English zoologist, ethologist and surrealist painter (born 1928)
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How can building genuine relationships transform your marketing strategy?In this episode, I sit down with Michael R. Drew, a serial entrepreneur and marketing expert who's helped 131 books hit the New York Times Bestsellers list. Michael brings a refreshing perspective to marketing, emphasizing the importance of building real, lasting connections with your audience rather than relying on transactional sales tactics.He introduces the 12 Steps of Intimacy, a model adapted from zoologist Desmond Morris's research on human relationships, showing how emotional connections can drive customer loyalty and long-term success.In this episode, we cover:Why understanding your audience and building authentic relationships is key to marketing successHow the 12 Steps of Intimacy can be applied to deepen customer engagementThe dangers of transactional marketing and how to avoid themActionable tips for amplifying your voice and growing your influenceHow trust and long-term relationships create lasting value for your brandIf you're looking to shift from a sales-focused approach to one rooted in genuine connection, this episode is packed with insights to help you connect more meaningfully with your audience.
Desmond Morris, famosissimo zoologo e musa ispiratrice di Francesco Gabbani per il pezzo Occidentali’s Karma, ha studiato l’uomo in quanto scimmia. L’unico, tra le scimmie, a essere sprovvisto di peli (evidentemente il prof. Morris non conosceva mio zio Efisio). Quello che sappiamo noi, però, è che l’uomo non discende dalla scimmia, e non è una scoperta recente: in realtà lo diceva già Darwin, ma l’abbiamo sempre interpretato male.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today we're joined by Seth Chagi of World of Paleoanthropology to review a stone age classic: Quest for Fire (1981) hits almost all the caveman movie tropes, but to be fair, it probably originated most of them. We talk about the origins of controlled use of fire, “conlangs”, and how this movie has become more scientifically accurate over time. Check out the World of Paleoanthropology: https://worldofpaleoanthropology.org/ https://www.youtube.com/@worldofpaleoanthropology Win some SotSA Merch! Send your mistakes, inaccuracies, and corrections to us by email or social media: Twitter: @SotSA_Podcast Bluesky: @sotsapodcast.bsky.social Facebook: @SotSAPodcast Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/sotsa/ Email: screensofthestoneage@gmail.com In this episode: Watch Quest for Fire on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9MV1H_bAt-E Nonhuman ape sense of humour: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fJarjlRVZzY Bonobos laugh: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hhlHx5ivGGk Bonobo sex: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/bonobo-sex-and-society-2006-06/ Sabre-toothed cats' coat patterns: https://www.scientificamerican.com/blog/laelaps/did-saber-cats-have-spotted-and-striped-coats/ The Naked Ape by Desmond Morris: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Naked_Ape Anthony Burgess created the Ulam language: https://www.anthonyburgess.org/quest-for-fire/quest-for-language/ Australian firehawks: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5zcJs16aZ5s Were there any human tribes who didn't have the ability to start fire? https://www.reddit.com/r/AskAnthropology/comments/872kfd/is_it_true_that_ther_arewere_isolated_peoples_who/
Today we're joined by Seth Chagi of World of Paleoanthropology to review a stone age classic: Quest for Fire (1981) hits almost all the caveman movie tropes, but to be fair, it probably originated most of them. We talk about the origins of controlled use of fire, “conlangs”, and how this movie has become more scientifically accurate over time.Check out the World of Paleoanthropology:https://worldofpaleoanthropology.org/https://www.youtube.com/@worldofpaleoanthropologyWin some SotSA Merch! Send your mistakes, inaccuracies, and corrections to us by email or social media:Twitter: @SotSA_PodcastBluesky: @sotsapodcast.bsky.socialFacebook: @SotSAPodcastLetterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/sotsa/Email: screensofthestoneage@gmail.comIn this episode:Watch Quest for Fire on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9MV1H_bAt-ENonhuman ape sense of humour: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fJarjlRVZzYBonobos laugh: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hhlHx5ivGGkBonobo sex: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/bonobo-sex-and-society-2006-06/Sabre-toothed cats' coat patterns: https://www.scientificamerican.com/blog/laelaps/did-saber-cats-have-spotted-and-striped-coats/The Naked Ape by Desmond Morris: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Naked_ApeAnthony Burgess created the Ulam language: https://www.anthonyburgess.org/quest-for-fire/quest-for-language/Australian firehawks: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5zcJs16aZ5sWere there any human tribes who didn't have the ability to start fire? https://www.reddit.com/r/AskAnthropology/comments/872kfd/is_it_true_that_ther_arewere_isolated_peoples_who/
