Podcasts about analogical

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Best podcasts about analogical

Latest podcast episodes about analogical

Campus Grenoble
Trafic 908 [19.3.24}

Campus Grenoble

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2024


  iNdéLicAt mOMenT acComPagNé dE :☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻Art Of Noise, Vague Imaginaires, Mike Parker, Traxx, Mr. B.K. Speed, Papa Tullo, Germain Gauthier, Off Love, Analogical, Alex Cortex, JR Dan, Cyklon B, Aquastep,☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻☻

Biblioscapes In Discussion
Nicola Cappellari

Biblioscapes In Discussion

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 29, 2024 36:32


In this episode of Biblioscapes in Discussion, I am joined by Nicola Cappellari to talk about his work and his book Analogical limbo.

analogical
The Future of the Transformer Part 2 with Trey Kollmer

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2023 64:48


Trey Kollmer returns to discuss the latest AI research revelations with Nathan Labenz. They explore how new techniques will shave 10% off global compute needs, how analogical prompting beats few-shot prompting, and how compressive historical records can increase LLM memory and retention abilities. If you need an ERP platform, check out our sponsor NetSuite: http://netsuite.com/cognitive. SPONSORS: NetSuite | Omneky NetSuite has 25 years of providing financial software for all your business needs. More than 36,000 businesses have already upgraded to NetSuite by Oracle, gaining visibility and control over their financials, inventory, HR, eCommerce, and more. If you're looking for an ERP platform ✅ head to NetSuite: http://netsuite.com/cognitive and download your own customized KPI checklist. Omneky is an omnichannel creative generation platform that lets you launch hundreds of thousands of ad iterations that actually work customized across all platforms, with a click of a button. Omneky combines generative AI and real-time advertising data. Mention "Cog Rev" for 10% off. RECOMMENDED PODCAST:  Every week investor and writer of the popular newsletter The Diff, Byrne Hobart, and co-host Erik Torenberg discuss today's major inflection points in technology, business, and markets – and help listeners build a diversified portfolio of trends and ideas for the future. Subscribe to “The Riff” with Byrne Hobart and Erik Torenberg: https://link.chtbl.com/theriff TIMESTAMPS: (00:00:00) - Episode Preview (00:01:11) - Paper: Think Before You Speak (00:03:13) - Multimodal models for combining vision and language (00:04:19) - Backspace Paper (00:06:25) - Chain of thought prompting for step-by-step reasoning (00:09:14) - Backspacing in language models to correct mistakes (00:12:05) - Attention sinks for expanding context length (0012:41) - Paper: Large Language Models as Analogical Reasoners (00:15:24) - Pause tokens for language models to "think" (00:18:23) - Analogical prompting to recall relevant examples (00:20:52) - Long context windows for language models (00:23:20) - Markdown works best for OpenAI (00:24:23) - Ring attention to break memory constraints (00:26:15) - Paper: StreamingLLMs (00:27:46) - Potential for superhuman performance with longer contexts (00:31:01) - Dynamic context window adjustment at runtime (00:33:53) - Retention and memory capabilities for transformers (00:37:12) - Planning algorithms combined with memory and scale (00:39:49) - Paper: Ring Attention (00:42:35) - Executive assistant prompting and critique (00:45:23) - Self-RAG for language models to find own examples (00:48:02) - Timelines and predictions for future capabilities (00:50:37) - Applications like analyzing long texts and scripts (00:53:15) - Local versus global attention in transformers (00:55:59) - Architectural changes versus just training adjustments (00:58:41) - Pre-training strategies like random start points

The Storytellers Podcast
20 | No Love in the Hood ft.  Analogical Da Poet </a#x3E;​

The Storytellers Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2023


​ @analogicaldapoet stops by to talk about Protecting Ya Neck, and new updates on the upcoming album. "No Love in the Hood" available AUGUST 11th! https://solo.to/analogicaldapoet ► Follow our 2nd YouTube Channel | https://bit.ly/33j1bFw ► Support us on Patreon | https://bit.ly/3qizUeU ***If you or someone you know is dealing with Depression, call 800-273-8255. They have operators 24/7 and get you the help you need. There is no shame in asking for help.*** *TRIGGER WARNING* The Storytellers Podcast is a show dedicated to storytelling in a twisted way. Trell, Cairo, Isaac, and Ri'Yadh come together to talk about current events, sports, music, movies, beliefs, politics, and more, all while having fun and making insensitive jokes. THIS SHOW NOT FOR THE EASILY OFFENDED. No punches are held on this show. Sometimes we talk health, faith, and relationships. Other times we're talking about yo momma and Trash Carolina. We hope you enjoy the show, but we warned you. *Come holla at us:* ►Insta | https://www.instagram.com/storyteller... ►Tiktok | https://bit.ly/3K4fUVm ►Spotify | https://spoti.fi/3fjdljY ►Apple Podcasts | https://apple.co/3rukTX5 ►Google Podcasts | https://bit.ly/3zYUFzK ►Facebook | https://www.facebook.com/TheStorytell... ★Isaac's Youtube Channel | https://bit.ly/3Frxqzu ★Cairo's Twitter | https://twitter.com/Supreme_Cairo ★The Movie Underground | https://bit.ly/3FrwZFm #AnalogicalDaPoet #wutang #statenisland #noloveinthehood #boxing #fight #TrendingNow #TheStorytellers #Charlotte #Dababy #Charlotte #CharlotteRappers #cairo #trell #itsmetrell #isaac #riyadh #thestorytellerspodcast #themovieunderground

Apparently invisible. Chemistry in ceramics.
Dry grit application by means of analogical systems

Apparently invisible. Chemistry in ceramics.

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2023 12:06


In ceramic production, grit applications are mainly "wet applications" made by means of airless spraying systems.A kind of application that involves a huge amount of water within which the grit is suspended. Nevertheless, in recent time a different application method is spreading.We could define it as a dry method that, however, has nothing to do with digital systems (that involve, instead, the use of digital glues together with a dry application of grit).Without forcing the words, in this case we could talk about "analogue dry application of grits".How does this application work and what sort of features must the grit have to properly develop the process and to produce high-performing ceramic tiles?

