratic process. We go in-depth regarding 'The Myth of The Perfect Victim.' A myth that blames the behavior of Black people instead of the system itself. Donate to Reed Familly: $DemetreeWynn
Today author D.L. Mayfield joins me to discuss her book 'The Myth of the American Dream' and her journey out of the evangelical/capitalist system into a deeper awareness of what the commands of Jesus really mean for us. D.L shares how the idea of the way of Jesus preached by evangelicalism and the system it supports, contrast so much with the basic commands of Jesus - to love our neighbour. She then explores four dimensions to we this - affluence, autonomy, safety, and power - and the uncomfortable truth of who white privileged Christians might really be in the Jesus story. She talks about privilege, and her experience of how when the system benefits us, it can blind us to the lived experience of reality of how things really are for the oppressed and marginalised. And then, where that leaves people who want to be truly faithful to the teachings of Jesus.
In this episode, Sara interviews author and historian Lara Freidenfelds about her book The Myth of the Perfect Pregnancy. Lara discusses the knowledge we've gained about early pregnancy and miscarriage, as well as wisdom we've lost from earlier times.
Today on the show I look at Albert Camus' 'The Myth of Sisyphus' and what this existentialist metaphor of embracing despair can mean for us in today's trying times. Don't worry I add a bit of spice it's not all doom and gloom.
Nathan Smith is a local activist, he currently is reporting the protest in front the Victoria legislature concerning the Wet'suwet'en first nations people. He is also a photographer, journalist and creator of the movement Profiling Black Excellence. His Instagram @N8images is full of fine art photography and please follow @ProBlackExcellence as well, and join the movement to dismantle racism in all its forms.
TJ De Santis and Nick Albert react to UFC 247 and discuss the misconception at any decision is unanimous.
In the fourth episode of the SOAS Humanitarian Hub Podcast, Jake Tacchi talks with Dr. Claudia Seymour about her book: 'The Myth of International Protection, War and Survival in the Congo'. Dr. Seymour's book presents a highly engaging, and very readable, amalgamation of her own experiences working within the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)as a child protection adviser, alongside her subsequent PhD research. We discussed many themes that arose from the book, as well as the difficulties of moving between humanitarianism and academia. For more information about SOAS’s new MSc programme: Humanitarian Action (Online) visit: www.soas.ac.uk/development/progr…an-action-online/ Please do visit our blog for more research, current news and debates about humanitarianism: blogs.soas.ac.uk/humanitarian-hub/ Dr. Seymour's fascinating and highly accessible book is available for sale: www.ucpress.edu/book/978052029984…tional-protection
In the fourth episode of the SOAS Humanitarian Hub Podcast, Jake Tacchi talks with Dr. Claudia Seymour about her book: 'The Myth of International Protection, War and Survival in the Congo'. Dr. Seymour's book presents a highly engaging, and very readable, amalgamation of her own experiences working within the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)as a child protection adviser, alongside her subsequent PhD research. We discussed many themes that arose from the book, as well as the difficulties of moving between humanitarianism and academia. For more information about SOAS’s new MSc programme: Humanitarian Action (Online) visit: www.soas.ac.uk/development/progr…an-action-online/ Please do visit our blog for more research, current news and debates about humanitarianism: blogs.soas.ac.uk/humanitarian-hub/ Dr. Seymour's fascinating and highly accessible book is available for sale: https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520299849/the-myth-of-international-protection
In this episode, we address a question from a listener. She wants to become a content creator but is concerned that because she isn't 'qualified', no one will care what she has to say. This turns into a discussion about how society is wired to implicitly convince us that we need permission before we can do stuff. We discuss 'The Myth of the Expert' and 'The Curse of the Expert', and offer some advice for anyone who's ever struggled with imposter syndrome.