Rerun: Congo, pet chimp of science writer and TV personality Desmond Morris, was considered a novelty in the art world when his paintings were displayed in the 1950's. But, on 20th June, 2005, three of his works went under the hammer at prestigious London auction house Bonham's - and sold for £12,000. Morris - zoologist, surrealist and author of the bestselling science book The Naked Ape - had the perfect experience to support the monkey in his artistic career, and was rewarded when his chimp's paintings were displayed at the ICA, lauded by Dali, and purchased by Prince Philip. In this episode, Arion, Rebecca and Olly explain how Congo's approach to art differentiated him from other primates; question whether Morris really was truly able to determine, as he claimed, that financial reward ruins artistic impulses; and reveal how Congo's status as the world's most advanced painting ape might soon be under threat… Further Reading: • ‘Bidders go ape for chimpanzee art' (BBC News, 2005): http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/4109664.stm • ‘Congo and the ‘Biology of Art'' (Zoological Society of London, 2021): https://www.zsl.org/blogs/artefact-of-the-month/congo-and-the-biology-of-art • ‘Meridian Tonight: Desmond Morris and surrealist art ‘ (ITV, 2012) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uvzGV3LnWIE ‘Why am I hearing a rerun?' Each Thursday and Friday we repeat stories from our archive of 800+ episodes, so we can maintain the quality of our independent podcast and bring you fresh, free content every Monday-Wednesday… … But
In Blaze of Memory, we leave the Changeling world for the cities of the humans where a Psy has been dumped on the Shine Foundation's doorstep. Dev Santos has to uncover who Katya is but with her memory loss she might not only be a danger to herself, she might be a danger to everything he's built... including his heart. Grab your copy of Blaze of Memory here: https://amzn.to/3RwMynb Sign up for author Nalini Singh's newsletter to receive fan service here: https://nalinisingh.com/ Want the official Psy-Changeling Reading Order? Click here: https://nalinisingh.com/books/psychangeling-series/ BOOKS MENTIONED The Human Animal featuring the Twelve Stages of Intimacy by Desmond Morris: https://amzn.to/3udhLE2 Want to learn worldbuilding from Leslye? Sign up here: https://learn.myimaginaryfriends.net/ Want to learn story structure from Ines? Sign up here: https://ineswrites.com/PTP Get ready for Bonds of Justice, coming in 2 weeks! Grab your copy to read along: https://amzn.to/3SfEJDP Find the hosts online at: L. Penelope: https://lpenelope.com/ Ines Johnson: https://ineswrites.com/ Credits: "Moonlight Hall" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com). Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License.
Stewart Lee takes us into a world of life-sized chess pieces, alcohol-guzzling nuns and crucified naked bespectacled men. The story of British Surrealism began, not in Bohemian north London, but in a Birmingham suburb. Today, the tradition continues with Birmingham artist Cold War Steve, whose work is featured on the website. His detailed collages evoke the surrealist world of the original Birmingham Surrealists. The seminal moment for British Surrealism was the 1936 London International Surrealist Exhibition when Salvador Dali donned a diving suit and walked through Piccadilly. But art historian and critic Ruth Millington reveals that the actual crazy beating heart of British Surrealism had already begun. A Birmingham group of artists refused to take part in that Exhibition, viewing the other British artists chosen as ‘overnight surrealists'. The Birmingham group, including Conroy Maddox and John Melville, were the first and truest expression of the movement in the UK, meeting in the Kardohmah café in New Street and the Trocadero pub in Temple Street. Later joined by Emmy Bridgwater and zoologist Desmond Morris - who left a giant elephant skull in Broad Street - they frequented Maddox's house in Balsall Heath. Inside were life-size chess pieces and wallpaper handprinted by an adapted washing mangle. They held parties where communists, Caribbean immigrants and naked women in high heels smashed pottery underfoot. Activities included Maddox being crucified, naked and bespectacled while a nun drank from a two pint bottle of local brew Mitchell and Butler. Maddox wanted to replicate this in shop windows in Birmingham but the Council refused. Stewart Lee explores the creative explosion in the Surrealist court of Birmingham and the art it produced. Artwork above by Cold War Steve. A True Thought production for BBC Radio 4.