Cincy Reformed Podcast
Creation and Evolution: A Conversation on the URC Creation Report

Cincy Reformed Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2022 24:55


Did God created everything in six literal days, or was each "day" representative of a longer duration? Did creation occur in the order in which Genesis chapter one describes? Did God use macro-evolution in order to create all things? In this episode, Pastors Brandon and Zac discuss the URC Statement on Creation and Evolution.  For more information, see:  URCNA Statement on Creation and Evolution  Revisiting the URC Creation Decision by R. Scott Clark  Report of the Committee to Study the Views of Creation by OPC Jesus on Every Page (chapter 7) by David Murray  Adam in the New Testament by J.P. Versteeg  For a discussion of various views, see:  The Genesis Debate: Three Views in the Days of Creation ed. by David Hagopian  Presuppositionalism and Young Earth (debate) by Richard Howe, Jason Lisle, and K. Scott Oliphint  For understanding the Six-24hr/Young Earth Creation view, see:  The Battle for the Beginning by John MacArthur  Why Does the Universe Look So Old? by Albert Mohler  Coming to Grips with Genesis by Terry Mortenson  Creation According to the Scriptures: A Presuppositional Defense of Literal, Six-Day Creation ed. by P. Andrew Sandlin For understanding the Analogical day view, see:  Redeeming Science by Vern Poythress  For understanding the Framework view, see:  Because It Had Not Rained by Meredith G. Kline  Space and Time in the Genesis Cosmogony by Meredith G. Kline  The Framework Interpretation: An Exegetical Summary by Lee Irons  For understanding the Modified Gap View (sometimes called "Historic Creationism"), see:  What Should We Teach About Creation? by John Piper  The Explicit Gospel (chapter 5) by Matt Chandler 

Cincy Reformed Podcast
Creation and Evolution: A Conversation on the URC Creation Report (Audio only)

Cincy Reformed Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2022 24:55


Did God created everything in six literal days, or was each "day" representative of a longer duration? Did creation occur in the order in which Genesis chapter one describes? Did God use macro-evolution in order to create all things? In this episode, Pastors Brandon and Zac discuss the URC Statement on Creation and Evolution.  For more information, see:  URCNA Statement on Creation and Evolution  Revisiting the URC Creation Decision by R. Scott Clark  Jesus on Every Page (chapter 7) by David Murray  Adam in the New Testament by J.P. Versteeg  For a discussion of various views, see:  The Genesis Debate: Three Views in the Days of Creation ed. by David Hagopian  Presuppositionalism and Young Earth (debate) by Richard Howe, Jason Lisle, and K. Scott Oliphint  For understanding the Six-24hr/Young Earth Creation view, see:  The Battle for the Beginning by John MacArthur  Why Does the Universe Look So Old? by Albert Mohler  Coming to Grips with Genesis by Terry Mortenson  Creation According to the Scriptures: A Presuppositional Defense of Literal, Six-Day Creation ed. by P. Andrew Sandlin For understanding the Analogical day view, see:  Redeeming Science by Vern Poythress  For understanding the Framework view, see:  Because It Had Not Rained by Meredith G. Kline  Space and Time in the Genesis Cosmogony by Meredith G. Kline  The Framework Interpretation: An Exegetical Summary by Lee Irons  For understanding the Modified Gap View (sometimes called "Historic Creationism"), see:  What Should We Teach About Creation? by John Piper  The Explicit Gospel (chapter 5) by Matt Chandler       

Conceptually Speaking
Matt Slocombe Talks Analogical Reasoning, Conceptual Change, and Transfer

Conceptually Speaking

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2022 53:40


 According to cognitive linguist and philosopher George Lakoff, “The essence of metaphor is understanding and experiencing one kind of thing in terms of another.” And that is what today's episode is all about. On this week's episode, I'm joined by Matthew Slocombe, a secondary school teacher specializing in educational design and technology and a doctoral student and researcher at the Center for Educational Neuroscience. Matt's research interests relate to the development of children's reasoning and the role of conceptual change and transfer in analogical reasoning. Matt and I connected during the early days of COVID while I was working on Learning that Transfers with Julie, Krista, and Kayla and he put us on to some fantastic research into the role of analogical reasoning in conceptual change and learning transfer. And, much to my joy, he helped us realize analogies are so much more than fanciful things used by poets: they are the essence of how we make meaning. So, get ready to accommodate and assimilate some new knowledge into your pre-existing schema and let's begin. Center for Educational NeuroscienceAnalogical Minds YouTube Channel

New Covenant OPC Sermon Podcast
Creation (Part 4): Old Earth Theories: Analogical day, framework, temple (Rev. Michael Grasso)

New Covenant OPC Sermon Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2022 48:33


Pastor Grasso gives an overview of the analogical day, framework hypothesis, and functional-ontological temple views of creation, showing their inadequacy.