In this episode, Dick and Dom head off on safari to present some amazing animal stories YOU wrote last year. So whether it's bed-time listening or some writing inspiration sit back and let Dick and Dom take it away with the BBC Radio Drama Company reading 'Fox the Dog', 'Hard to Be Me', 'Spencer Saves the Day', 'The Myth of the Mountain Wolf' and 'The Guardian Shark'. Find out more about 500 Words at bbc.co.uk/500Words.
Podcast of Dr Ailise Bulfin's paper as part of 'Bodies of Data: Intersecting Medical and Digital Humanities'.
Know Your Risk Radio with Zach Abraham, Chief Investment Officer, Bulwark Capital Management
Zach has a market update and a longform interview with Jonathan Tepper, author of the must read book 'The Myth of Capitalism: Monopolies and the Death of Competition'
Jason Ānanda Josephson Storm received his Ph.D. in Religious Studies from Stanford University in 2006 and is tenured at Williams College in their Religious Studies Department. He has three primary research areas: Japanese Religions, European Intellectual History, and Theory more broadly. He has been working to articulate new research models for Religious Studies in the wake of the collapse of poststructuralism as a guiding ethos in the Humanities. Jason and I discuss his book 'The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity, and the Birth of the Human Sciences' from 2017 as well as his text on inventing religion in Japan. We delve into the role of enchantment and the myth of disenchantment, the role of enchantment in science and the fascinating indulgences of many of the great scientific thinkers in spiritualism and enchanted beliefs. We cover East & West philosophy, The Kyoto School, Metamodernism, and more. Our conversation also joins up nicely with previous guests and the desire to give emergence to something new after post-modernism and modernism, and for Buddhists, something beyond the cultural infiltration of both in contemporary western Buddhism. Music. Matthew O'Connell a life coach and the host of the The Imperfect Buddha podcast. You can find The Imperfect Buddha on Facebook and Twitter (@imperfectbuddha). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Jason Ānanda Josephson Storm received his Ph.D. in Religious Studies from Stanford University in 2006 and is tenured at Williams College in their Religious Studies Department. He has three primary research areas: Japanese Religions, European Intellectual History, and Theory more broadly. He has been working to articulate new research models for Religious Studies in the wake of the collapse of poststructuralism as a guiding ethos in the Humanities. Jason and I discuss his book 'The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity, and the Birth of the Human Sciences' from 2017 as well as his text on inventing religion in Japan. We delve into the role of enchantment and the myth of disenchantment, the role of enchantment in science and the fascinating indulgences of many of the great scientific thinkers in spiritualism and enchanted beliefs. We cover East & West philosophy, The Kyoto School, Metamodernism, and more. Our conversation also joins up nicely with previous guests and the desire to give emergence to something new after post-modernism and modernism, and for Buddhists, something beyond the cultural infiltration of both in contemporary western Buddhism. Links O'Connell Coaching: oconnellcoaching.com Post-Traditional Buddhism: posttraditionalbuddhism.com Facebook: www.facebook.com/imperfectbuddha Twitter: twitter.com/Imperfectbuddha Episode Links Jason's university page: https://religion.williams.edu/faculty/jason-josephson Intelligence Squared podcast with John Gray: https://soundcloud.com/intelligence2/adam-phillips-and-john-gray John Gray's Straw Dogs: https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374270933 Music https://robinmitchell.bandcamp.com/
The Myth of Believing and the Secret to Achieving. This is somewhat provocative and maybe even a little shocking for some of you. Particularly if you are immersed in the self-help, in spiritual agility, and the whole field of changing our thoughts and our beliefs in order to create the life of our dreams. You see, while there is truth-the power of your thoughts. The importance of mindset. These are all very, very important elements. But in fact, it’s become in a way a disease where the idea that we have to feel it, to do it, to believe it. We have to believe it to achieve it. We have to feel confident to do it. It has created in many individuals this waiting period. We are not going for our life. We are not living our life. We are not doing the thing we most want to do in creating and being because we are waiting. We are waiting to believe it. We are waiting to feel it. We are waiting to have the confidence. We are waiting for it not be scary and we checking in, with our beliefs. I'm I there yet? We are contemplating our navel instead of getting out there where the action is and going forward. This is really becomes a problem that I see more and more. Where individuals are waiting. Remember from the Emergence model. Whatever you are waiting for you are waiting with. Whatever is missing is what you are not giving. Where you are not generating your divine power plan. A power plan doesn't receive energy it generates it. You are waiting for amuse to knock. You are waiting for inspirations. As if it’s going to come knock at your door, but instead of understanding it’s the inspiration is in you. YOU have to act like an inspired person and you will activate inspiration. YOU have to act like a confident person and you activate confidence because it’s ALL IN YOU. YOU see the truth is it’s already done. It’s already happening. What you need to do is to become in alignment with that which already is happening. Listen now to episode 121 'The Myth of Believing, The Secret of Achieving' of the Emergence Podcast. to Find out these clues and to support your personal development and spiritual growth and to start participating in your future good NOW. And remember, self-help is shelf help – you have everything you need already! Stay Inspired!