Fifty godd*** episodes! 'Tis been a ride full of debate, drinks, questionable arguments, Ben becoming both a dualist and a social media addict, and Vaden stalwartly not changing his mind about a single thing. To celebrate, we dive into a thesis which connects many strands of what we've discussed over the years: Brian Boyd's work on art and fiction. Boyd provides an evolutionary account of why we're heavily invested in both creating and consuming fictional narratives. If this was simply a fun habit without any real advantage, such a propensity would have been selected against long ago because creating fiction requires an enormous amount of time. This raises the question: What is the advantage of fiction? Why is producing it adaptive? Brian Boyd (https://profiles.auckland.ac.nz/b-boyd) is a distinguished professor emeritus at the University of Auckland. His most well-known for his scholarship on Vladimir Nabokov, and is currently writing a biography on Karl Popper. You can understand why Vaden got so excited about him. Note: We spend a lot of time giving background context for Boyd's theory - if you want to skip all that and get right to the theory itself, we've added chapter markers to take you there. Added after publishing : Looks like chapter markers aren't working correctly on some players, discussion of theory begins at 00:40:43 We discuss - Reflections on our 50th episode! - Non-evolutionary theories of art and fiction, and why they fail - Boyd's thesis that art results from playing with pattern and information - Fiction as a kind of art which results from playing with social information - How these theories explain why art is adaptive - The link between art and creativity - How Boyd's theory improves on the two other major evolutionary theories of art References - On the Origin of Stories (https://www.amazon.com/Origin-Stories-Evolution-Cognition-Fiction/dp/0674057112) - Stacks of Stories, Stories of Stacks. Essay from the book Stalking Nabokov (https://www.amazon.com/Stalking-Nabokov-Brian-Boyd/dp/0231158572/ref=sr_1_1?crid=GM1PNYNGW6EO&keywords=stalking+nabokov&qid=1682337869&s=books&sprefix=stalking+nabokov%2Cstripbooks%2C82&sr=1-1) - Steven Pinker's thesis on art (https://stevenpinker.com/files/pinker/files/pinker_2016_we_make_art_because_we_can_mona_exhibit_by_steven_pinker.pdf) - Geoffrey Miller's thesis (https://varenne.art/usr/library/documents/main/geoffrey_miller_art_to_attract_mates.pdf) Quotes We crave information. But because we have a much more open-ended curiosity than other animals, we have a special appetite for pattern. We crave the high yield of novel kinds of pattern. So we not only chase and tussle, we not only play physically, but we also play cognitively, with patterns of the kinds of information that matter most to us: sound, sight, and, in our ultrasocial species, social information. We play with the rhythm and pitch and shape of sounds in music and song; with colors and shapes in drawing and painting and mudpies or sandcastles; and with patterns of social information in pretend play and story. In the social world, we see patterns of identity (who are they?), personality (what are they like?), society (whom are they related to? whom do they team up with? how do they rank?). In the world of events, we see patterns of cause and effect. In the world of social events, we see patterns of intention, action, and outcome. (Stacks of Stories, Stories of Stacks - Boyd) To sum up: I've explored the hypothesis that art—or at least many forms of art—exploit visual aesthetics for no direct adaptive reason. Making and looking at art does not, and probably never did, result in more surviving offspring. There are, to be sure, adaptive explanations why certain visual patterns give human beings aesthetic, intellectual and sexual pleasure: they are cues to understandable, safe, productive, nutritious or fertile things in the world. And since we are a toolmaking, technological species, one of the things that we can do with our ingenuity, aside from trapping animals, detoxifying plants, conspiring against our enemies and so on, is to create purified, concentrated, supernormal, artificial sources of these visual pleasures, just for the sheer enjoyment experienced by both maker and viewer. (Pinker) In the 1950s, when Desmond Morris supplied chimpanzees in his care with paint, brushes, and paper, they threw themselves into painting provided they received no external reward. Those who were offered food would make a few perfunctory strokes and break off quickly to seek