Crazy Wisdom
Why is Modernity Difficult on Spiritual Deviants? w/ Neal Davis

Crazy Wisdom

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2022 65:31


  Director of developer experience at the Urbit Foundation ~lagrev-nocfep on Urbit @sigilante on twitter   What is a sigil? What is the most important thing you've learned about teaching? Driven by authoritarian high modernism Top down imposition Structural way of understanding context Industrial revolution Ten years ago there was online education MIT open course where Open up the content to everyone and it will create revolution Introducing a model that the person gets illuminated from Humans are good at metaphors Give them a framework and people will figure it out These things are measurable Open problem in computer science Two classes of complexity Polynomial time Vastly exponentially complicated than things that can be solved in a certain time NP on the hard problems Has to do with the structure of our attention 9 years experience Philosophy of pedagogy Why doesn't it make it easy to open up knowledge? How do you make something relevant? Strongly in favor of hyper individualist approach to teaching Interdisciplinary Try everything, some things stick Analogical reasoning How do you improvise for metaphors? Why is it so disincentivized to do improv? Input output model doesn't quite work because the context is so vast The model of the areas of learning is helpful but not 100% accurate Tutorial method does not scale but its the most effective Really hard problem P=NP what is it? When I'm working on a particular mode, gumption traps, energy sinks, takes a lot of agency to activate yourself out of the state Rumsfeld called the unknown unknowns What questions do you have? Is a better question than What are your questions? What do you do when you need to solve a problem? Someone tried to build a solution for what Neal is talking about at 10 minutes in Go to the fringes to get the edge cases What is the advantage of a low status source? How do you make your questions and answers legible? Subtopics and how to use them? What is the demand for previous for previous programmers learning Urbit? What is the percentage of programmers who are learning Urbit? What was the first iteration of home school? Dozen people finished Now they have 60 people finishing Why does Urbit have a weird perception from people? Once you hear about it you go into the rabbit hole and it never stops Its a web within a web Its like a secret door in a house didn't you know about it Pitch the idea of the treasure hunt powered by Urbit Why did stars survive in demand? How much did they survive? How much does it cost to buy a star now versus the 2022 downturn in crypto How do you get the right answer as opposed to the fast answer? Only developers who are autodidactic like and stay with Urbit Who is Richard Stallman? LISP He built community around GANU, Linux? Invented the free software  What is functional programming? What is the relationship between mental divergence and programming? What is the third type of developers in relation to something like Urbit? The arguers What is the fourth type of developers in relation to something like Urbit? Rebellious and devious enough  What is the relationship between Bitcoin and Urbit? What are the main challenges you see in terms of my crazy idea for the treasure hunt? What are the options to build this quickly? This is the main problem Is it a web page driven experience? Build an urbit app and get them to install it You would have to figure out how to do the call outs to the phone device Hot or cold game Only track wether they found it or not How can we effectively expose underlying things to the urbit server? 24 minutes in Should we think about Urbit as a operating system? Who is experimenting with Urbit moons as internet of things? Urbit app that plays a tone with your wifi strength How can I think about building the prototype in the real web, so that I can destroy it and rebuild with urbit? Urbit is the database and the identity Riding back whatever you need as permanent state  July and August there will be an urbit hackathon Online What are the dates? Hooner, front end dev, and domain expert What is a team? Where is it? Assembly conference in Miami at the end of September Why do people care about Urbit? Stewart Christoff What do you think of the complex about trying to create things that you dont want to get paid for? What is Immun Async paid money What are your thoughts on ADA (Cardano)? Does Urbit.org do the micropayments? bounties, apprecintinceships and proposals Get stars Why did stars go up when the rest of the crypto market went down? How can I as someone non technical help with the development on Urbit? Noah Kumin At marsreview on twitter (didn't work, find it again) Launch party in NYC Ongoing bounties Mars review of books, launched with the combine, an urbit foundation Who at the mars review of books? Who is Jonathan Blow? Who are the original founders of the web and why didn't they get paid? What should we know about institutional capture? Why do you disagree with me about the inevitably of institutional capture? People who look at the project and see the knock kernel cooling More chaotic to less chaotic Perceive a teleoligical purpose We are going to win because we  Its a happy accident If we don't kick in and make it happen What did Aristotle say about the Good? You have to drop everything What are your thoughts about the open future? What is the macrocosmic conceptual of the rant stewart went on at 45 minutes in? Hellbaked You can never have high value? This selects very hard for survival No balance Everything that has value has been built in hell Why do things suck? Essay by Nick Land The assertion that everything with value is built in Hell How do you cull low value? Why does evil exist? What is the hard darwinian view? How to you square the harmonious idea of aesthetically and ethicall appealing to us versus the violent nature? Part of the answer is that there are always components of existence Manifest physical reality, creation What is a world soul? This means that the only way for intelligence or spirits to enter into higher states is by facing full oppositional world Its not going to get easier, its always going to be a struggle, its a whitepill, build something that survives How do you build exit based on natural principles? If you see a ferret, you know that a rabbit exists If you see a flower, you know there is something like a sun How do you steer human moths away from the web 2.0 world and attract them to a new way of reclaiming attention? The revolution will not be AB tested Why is modernity difficult on spiritual deviants? Why was it ok to be Wierder in the 90s? This explains gen X Is the employer and employee relationship something we should perpetuate into the open future? How do DAOS fit into this? When was the joint stock firm invested? When was the Bar invented?

Overmorrow’s Library
S2E8 – Lucia Pietroiusti on analogical thinking

Overmorrow’s Library

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2022 43:40


Image credits: Geometric nest of a pufferfish.

The Storytellers Podcast
12 | Enter The Logic Room w/ Analogical Da Poet | The Storytellers Podcast

The Storytellers Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2022


Analogical Da Poet is an up and coming rapper in the local Charlotte area. From Park Hill, Staten Island (home of the Wu-Tang Clan) he joins us to talk to about stepping out of the Emotional room and into the Logical room to deal with the ups and downs of life.► Analogical Da Poet's Socials | https://solo.to/analogicaldapoet ► Insta | https://www.instagram.com/analogicaldapoet/► Youtube | https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwUIydCMPfrqmcp9Yq4bjoA►Support us on Patreon | https://bit.ly/3qizUeU►Follow our 2nd YouTube Channel | https://bit.ly/33j1bFwShow Notes: ► Bar Lord Guardian Of Analogies (Official Video) | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F4JkdNksq6Y ► Enter The Introvert (Official Video) | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YXmJkYU9lIw ► Pusha T's McDiss | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cn0LjF4_5r4&t=3s ► Mandela Effect Quiz | https://quizly.co/can-you-pass-this-mandela-effect-memory-quiz/Follow Us @►Insta | https://www.instagram.com/storyteller... ►Tiktok | https://bit.ly/3K4fUVm ►Spotify | https://spoti.fi/3fjdljY ►Apple Podcasts | https://apple.co/3rukTX5 ►Google Podcasts | https://bit.ly/3zYUFzK ►Facebook | https://www.facebook.com/TheStorytell... ★Isaac's Youtube Channel | https://bit.ly/3Frxqzu ★Cairo's Twitter | https://twitter.com/Supreme_Cairo ★The Movie Underground | https://bit.ly/3FrwZFm

ThePrint
ThePrintPod: Why the Karnataka High Court's analogical reasoning on hijab is poor

ThePrint

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2022 5:24


Some rather strange situations were considered relevant in trying to understand the boundaries of constitutional liberty in the hijab case. ----more---- https://theprint.in/opinion/why-the-karnataka-high-courts-analogical-reasoning-on-hijab-is-poor/876877/

ThePrint
ThePrintPod: Why the Karnataka High Court's analogical reasoning on hijab is poor

ThePrint

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2022 5:24


Some rather strange situations were considered relevant in trying to understand the boundaries of constitutional liberty in the hijab case. ----more---- https://theprint.in/opinion/why-the-karnataka-high-courts-analogical-reasoning-on-hijab-is-poor/876877/

Tro & Förnuft
Avsnitt 51: Mellansnack om David Tracys "The Catholic Analogical Imagination"