Johnathan Tepper, economist and founder of Variant Perception, joins us to talk about his new book, 'The Myth of Capitalism', a detailed look at how advanced economies demonstrate little real competition in many industries, with implications for the economy, wage inflation, and even politics. Tepper also famously predicted a severe housing crash for Australia, and he updates us on his views now that house prices are declining. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In 1921 a schooner ran aground on the treacherous shoals off Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. When rescuers climbed aboard, they found signs of a strange drama in the ship's last moments -- and no trace of the 11-man crew. In this week's episode of the Futility Closet podcast we'll examine the curious case of the Carroll A. Deering, which has been called "one of the enduring mysteries of maritime history." We'll also experiment with yellow fever and puzzle over a disputed time of death. Intro: Benoni Lanctot's 1867 Chinese and English Phrase Book is not a model of cross-cultural comity. In 1916 a bank director mailed 15,000 bricks to establish a new bank in Vernal, Utah. Sources for our feature on the Carroll A. Deering: Bland Simpson, Ghost Ship of Diamond Shoals, 2002. Edward Rowe Snow, Mysteries and Adventures Along the Atlantic Coast, 1948. David Stick, Graveyard of the Atlantic: Shipwrecks of the North Carolina Coast, 1952. David H. Grover, "Baffling Mystery of Cape Hatteras' Twin Ship Disappearances," Sea Classics 40:6 (June 2007), 42. David Grover, "Bedeviling Mystery of the Vanished Conestoga," Sea Classics 42:4 (April 2009), 42-49. National Park Foundation, "The Legend of the Ghost Ship: Carroll A. Deering," Oct. 28, 2015. National Park Service, "The Ghost Ship of the Outer Banks," April 14, 2015. Richard Seamon, "Ghost Ship of Diamond Shoals: The Mystery of Carroll A. Deering," United States Naval Institute Proceedings 128:11 (November 2002), 82-84. "3 U.S. Ships Vanish at Sea With Crews; Reds Blamed," New York Tribune, June 21, 1921. "Piracy Suspected in Disappearance of 3 American Ships," New York Times, June 21, 1921. "Ghost Ship Met Foul Play, U.S. Charges," Washington Times, June 21, 1921. "Bath Owners Skeptical," New York Times, June 21, 1921. "Schooner Deering Seized by Pirates Off the North Carolina Coast, Is Belief," Great Falls [Mont.] Tribune, June 22, 1921. "Deering Skipper's Wife Caused Investigation," New York Times, June 22, 1921. "More Ships Added to Mystery List," New York Times, June 22, 1921. "Divided as to Theory About Missing Ships," New York Times, June 22, 1921. "Are Pirates Afloat in North Atlantic? Is Question Asked," Union [S.C.] Times, June 23, 1921. "Skipper's Daughter Holds Pirate Theory," New York Times, June 23, 1921. "London Isn't Thrilled by Ship Mysteries," New York Times, June 25, 1921. "Soviet Pirate Tale Declared a 'Fake,'" New York Times, Aug. 26, 1921. Shaila Dewan, "A Journey Back in Maritime," New York Times, July 4, 2008. Alyson Cunningham, "Schooner's Voyage Ends on Carolina Coast," [Salisbury, Md.] Daily Times, Feb. 26, 2014, 40. "The 'Ghost Ship' Mysteries Yet to be Solved," Telegraph, Jan. 23, 2014. Engineer James Steel took the above photograph of the Carroll A. Deering from the deck of the lightship off Cape