another tasty morsel. But those whose motivation remained uncorrupted by “payment” developed a fierce commitment to painting. They painted intensely, persisting, while the session lasted, until they thought a sheet finished, though they would never glance at their work later. (On the Origin of Stories, pg 94) Our capacity to understand other minds so well, which arises especially from our cooperative disposition, allows us to understand false belief: we appreciate clearly that others may not know information relevant to the situation that we happen to know. That also means that we realize * we * may not know what we need to know, and that realization drives human curiosity. (Stacks of Stories, Stories of Stacks - Boyd) Very young children do not readily think offline, away from the here and now. They do not easily recall their recent past, but they can easily use the present props of toys, whether homemade or manufactured, to conjure up scenarios involving agents that hook their attention. They learn to think in a sustained fashion in ways decoupled from the here and now, first by using physical props as fellow agents, then gradually by raiding the readymade stories and characters of their culture. By building on our sociality, fiction stretches our imaginations, taking us from our immediate present along tracks we can easily follow offline because they are the fresh tracks of agents. (Stacks of Stories, Stories of Stacks - Boyd) In the 1989 TV movie The Naked Lie the unpleasant and self-centered Webster shows no sympathy for a prostitute who has been killed. When Victoria asks him, “What if it were your sister?” he sneers: “I don't have a sister, but if I did, she wouldn't be a hooker.” Later in the movie Victoria muses to another character: “You know that sister Webster doesn't have? Well, she doesn't know how lucky she is.” We easily follow Victoria's initial counterfactual, Webster's counterfactual refutation of her condition, and Victoria's comically contradictory counterfactual consequence, the sister who, because she does not exist, cannot know how lucky she is not to do so if she has to suffer Webster as her brother. Stories help train us to explore possibility as well as actuality, effortlessly and even playfully, and that capacity makes all the difference. (On the Origin of Stories, pg 188) Contact us Follow us on Twitter at @IncrementsPod, @BennyChugg, @VadenMasrani Check us out on youtube at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_4wZzQyoW4s4ZuE4FY9DQQ Come join our discord server! DM us on twitter or send us an email to get a supersecret link What patterns have you been playing with recently? Tell us your story over at incrementspodcast@gmail.com Image Credit: Kinza Riza, from the Atlantic article (https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2014/10/humanitys-earliest-art-was-spray-painted-graffiti/381259/).
Mohana van den Kroonenberg besloot op haar vijfde om een ieder geval een jaar helemaal niet meer te praten. Haar stotterprobleem vormde zo'n grote belemmering dat ze er een geheim van maakte. Niemand mocht het weten. Het geheim werd groter dan het probleem zelf. Inmiddels is ze bevrijd van deze belemmering en de frustratie dankzij haar kinderboek Dodo dat uitgegeven werd door De Vier Windstreken. Mohana is ook beeldhouwer. Versterken die twee disciplines elkaar? Waar liggen de grote verschillen? Mohana wil zo onafhankelijk mogelijk zijn in het schrijven, terwijl ze bij het beeldhouwen eerder bereid is om concessies te doen voor een klant. Je kan niet direct vanuit je gevoel werken, wat met beeldhouwen wel mogelijk is. “Een boek gaat altijd door je hoofd, want je moet de grammatica en de woorden omzetten”, zegt Mohana. Tijdens het beeldhouwen kan ze zich af laten leiden door haar kinderen bijvoorbeeld, “want een idee is niet rationeel. Het is gevoelsmatig en dat verlies ik niet als ik bezig ben.” Bij een beeld overzie je bovendien het hele werk als je er omheen loopt. Je boek zal je toch telkens helemaal moeten lezen. En dat heeft Mohana honderd keer gedaan tijdens het proces. Als Mohana de term ‘passage' aanhaalt blijkt deze zowel een overeenkomst als een verschil te zijn tussen schrijven en beeldhouwen. In beide disciplines worden passages gebruikt: Waar de ene lijn overgaat in de andere, of de ene bolling in de ander, spreken we in het beeldhouwen van passages. In het boek worden de scenes passages genoemd. Deze bereikt de schrijver dmv de witregel, een ademhaling. Een witregel is in feite tijd. En tijd speelt geen rol in een