Tro & Förnuft

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2022 55:58


Enligt den amerikanske katolske teologen David Tracy (född 1939) kan man analysera olika teologiska ramverk som uttryck för olika typer av "horisonter", "paradigm", "tankesätt" eller "imaginations". Tracy kontrasterar främst "analoga" respektive "dialektiska" tankesätt (Tracy använder främst ordet "imagination" vilket inte har någon bra översättning på svenska.) Kristen tro får olika karaktär beroende på i vilket paradigm den gestaltas. Analoga och dialektiska paradigm är "idealtyper". Men på ett generellt plan är det analoga mer typiskt, menar Tracy, för katolska traditioner och det dialektiska mer typiskt för protestantiska traditioner. Den grundläggande skillnaden mellan dessa paradigm är hur man tänker på - inte vad som existerar, utan hur det som existerar relaterar till varandra. I det analoga sättet att tänka är dessa relationer av typen del-helhet: det finns en affinitet, en resonans mellan exempelvis tro och förnuft, Gud och världen. Detta uttrycks i det medeltida mottot att "Nåden bygger på naturen och fullkomnar den, men förstör den inte". Dessutom är skapelsen sakramental, en mötesplats med Guds nåd. "God lurks everywhere" som sociologen Andrew Greeley uttrycker det. I den dialektiska föreställningsvärlden är Gud ganska frånvarande från skapelsen och egentligen bara närvarande i sina handlingar av specifik uppenbarelse. Relationerna här präglas snarare av kontrast och ett antingen/eller-förhållande. Gud eller världen, tro eller förnuft. Ibland kan detta utvecklas till en dikotomi, en motsatsrelation.  Filosofihistorikern Peter Adamson menar till exempel att första gången han upptäcker synsättet att tron och förnuftet konkurrerar med, och inte kompletterar, varandra är när han läser Jean Calvin (1509-1564).  Det dialektiska sättet att tänka tycks resultera i antingen dualism eller monism - på ett sätt som motsvarar de två andra sätten som man har förstått religiöst språk, vid sidan om det analoga sättet: via negativa - orden om Gud har helt annan innebörd än orden om ting i skapelsen, respektive via positiva - orden om Gud har exakt samma innebörd som orden om ting i skapelsen.  Det dialektiska sättet att tänka tycks pendla mellan dualism och monism, eftersom det bygger på tanken att något antingen är a eller b. (Att kontrastera mot möjligheten att a är på väg mot och realiserat delar av b.) Denna pendling mellan dualism och monism kan möjligen illustreras av hur den protestantiska tanken om att vi inte kan veta något alls om Gud oberoende av uppenbarelsen (dualism mellan tro och förnuft) övergår i den liberalteologiska tanken att uppenbarelsen inte tillför något alls till vår kunskap om Gud (monism mellan tro och förnuft). Eller för den delen den starka betoningen av världens fallenhet (dualism mellan världen och Guds rike) som övergår i en idé om att det inte finns någon skillnad alls mellan mänsklig hygglighet och Guds rike. Länkar till saker vi pratar om i programmet: Katolska universitetet i Lviv som Newmaninstitutet samarbetar med. En av deras lärare har en serie sammanfattningar på Youtube av hur det militära läget i Ukraina utvecklar sig.  Alexander Dugin, en fascistisk filosof som utövat inflytande på det ryska geopolitiska tänkandet. Hans bok The Foundations of Geopolitics har använts inom den ryska militärutbildningen.  Wikipediaartikel om "Catholic imagination".

Workplace Hugs
Episode 103 – Workplace Hugs - Episode 103: Range

Workplace Hugs

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2021 40:33


Episode Notes Is it better to have range or to be specialized? As the title of this episode alludes, it is better to have range and Shannon and Rami look at all the different ways to make a case for range in your work and life. They also break down Analogical reasoning, Lateral Thinking and if the Tiger path is the best option.

Redeemer PCA of Overland Park
Sermon: God's Climactic Creation

Redeemer PCA of Overland Park

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2021 44:36


“God's Climactic Creation” Genesis 1:3-27 August 22, 2021 Pastor Tony Felich   ----more---- Genesis 1:26 Then God said, “Let us make man in our image, after our likeness. And let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over the livestock and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.” [27] So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them. [28] And God blessed them. And God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it, and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over every living thing that moves on the earth.” [29] And God said, “Behold, I have given you every plant yielding seed that is on the face of all the earth, and every tree with seed in its fruit. You shall have them for food. [30] And to every beast of the earth and to every bird of the heavens and to everything that creeps on the earth, everything that has the breath of life, I have given every green plant for food.” And it was so. [31] And God saw everything that he had made, and behold, it was very good. And there was evening and there was morning, the sixth day.     God means to be known as the Creator of all things. Mankind is uniquely created in His image meant and to have a special place over the rest of creation. God's process of creation (3-25) Days of Forming Days of Filling 1. Light & Dark 4. Sun, Moon, & Stars 2. Sea & Sky 5. Fish & Birds 3. Land & Plants 6. Land animals & Humans   God's climax of creation (26-31)       How might we understand the “days” of creation?                               Calendar-days view                               Day-age view                               Framework interpretation                               Analogical days View      What are the key points from Genesis 1 so far?

Godward: A Lit-Wisdom Podcast
Episode 54: Lyricism & Analogical Thinking

Godward: A Lit-Wisdom Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2021 43:49


In this experimental video, just get into the trance, learn to think like an iris flower, see some inverted video and hear more from Aarvoll & Dogen & Dionysus. There's also a bunch of paintings and pictures of early Spring. And what's with Moses covering his face?

Albany Baptist Church
Genesis: The Day-Age View and Analogical Days View

Albany Baptist Church

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2021 67:00


analogical
Philosophy Exchange Podcast
PX - Analogies and Analogical Reasoning

Philosophy Exchange Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2021 29:55


What is the nature of analogy and the role of analogical reasoning in philosophy and science? What makes an analogy reliable or justified? Why do philosophers and scientists employ analogical reasoning in their investigations? After introducing general intuitions on the concept of analogy, Johanna, Jorge and Lorenzo try to provide an answer to these questions by presenting several examples of analogies and analyzing their epistemic features.

University Study is Easy: Study Hints & Hacks to TRANSFORM your studies!
Analogical reasoning - an innovative approach to adding value

University Study is Easy: Study Hints & Hacks to TRANSFORM your studies!

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2020 12:13


A rumination on how we can unlock competitive advantage from tapping into analogies and using them well!

Albany Baptist Church
The Day-Age and Analogical Days Views

Albany Baptist Church

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2020 62:00


1. The day-age view- the -days- of Genesis one and two are long periods of time of indefinite length, Genesis one represents six long periods of tine in correct sequence, since the sun was created on the fourth day, the first three days could not have been normal solar days.--2. The analogical view- The days in Genesis one are not human days but God's days, in Exodus 20- 8-11 the patter of God's work and rest is analogical, the developments in Genesis one represent ordinary providence at work, Genesis one is -exalted prose-, so it should not be taken literally, the days of Genesis one represent six chronological successive periods of undefined length. --3. A refutation of the day-age analogical views- The proponents of these views are driven by a desire to show how Genesis one doesn't contradict valid scientific methods, the ordinary biblical use of the word -day- refers to 24 hour solar days, Exceptions are plain from context, the order of days in Genesis one does not fit the evolutionary hypothesis, these theories assume that death was natural before the fall, and that death is -good-, these theories undermine the biblical doctrine of man, the rational given for the fourth commandment contradicts these theories, the New Testament assumes the historical and chronological veracity of Genesis 1-2, the analogical day view undermines the perspicuity -clarity- of Scripture.