Lookout, North Carolina, on Jan. 28, 1921. Listener mail: Wikipedia, "Self-Experimentation in Medicine" (accessed May 4, 2018). Wikipedia, "Max Joseph von Pettenkofer" (accessed May 4, 2018). Wikipedia, "Jesse William Lazear" (accessed May 4, 2018). Kiona N. Smith, "The Epidemiologist Who Killed Himself for Science," Forbes, Sept. 25, 2017. Neil A. Grauer, "'The Myth of Walter Reed,'" Washington Post, Aug. 26, 1997 Karin Brulliard, "Could a Bear Break Into That Cooler? Watch These Grizzlies Try," Washington Post, Nov. 29, 2017. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hdOcrUtE-UQ This week's lateral thinking puzzle was contributed by listeners Neil de Carteret and Nala, who sent this corroborating link (warning -- this spoils the puzzle). You can listen using the player above, download this episode directly, or subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Google Play Music or via the RSS feed at http://feedpress.me/futilitycloset. Please consider becoming a patron of Futility Closet -- you can choose the amount you want to pledge, and we've set up some rewards to help thank you for your support. You can also make a one-time donation on the Support Us page of the Futility Closet website. Many thanks to Doug Ross for the music in this episode. If you have any questions or comments you can reach us at podcast@futilitycloset.com. Thanks for listening!
Bonus episode! Chase hosted a live Twitch Q&A with Alex 'Assassinato' Fitzgerald on his new book 'The Myth of Poker Talent'
Question 1 from Taaryn re: the double-barrel (2:00) Question 2 from Joel Stott re: Flopzilla (6:35) Question 3 from Anonymous re: Unregulated Online Poker (11:50) 'The Myth of Poker Talent: why anyone can be a great poker player' Alex "Assassinato" Fitzgerald is coming out with a new book! Get it here: http://www.smartpokerstudy.com/themythofpokertalent Show Notes with more info, pics and links: http://www.smartpokerstudy.com/pod88 Hosted by Sky Matsuhashi, poker player, poker coach and author. Please visit my poker strategy website at http://www.smartpokerstudy.com and sign up for the Smart Poker Study Newsletter for weekly strategy, study and poker play tips. Discuss poker with like-minded players at http://www.smartpokerstudy.com/discuss Support my show on Patreon! http://www.patreon.com/smartpokerstudy Check out my YouTube Poker Training Channel at http://www.smartpokerstudy.com/youtube Contact Smart Poker Study: Twitter @smartpokerstudy Email to sky@smartpokerstudy.com
T&A talk with Scott Barry Kaufman, cognitive psychologist, author, and speaker about his article 'The Myth of the Alpha Male" to better understand what qualities women most want in a man. Do we ladies prefer Alpha or Beta? It turns out it's a little more complicated and nuanced. Tune in to better understand how we can attract the perfect mate. ...and check out Scott's article at The Art of Manliness of you want to read from where our conversation started. Find more info. about Scott and his other work on creativity and the mind HERE: www.ScottBarryKaufman.com
Legendary writer and environmentalist Derrick Jensen chats to Ray Grenfell about his new book, 'The Myth of Human Supremacy', breaking identification with the dominant culture and the struggle for survival in the face of an impending global ecocide.