beeldhouwwerk. De uitgever is in wezen de brug tussen de schrijver en de lezer. Mohana vertelt over de samenwerking met de redacteur. Kritiek op haar werk als schrijver komt bij Mohana harder aan dan wanneer het over haar als beeldhouwer gaat. Iets aanpassen in was of klei is veel simpeler dan een manuscript omgooien. Cornelis Lemair lijkt er vrij helder over te zijn: De kwaliteit van een schilderij openbaart zich in de techniek. “Ik weet niet of ik gelukkig ben. Maar ik weet ook niet of ik ongelukkig ben”, antwoordt Cornelis op m'n eerste vraag over geluk. Voor mij was dat antwoord positief en een reden om direct naar de volgende vraag te gaan. Cornelis zijn 17e eeuwse schilderijen zijn bekend. Hij vertelt dat het werkproces hieraan volledig intuïtief is, al zou het werk anders doen verwachten. Regels zijn alleen voor de gevallen waar het niet goed gaat concluderen we allebei. Maar als Cornelis z'n werk zo nu en dan nakijkt op de Gulden Snede of een radiale compositie blijkt hij daar niet van afgeweken te hebben, zonder dit bewust toegepast te hebben. Cornelis vertelt over het hoge niveau van Willem Kalf. “Daar moet ik onder blijven. Projecteer mij in die tijd en dan ben ik een kleine jongen”, zegt hij. Het hoogtepunt van de Nederlandse schilderkunst hebben we misschien al drie eeuwen achter ons liggen. Verder vergelijken we Rembrandt met Geert de Lairesse, Rubens, Ingres, Vermeer, maar ook Van Gogh komt voorbij. Zitten de kwaliteit en magie achter een kunstwerk echt alleen in techniek? Bij deze vraag komen op de chimpansee Congo. Deze chimpansee werd door de antropoloog Desmond Morris achter de schildersezel gezet en maakte zo'n 400 prachtige abstracte schilderijen. Deze zijn later op een veiling voor hoge bedragen verkocht zonder dat mensen wisten dat de schilderijen door een aap gemaakt waren. “Een aap kan niet schilderen”, stelt Cornelis. Biologisch bestaat er geen verschil tussen mens en aap, zij het gradueel. Wij mensen kunnen reizen in de tijd, reflecteren en filosoferen. En daarmee kunnen we kunst maken. Toch gaat creëren het beste wanneer we ons mee laten nemen door het moment. Is dat niet wat Nietzsche als ‘Vertierung” omschreef? titusmeeuws.com contact: info@portretvanmijnhuis.nl
En general nos encanta besar, aunque casi la sexta parte de la Humanidad no lo practica. Al parecer está con nosotros desde siempre pero no tenemos muy claro por qué apareció.Uno de los primeros en intentar explicar la funcionalidad del beso fue Sigmund Freud que especuló, como podría esperarse, que se tratara de un regreso a la época de amamantamiento. Más tarde, en los años 1960, el zoólogo Desmond Morris propuso que el beso podría haber evolucionado de la práctica por la cual las madres primates mastican la comida de sus hijos antes de dársela boca a boca con los labios fruncidos. Suscríbete a MUY HISTORIA con un descuento del 50% usando el código especial para podcast - PODCAST1936https://bit.ly/3TYwx9aComparte nuestro podcast en tus redes sociales, puedes realizar una valoración de 5 estrellas en Apple Podcast o Spotify.Dirección, locución y producción: Iván Patxi Gómez GallegoContacto de publicidad en podcast: podcast@zinetmedia.esSuscríbete a Muy Interesante https://suscripciones.zinetmedia.es/mz/
- Tại sao bóng đá lại khiến con người ta “cuồng nhiệt” như vậy? - Tại sao bóng đá trở thành môn thể thao số 1 của nhân loại, mà không phải là bộ môn thể thao khác? - Tại sao có rất nhiều người không chơi bóng đá, không thường xuyên xem bóng đá, nhưng họ vẫn thích xem môn thể thao này? Vậy thì cuốn sách The Soccer Tribe của nhà nhân chủng học nổi tiếng người Anh, Desmond Morris sẽ giải đáp cho chúng ta những thắc mắc này. Hãy cùng đón xem cuốn sách tuần này đem đến cho bạn kiến thức thú vị gì nhé! XEM VIDEO MINH HOẠ TẠI: https://youtu.be/V1Oqbb-IO8Q Xem thêm các video khác tại: https://www.youtube.com/c/BetterVersionVN/videos ------------------- ❤️ Link mua sách bản gốc: https://amzn.to/3V1I47x ❤️ ỦNG HỘ KÊNH TẠI: https://beacons.ai/betterversion.donate Cảm ơn bạn rất nhiều! ------------------
De la mano de Angie Chevalier y de Anamí Velasco entérate de los temas de novedad dentro de ámbitos como el arte y la sociedad a las 14:00 horas de lunes a viernes en La Conjura de los necios. En La entrevista, el Mtro. Yassin Radilla, periodista de ciencia, charla sobre el libro de ciencia: El mono desnudo de Desmond Morris, y su relación con la autopsicología.
Desmond Morris, Zoologist talks about life and his new art institute DIVA.
Desmond Morris, Zoologist talks about life and his new art institute DIVA.