恩约教会主日讲道
比利时信条简释02:独一上帝(第1条)

恩约教会主日讲道

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2020 50:08


第一条 独一上帝 创造主-受造物之间的区别; Archetypal-Ectypal 原本与复本的区别; Univocal, Equivocal, Analogical 单义、歧义、类比; 上帝的属性:不可传递的属性;可传递属性 simplicity 单纯性;aseity 自存性; divine sovereignty and human freedom 上帝的主权与人的自由

analogical equivocal
Aquinas 101 - Course 2: Introduction to Thomistic Philosophy
Episode 21 – Analogical Naming of God in Aquinas | Fr. Thomas Joseph White, O.P.

Aquinas 101 - Course 2: Introduction to Thomistic Philosophy

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2019 58:39


Course Listening for Lesson 21 - "Analogy"

Da Mid East
Ep. 8 Analogical Thinkers

Da Mid East

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2019 82:08


On today’s episode of Da Mid East podcast, the gang talks Future and the greatness that is “Save Me”, the ever growing question of “what is rap today?”, Rick Ross’ run in rap, problems with “POM2” stalled rollout, the return of the Boondocks, Reminiscing over old Gucci, new Gucci vs new Wayne, Accountability and messing with your man’s girl. Tune in.

Preaching Points
Analogical stories open minds and hearts

Preaching Points

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2019 5:31


Stories which serve as comparisons open hearts and minds.

Preaching Points
Analogical stories open minds and hearts

Preaching Points

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2019 5:31


Stories which serve as comparisons open hearts and minds.

Sunday Letters
EP183 Analogical Thinking: A Method For Solving Problems

Sunday Letters

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2019 32:52


Read the article here Support the show here The ability to solve problems is an essential skill for our survival and growth in the fast-paced, moment to moment shifting of modern society. No matter what the domain of expertise or work, challenges present themselves at an ever-increasing rate. And so it should be, for what is a life worth living if we never have problems to solve? We must accept that challenges are inherent in life, and so we must use our imagination and ingenuity to find solutions. Creativity and high performance require it. Although solving problems is never as simple as following a linear process, using lateral thinking processes for generating solutions is a skill we can cultivate, and in this week's article, I'm taking a look at a couple of examples of analogical thinking in practice. However, take into account that often switching off entirely from the problem can be the best route to the solution you need. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sunday-letters/message

bamboo & glass
12. 3 Articles: Procrastination, Analogical Thinking, and Emotional Labor

bamboo & glass

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2019 30:48


Anyone who knows Sophia knows she LOVES a good article, and in this episode, we once again use Motif to share and discuss 3 of her favorites: "The Procrastination Doom Loop," "This Is How Elon Musk Can Learn and Master Anything Quickly," and "50 Ways People Expect Constant Emotional Labor from Women and Femmes."Tune in to hear our discussion about:How growing up with asian parents influenced our ideas about discipline, procrastination, and motivationExamining the emotions involved in procrastinationHow analogical thinking enriches our creative pursuits and makes us more courageous in pursuing our career goalsEmotional labor we've never explicitly thanked our friends, coworkers, and romantic partners for Click here to scroll through the articles and listen to our discussion:https://app.usermotif.com/showroom/watch?v=S1gKBhbg94Articles: https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2014/08/the-procrastination-loop-and-how-to-break-it/379142   https://curiosity.com/topics/this-is-how-elon-musk-can-learn-and-master-anything-quickly-curiosity/   https://thebodyisnotanapology.com/magazine/50-ways-people-expect-constant-emotional-labor-from-women-and-femmes/Support the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/bambooandglass)

Beats per minut
Analogical Force ho peta

Beats per minut

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2019 61:22


MCMP – Philosophy of Science
An Analogical Inductive Logic for Partially Exchangeable Families of Attributes

MCMP – Philosophy of Science

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2019 74:15


Simon Huttegger (UC Irvine) gives a talk at the MCMP Colloquium (22 May, 2014) titled "An Analogical Inductive Logic for Partially Exchangeable Families of Attributes". Abstract: Since Carnap started his epic program of developing an inductive logic, there have been various attempts to include analogical reasoning into systems of inductive logic. I will present a new system based on de Finetti's concept of partial exchangeability. Together with a set of plausible axioms, partial exchangeability allows one to derive a family of inductive learning rules with enumerative analogical effects.

The Thomistic Institute
Aquinas on the Person and the Analogical Scale of Truth | Enrique Martinez

The Thomistic Institute

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2019 57:56


This lecture was given as the annual lecture in honor of St. Thomas Aquinas at the Dominican House of Studies in Washington, DC on January 24th 2019. For more information on upcoming events visit: https://thomisticinstitute.org/events?view=calendar&month=01-2019

le Catalyste radio show
Standalone Series: ScanOne (Uk- Analogical Force)- broken-electronic

le Catalyste radio show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2018 53:31


This week, Le Catalyste is super happy to receive Jude Greenaway aka “Scanone”, a London-based producer, DJ and AV artist who has been making, playing and releasing music for over 2 decades. In that time he has managed to develop a sound that skirts around the lunatic fringes of a myriad of underground genres, from bass-heavy electro and techno to glitched-up IDM and techy, brooding electronics. This mix is also the occasion to start a collaboration with the Montréal based Webzine "Mes Enceintes Font défaut", which is always looking deeper into sound, and show great taste about ambiant/IDM/experimental electronic music! https://www.mesenceintesfontdefaut.com/ https://bit.ly/2rHONsc