Colin Marshall talks with David. L Ulin, former book critic at the Los Angeles times and author of such books as 'The Myth of Solid Ground: Earthquakes, Prediction, and the Fault Line Between Reason and Faith', 'The Lost Art of Reading: Why Books Matter in a Distracted Time', and the novella 'Labyrinth'. He's also edited the anthologies of Los Angeles writing 'Reading Los Angeles' and 'Another City', and his new book, 'Sidewalking: Coming to Terms with Los Angeles', deals directly with his nearly 25-year history in the city and what it means, to him and others, to live here.
Meltdown Presents: History of The Batman with Londyn! #005 - Myth of the Batman God Complex History of the Batman relives the defining moments of one of the most iconic figures in comic art and literature. Londyn explains what 'The Myth of the Batman God Complex" is and provides her top 10 list of the Caped Crusader's greatest loses in his 75 years in DC Comics. Adam from Meltdown Comics and Shadow Adam also make appearances and add some thoughts to Londyn's list. Produced by Mason Booker and Adam Silverstein. Engineered by Mason Booker Theme music by ROYALTYFREEMUSIC Logo design by Hannah Nance Partlow, hannahnance.com.
A review of -The Myth of Junk DNA- by Jonathan Wells -Discovery Institute Press Seattle, WA, 2011-. Reviewed by Jeffrey Tomkins -http---creation.com-review-wells-junk-dna-.-----One of the greatest evolutionary frauds of recent times is the myth that eukaryotic genomes, particularly the human genome, are largely composed of meaningless -junk- DNA sequences that serve no biological purpose. While many of the actual researchers working in the vast field of genomics now realize that virtually the entire genome is functional,1 a handful of influential and popular bio-science authors still authoritatively proclaim the fraudulent myth of -junk DNA-. Thus, the errant junk DNA myth is still widely perpetuated even though several decades of hard-hitting research profoundly declares otherwise.-----The problem is that the general public doesn-t often read the journal-based scientific literature, but instead rely on popular science authors to distill the pertinent research data into a more easily understood form. In this process, the truth about non-coding DNA is withheld and distorted by the popular media technical outlets. Unfortunately, the scientific technocracy of our time uses the junk DNA myth as a key component to perpetuate the overall myth of Darwinian evolution. A new book by molecular biologist and author Dr Jonathan Wells utterly and thoroughly destroys the cherished junk DNA paradigm. It is appropriately titled 'The Myth of Junk DNA.'-
Stefan Molyneux, host of Freedomain Radio, discusses men's issues, human liberation and the challenges of modern feminism with Dr Warren Farrell, author of 'The Myth of Male Power.' Freedomain Radio is the largest and most popular philosophy show on the web - http://www.freedomainradio.com
The Stabat Mater's imagines the sufferings of the Virgin Mary at the foot of the cross, and Pergolesi's eighteen-century setting remains a choral favourite. Pam Self tells the moving story of how this piece unites her and her friend Helen Vaughan, both during life and after. Soprano Catherine Bott reflects on the piece's themes. The Stabat Mater has been reinterpreted many times over the years: Sasha Lazard recalls singing it in the school choir, before later taking the melody and transforming it into a dance version for her album 'The Myth of Red' rechristening it 'Stabat Mater IXXI' in the wake of the September 11th attacks. Victor Alcantara also sang it as a boy, before returning to the piece as an adult and transforming it into a jazz opus. Composer and Conductor Paul Spicer examines the musical tensions in the piece, likening its opening to "a heartbeat." Professor Anthony DelDonna recalls a performance of the Stabat Mater in his hometown of Naples, and reflects on the moment which reaffirmed his his faith. Producer: Toby Field Researcher: Nicola Humphries.
This week, an interview with Globe and Mail columnist Doug Saunders on his latest book 'The Myth of the Muslim Tide', which challenges the notion that Western values are being threatened by a wave of Muslim immigration.