Made You Think
49: The Power of Serendipity. Happy Accidents by Morton A Meyers

Made You Think

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2018 119:35


“Discovery requires serendipity but serendipity is not a chance event alone. It is a process in which a chance of event is seized upon by a creative person who chooses to pay attention to the event, unravel its mystery and find a proper application for it.” In this episode of Made You Think, Neil and Nat discuss Happy Accidents by Morton A Meyers. In this book we look at the serendipity of so many scientific discoveries and the author suggests how we can foster these chance happenings to make giant leaps in research and discovery. “Penetrating intelligence, keen perception, and sound judgment — is essential to serendipity. The men and women who seized on lucky accidents that happened to them were anything but mindless. In fact, their minds typically had special qualities that enabled them to break out of established paradigms.” We cover a wide range of topics, including: Penicillin, Petri Dishes and Moldy Mary The impact of freedom on research Tangents on Private Schools, Social Media & Conspiracy Theories Modern Diets, Drugs and Toxins turned into cures Self experimentation, Ostracism and changing Medical opinions A possible special kayaking retreat for supporters And much more. Please enjoy, and be sure to grab a copy of Happy Accidents by Morton A Meyers! You can also listen on Google Play Music, SoundCloud, YouTube, or in any other podcasting app by searching “Made You Think.” If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to check out our episodes on Skin in the Game by Nassim Taleb where he shares other stories of scientists trying treatments firsthand, and Merchants of Doubt by Naomi Oreskes and Erik Cornway for more on controversial science, academia and Pharma companies. Be sure to join our mailing list to find out about what books are coming up, giveaways we're running, special events, and more. Links from the Episode Mentioned in the show Bottom Up Methodology [01:31] Scientific Method [1:48] Penicillin [05:27] LSD Discovery [05:48] Contact High [06:01] Dogmatic [06:19] Petri dishes [08:01] Lifehacker [08:47] The Structure of Scientific Revolutions by Thomas S. Kuhn [9:31] Narrative Fallacy [16:17] Fleming Nobel Prize Speech [17:38] Peoria, Illinois [26:03] Corn Steep Liquor [26:09] Merck [26:48] Squibb [26:48] Pfizer [26:48] World War I [27:42] Aquatic Apes [29:04] Sippy Diet [30:27] Tetracycline Antibiotic [31:47] Acid Inhibitors [34:14] Statins [34:36] Carbohydrates [36:16] LDL [36:20] LDL receptors [36:33] Viagra [38:26] Asbestos [39:46] Facebook Groups [42:14] Discord Groups [42:15] Carnivore Diet [42:49] Shake Shack [44:04] M&M’s [44:07] Purina Dog Food [46:08] Stats of College Debt – Tweet [46:32] CMU [52:40] Choate School [53:45] Sidwell Friends [54:23] Boarding Schools [54:34] Alkylating Agents [57:15] Geneva Convention [58:08] Patreon [01:02:08] Google Trends on episode 35 [1:02:00] Epidemics [01:02:27] SARS [01:02:54] Influenza [01:02:56] Syphilis [01:03:22] Fish Aquarium Antibiotics [01:04:53] FDA [01:07:51] Nazi Testing [01:08:04] Japanese testing on Chinese prisoners [01:08:08] Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male [01:08:19] Eugenics [01:10:18] Darwinism [01:10:31] (related podcast) Russian Gulag [01:11:38] Thalidomide [01:11:52] Diethyl Glycol [01:12:59] Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act [01:13:10] Accutane [01:15:06] Doxycycline [01:16:26] Microbiome [01:16:52] Eczema [01:17:43] Steroids [01:17:36] Spartan Race [01:20:09] Nat’s Instagram [01:20:15] Blockchain [01:21:06] X-Rays [01:22:29] Morphine [01:23:51] American Urological Association [01:24:48] CVS patient statistics for Viagra [01:29:42] Netflix [01:31:18] Spleen [01:32:47] Confirmation bias [01:34:43] Ego death [01:39:38] Dissociative experience [01:39:40] Magic mushrooms [01:40:02] LSD Therapeutic Research Study [01:41:03] NASA [01:46:22] Direct to Consumer Drug Advertising [01:46:29] ADD [01:47:41] Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder [01:47:58] Prozac / Seraphim [01:48:09] Paxil [01:48:18] Female Sexual Dysfunction [01:48:24] Lipitor [01:48:57] Zoloft [01:49:16] UBI [01:53:07] Ethereum [01:59:48] Books mentioned Happy Accidents by Morton A Meyers Beginning of Infinity by David Deutsch [00:42] (book episode) The War on Normal People by Andrew Yang [00:51] (book episode) Antifragile by Nassim Taleb [07:02] (Nat’s notes) (book episode) The Structure of Scientific Revolutions by Thomas S. Kuhn [9:31] Boron Letters by Gary C. Halbert [14:44] Skin in the Game by Nassim Taleb [30:00] (Nat’s notes) (book episode) Merchants of Doubt by Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway [01:02:02]] (Nat’s notes) (book episode) Merchants of Doubt by Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway [01:02:02] (Nat’s notes) (book episode) Homo Deus by Yuval Harari [01:02:36] (Nat’s notes) (book episode) Words that Work by Frank Luntz [01:28:24] LSD My Problem Child by Albert Hofmann [01:40:51] Brave New World by Aldous Huxley [01:48:46] People mentioned Morton A Meyers David Deutsch [00:42] (Beginning of Infinity episode) Andrew Yang [00:51] (The War on Normal People episode) Winston Churchill [05:04] Alexander Fleming [05:29] Nassim Taleb [07:02] (Antifragile episode) (Skin in the Game episode) Thomas Kuhn [09:21] Peter Thiel [10:12] Gary C. Halbert [14:44] Charles Darwin [18:39] (Daniel Dennett’s book) Ernst B Chain [22:31] Moldy Mary [25:56] Barry Marshall [31:07] Robert Koch [32:10] Bill Clinton [01:00:32] George W Bush [01:01:18] Erik M. Conway [01:02:02] Yuval Harari [01:02:45] (Homo Deus episode) (Sapiens part I and part II) FDR [01:13:08] Claude Bernard [01:22:24] Frank Luntz [01:28:24] John William Gofman [1:31:35] President Eisenhower [01:34:48] Timothy Leary [01:40:28] Albert Hofmann [01:40:51] Steve Jobs [01:41:00] Louis Pasteur [01:45:32] Aldous Huxley [01:48:46] Show Topics 00:26 – The book is fun to read, light, enjoyable, easy going. An exploration of scientific discovery and progress and how consistently it is influenced and driven by the role of Serendipity. A case opposite or complementary to the Scientific Method. Serendipity defined as a combination of accidents and sagacity. 05:05 – Not all discoveries are immediately realized or understood. Winston Churchill – “Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing had happened”. Penicillin and LSD examples. The dangers of being dogmatic without leaving room for the unexpected. 06:53 – Central theme of the book–How do you foster that serendipitous mindset? Nassim Taleb says that serendipity comes from chance encounters, like a cocktail party. The potential gain from a chance encounter is worth the effort of stepping outside your comfort zone. 07:42 – Trying to harness serendipity for your own benefit. Serendipity through disorder and randomness. Investigating how scientists can foster serendipity in their lab work and how academia and education and research grants, peer review could change because of that. 09:41 – Normal vs revolutionary science, Meyers is dismissive of puzzle solving. Normal science is making incremental improvements on existing knowledge, whereas serendipity fosters revolutionary discoveries as they come from a change in the ordinary methods. 10:51 – Two stages to serendipity. You need something unusual to happen and you have to recognize it to take advantage of it too. 11:21 – Innovation departments rarely come up with paradigm-shifting ideas and products. Need a certain mindset to make the most of these opportunities. Reason, intuition and imagination. Too much experience in a field can cloud your judgement on new ideas. 13:51 – The book is primarily about serendipity in medicine and science but it can be applied to most fields. Breaking out of the norm and finding inspiration for innovation in other industries. Looking at magazines to apply to blog copywriting. 15:33 – "Analogical thinking has certainly been a cornerstone of science." Another theme in the book is looking for one thing but ending up on a totally different path. All of the people making discoveries seemed to have a level of independence in their research to follow a new path when it interests them. The narrative fallacy involved in serendipitous scientific discovery or startups growth. 17:40 – Alexander Fleming and discovery of Penicillin as anti-bacterial.  Fleming said that if he was working on a research team at the time it would have been ignored as it wasn’t what he was working on. Being free allows you to pursue these anomalies. 19:04 – Darwin and the finches in the Galapagos. Being told to go and study something brings different results than if you’re free to follow your own curiosity. The constraints of research impose harmful limits on discoveries. 19:54 – Structure of the book is Introduction of the premise, 30+ chapters of examples and the conclusion. Myers suggests at the end of the book that the structure for scientific research and funding is counter to the ability for these serendipitous events to happen. 20:50 – More on Fleming and Penicillin. Odds of it happening were astronomically low. He was away for two weeks and on returning and viewing his petri dishes on his desk discovered an anti-bacterial zone around the mold. It wasn’t until 7 years later that another researcher realized what he had found. 23:09 – For Fleming it took a number of environmental factors that allowed Penicillin to be discovered at all: heat, location, time. Penicillin wasn’t originally pitched as a drug, originally suggested as a way to isolate bacterial colonies. Then there was the huge scale up and production process of the drug. Peoria (IL), the role of corn syrup, and the mold discovered by chance. 29:00 – Bonus Material Discussion, Aquatic Apes, Patreon, future episode ideas. 29:52 – Causes of ulcers, used to be thought of as stress and spicy food. Discovery that it is caused by bacteria in 1981. Marshall ran an experiment on himself to take the bacteria, give himself ulcers and cure himself with antibiotics. Pharmaceutical industry had a strong incentive to not prove this as the cause, current drugs of acid inhibitors were reaching sales of $6 Billion dollars in 1992. 35:04 – Pharma companies lobbying to decrease acceptable cholesterol ranges to induce more people into treatments. Changing opinions of statins within last 10 years. Effects of low cholesterol on longevity, links to all-cause mortality. Reducing cholesterol and precursors to creating testosterone in diet has lead to a reduction in testosterone and erectile dysfunction requiring a need for Viagra. 39:59 – What are we currently doing in society now that we will look back on and question in the future? Possible future problems associated with over consumption of social media. Mental and physical health complaints are unknown. 41:53 – Pull away in society from open sharing, moving towards private communities. Effectiveness of diets, feeling good vs having long term health benefits. Benefits of adopting a new diet may be equal to reducing other harmful choices – like stopping drinking for a month. The changing conventions of meal-times, quality of dog food, college debt. 47:12 – Tangent. Education and the need to change the K through 12 program instead of starting with College reform. The benefits of private vs public school. Mixing with different socioeconomic backgrounds, expense of private school. Both build very different sets of social and academic skills. Bay Area dystopia, where citizens pay lots in taxes that go into public schools, but parents end choosing private ones. 55:53 – Chemical weapons, World Wars and the changing use of toxins into cures. Bombing a ship leading to the first chemo treatments for cancer. North Korea and the development of nuclear tech (more info in the Bonus material). Google health trends being able to predict health outbreaks based on search volume. Sex hormones and noticing the change of tumors in animals after castration. 01:07:55 – Consequences of controversial testing on wartime prisoners that have given us useful data. Study of African-American men with syphilis, they were told they were having free medical treatment but they were mislead and were being studied for the untreated effects of syphilis over 40 years. Possibilities of current testing on prisoners or other conspiracies. 01:11:52 – History of Thalidomide being marketed as a sedative and pain management. Widely distributed before it was realized it had the side effect of severely inhibiting fetal development. U.S avoided this because the FDA already setup due to a drug being administered alongside Diethyl Glycol which was toxic, killing over 100 children. Testing required before products could be marketed. Thalidomide now used as an anti-cancer drug as it inhibits new blood vessel growth. 01:15:05 – Acne treatments and the imbalanced side-effects on fertility. Use of cleanser on the face strips natural oils. Use of antibiotics for acne which causes destruction of the microbiome. Latex gloves that may transmit more bacteria than your hands. Effects of steroids and keto on curing eczema. Nat not using shampoo even after a Spartan race. Body naturally cleansing. 01:21:06 – Tangents, aquatic apes, blockchain, negative reviews. 01:21:59 – Heart chapter and testing of catheterization. Self-experimentation and the need to prove theories. Ostracism and dangerous procedures. 01:24:44 – Viagra, originally for treating angina, it was found that this medication increased blood flow and became a cure for impotence – renamed to erectile dysfunction. Self-experimentation on erectile dysfunction. "The annual scientific meeting of the American Urologic Association is usually a pretty staid Affair but one meeting has entered the annals of folklore in the early 1980s. During the course of his lecture on the effectiveness of injecting substances directly into the penis to increase blood flow one urologist announced that he had performed such injections on himself only an hour earlier. Stepping from behind the lectern and he dropped his trousers and proudly demonstrated to the audience his own erect manhood. Urologists who attended this meeting still shake their heads at the memory." 01:28:00 – The power of names and the words used, like pro-life and pro-choice. How you phrase something changes the impact. Pharmaceuticals changing the names of conditions to promote sales of new drugs. Sales of Viagra were $780 Million in the first 9 months of 1998. 01:30:02 – 1% of women take Viagra to increase arousal and sensation and orgasm strength. Netflix’s biggest competitor is sleep, Viagra’s biggest competitor is death. 01:31:48 – Cholesterol testing on rabbits. Cholesterol data seems outdated with the book being 11 years old. Comparison of Chinese soldiers and lifestyle and diet. Lack of nutrition education in Doctors, mostly educated by pharmaceutical companies. People seem to want to take a pill rather than change their lifestyle or diet and doctors have lack of trust in the patient that they will try to improve their own situation. 01:38:07 – Psychiatric stuff. Hoffman discovering LSD by accidentally pouring it over his skin. LSD microdosing experiences. 01:42:40 – Tangents on kayaking, LSD microdosing and the Made You Think – Patreon $1000 Tier. 01:43:06 – Conclusion. Modern sciences are antithetical to the process of serendipity and how our institutions penalize our ability to take advantage of it. Government contracts and grants impose constraints. If you're getting money to research a specific topic you will be disincentivized from exploring things that deviates. If you're a free agent, then you can run down those rabbit holes. 01:44:31 – Peer reviews. Most businesses are judged by their customers but academia is judged solely by their peers. Ostracism as a consequence of investigating fringe theories. Direct to consumer advertising for drugs. Diseases and disorders that seems to be created and renamed just to increase drug sales. Long terms effects of drugs. 01:52:19 – On Patreon you get all kinds of goodies. Bonus materials, detailed notes for each episode and book highlights. You get a space to discuss the show with both of us. You can also join for our monthly live Hangouts. If you join the $1000 a month tier you can join us for a major excursion – Made You Trip! 01:54:57 – Patreon is a great way to support the show and let us keep doing this ad free. So we don't have to break up the episode with ads and we keep rolling with the tangents. 01:55:48 – Leave a review on iTunes that is super helpful for us because we show up as a recommended podcast and also is a great way for us to book guests. Other ways to support the show, you can go MadeYouThinkPodcast.com/support and tell your friends. 01:57:58 – If you want to talk to us, you can talk to us on Twitter anytime. I'm @TheRealNeilS and I am @NatEliason. If you're shopping on Amazon click through on our link. We super appreciate that.  All right, we will see everyone next week. See you guys next time. If you enjoyed this episode, don’t forget to subscribe at https://madeyouthinkpodcast.com

amazon netflix history game google education body work college magic books doctors war food chinese mental sex benefits government heart sales innovation japanese study african americans modern illinois nasa testing normal drugs lack medical soundcloud disease doubt discovery effects comparison skin consequences billion blockchain stepping structure drug odds fda bay area conclusion ego steve jobs north korea pfizer reason tier epidemics reducing stats possibilities bill clinton infinity lsd myers affair george w bush ethereum mixing peer hoffman chemical investigating winston churchill confirmation steroids mm bombings effectiveness conway cvs sars fleming pharma spartan morton viagra dwight eisenhower microbiome toxins acne influenza meyers serendipity tangents andrew yang brave new world merck charles darwin cholesterol pharmaceutical peter thiel normal people ubi merchants tangent pharmaceuticals carbohydrates kuhn sapiens peoria eugenics google play music private school psychiatric aldous huxley eczema ldl galapagos carnivore diet spartan race petri shake shack syphilis world wars darwinism boarding school google trends antifragile latex asbestos hangouts scientific method lifehacker morphine timothy leary cmu statins spleen nassim taleb x rays urologists penicillin louis pasteur geneva convention scientific revolution homo deus happy accidents penetrating zoloft yuval harari accutane daniel dennett thomas kuhn thalidomide dogmatic halbert frank luntz alexander fleming dissociative robert koch naomi oreskes david deutsch lipitor paxil premenstrual dysphoric disorder albert hofmann squibb peoria illinois erik m doxycycline american urological association ostracism female sexual dysfunction barry marshall gary c claude bernard tuskegee study made you think analogical cosmetic act american urologic association thomas s kuhn lsd my problem child
God and Creation
ST506 Lesson 17

God and Creation

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2015 35:45


Explore YHWH's perfection and presence. "God is not merely distinct from the world, but also distinguishes Himself from it and it from Himself . . . and by means of this absolute inalienable Self-mastery of God, this doctrine opens the prospect that God can communicate Himself to the world without detriment" as Isaak Dorner states in System of Christian Doctrine. For humans, giving to another involves detriment to oneself. How can God give to us and not cause himself loss? God is the transcendent God but also near. Peter Leithart states, "I teach my theology students to be “because of” theologians rather than “in spite of” theologians. God is immanent not in spite of His transcendence, but because of His transcendence. The Son became man not in spite of His sovereign Lordship, but because He is Lord, as the most dramatic expression of His absolute sovereignty. Creation does not contradict God’s nature, but expresses it." Consider that Jesus stating "I AM" in the New Testament is his claim to be God and is what causes Him to be killed. How will we know God when we are perfected? Knowledge of something is always limited. There is Archetypal knowledge which is God's knowledge of God - perfect and comprehensive. We have Ectypal knowledge which is dependent on another. We will never comprehend him and know Him to the fullest depths. Consider words we use to relate to God. Univocal language is using a word to mean exactly the same thing in every sense. Equivocal language applies to different speech where nothing is the same and there is no similarity between the two words. Consider Aquinas' thoughts on Univocal and Equivocal language in relation to the Bible. Analogical language is neither. Aquinas holds that all our language is analogical. Consider that words apply to God by analogy. God takes our ordinary language and uses and perfects it to speak of glorious heavenly things.

The Tenth International Conference on Concept Lattices and Their Applications - CLA'13

Chair: F.Valverde 1- CRL-Chu correspondences Ondrej Krídlo, Manuel Ojeda-Aciego 2- Isotone L-bonds Jan Konecny, Manuel Ojeda-Aciego 3- Formal Concept Analysis of higher order Ondrej Krídlo, Patrik Mihalcin, Stanislav Krajci, Lubomír Antoni 4- Analogical proportions and the factorization of information in distributive lattices Nelly Barbot, Laurent Miclet, Henri Prade

Bra skit!
Avsnitt #4

Bra skit!

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2012


TRACKLIST Dayn – Adventure Time Crewdson – Electric Wing (Real Remix) Kryptic Minds – When Two Paths Cross B-Ju – Taurus Evil Needle – Groovin’ In Heaven M.I.A. – Bad Girls (Switch Remix feat. Missy Elliott & Rye Rye) Sleigh Bells – Demons (Diplo Remix) Sweatson Klank – Always You Barker & Baumecker – Analogical [...]

Parables and Miracles
Parables and Miracles 9: Maxims for Interpreting the Parables III/Analogical Analysis I

Parables and Miracles

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2010 79:02


Lecture by Dr. Vern Poythress, professor of New Testament Theology. Various Verses.

Parables and Miracles
Parables and Miracles 10: Analogical Analysis II/Interpreting Miracle Stories I

Parables and Miracles

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2010 79:44


Lecture by Dr. Vern Poythress, professor of New Testament Theology. Various Verses.

Linguistics Lectures
Analogical effects in visual word processing: Evidence from Dutch

Linguistics Lectures

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2010 48:41


effects dutch visual word processing analogical
Dogmatics 1
34 - To what kinds of words does the term analogical language apply?

Dogmatics 1

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2009 10:08


language kinds analogical
Legal Writing Tips - Podcasts
Basics of Analogical Reasoning

Legal Writing Tips - Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2009 5:44


Podcast – Radical Change Group
#43 Language Series 07: Sleight of Mouth Patterns – part 3

Podcast – Radical Change Group

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2008 17:43


In this episode we are concluding the Sleight of Mouth patterns with the Alogical, or as we also call it Analogical, or Metaphorical SOM pattern. The Alogical SOM Pattern Utilizes many different skills – metaphorical, hypnotic, by-passes logical objections 3 examples of the alogical pattern Explanations of the metaphors How do we use alogical SOM […]