This week on Radically Loved, Rosie speaks with Rod Stryker about taking accountability for a mistake as someone in a position of authority.Owning up to mistakes is always a grueling process. It's even multiplied when there's a power differential in the dynamic and even more so when all of this is played out on social media. Trust is a critical element that binds people to authority figures. The gravity of crossing boundaries and breaching this trust is seen and felt on a larger scale. Rod walks us through the process of repair, self-reflection, taking accountability, and the lessons he learned from making a grave mistake as an authority.This episode is brought to you by: OPENLet's practice together! https://www.withopen.com/LOVEDUse promo code: LOVEDKa'ChavaKa'Chava is offering 10% OFF for a limited time. Go to www.Kachava.com/lovedEpisode Highlights[02:12] What Human Beings Have in Common[05:00] Becoming Accountable[09:29] Take Accountability by Taking Responsibility[13:14] An Opportunity to Learn[17:43] The Challenge of Moving Forward[24:35] Navigating Intellectual Boundaries[29:56] How His Intentions Behind Teaching Changed[37:19] How to Cultivate a Sense of Compassion and Openness[48:20] On Mob Mentality[50:35] The Gap Between Intent and Impact[58:04] Seeing Beyond the Surface[1:01:28] The Title of Yogarupa[1:06:25] The Lesson He Wants to Leave His Children[1:09:57] How Rod Feels Radically Loved PresentlyResources:Connect with Rod Stryker:- Website: https://rodstryker.com/ - The Naked Ape by Desmond Morris: https://www.amazon.com/Naked-Ape-Zoologists-Study-Animal/dp/0385334303 - Right Use of Power by Cedar Barstow: https://www.amazon.com/Right-Use-Power-Heart-Ethics/dp/0974374628 - Yoga-Vasistha of Valmiki, edited by Dr. Ravi Prakash Arya: https://www.amazon.com/Yoga-Vasistha-Valmiki-Volumes-Edited-Prakash/dp/B001TE2EM8 - You Are Radically Loved by Rosie Acosta: https://www.amazon.com/You-Are-Radically-Loved-Self-Love/dp/0593330153 - Radically Loved is now part of the iHeartMedia Podcasts: https://www.iheartmedia.com/podcasts.- Have a specific topic in mind? Email us at info@radicallyloved.com. - Download BUILD YOUR DAILY MEDITATION RITUAL and other freebies at https://www.radicallyloved.com/free-stuff!- FREE Action Guide! Sign up at https://www.radicallyloved.com/episode-show-notes, and I'll send it right away!Stay updated!- Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rosieacosta/- Twitter: https:twitter.com/rosieacosta- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/radicallylovedrosie - TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@itsrosieacosta
This week on Radically Loved, Rosie speaks with Rod Stryker about taking accountability for a mistake as someone in a position of authority.Owning up to mistakes is always a grueling process. It's even multiplied when there's a power differential in the dynamic and even more so when all of this is played out on social media. Trust is a critical element that binds people to authority figures. The gravity of crossing boundaries and breaching this trust is seen and felt on a larger scale. Rod walks us through the process of repair, self-reflection, taking accountability, and the lessons he learned from making a grave mistake as an authority.This episode is brought to you by: OPENLet's practice together! https://www.withopen.com/LOVEDUse promo code: LOVEDKa'ChavaKa'Chava is offering 10% OFF for a limited time. Go to www.Kachava.com/lovedEpisode Highlights[02:12] What Human Beings Have in Common[05:00] Becoming Accountable[09:29] Take Accountability by Taking Responsibility[13:14] An Opportunity to Learn[17:43] The Challenge of Moving Forward[24:35] Navigating Intellectual Boundaries[29:56] How His Intentions Behind Teaching Changed[37:19] How to Cultivate a Sense of Compassion and Openness[48:20] On Mob Mentality[50:35] The Gap Between Intent and Impact[58:04] Seeing Beyond the Surface[1:01:28] The Title of Yogarupa[1:06:25] The Lesson He Wants to Leave His Children[1:09:57] How Rod Feels Radically Loved PresentlyResources:Connect with Rod Stryker:- Website: https://rodstryker.com/ - The Naked Ape by Desmond Morris: https://www.amazon.com/Naked-Ape-Zoologists-Study-Animal/dp/0385334303 - Right Use of Power by Cedar Barstow: https://www.amazon.com/Right-Use-Power-Heart-Ethics/dp/0974374628 - Yoga-Vasistha of Valmiki, edited by Dr. Ravi Prakash Arya: https://www.amazon.com/Yoga-Vasistha-Valmiki-Volumes-Edited-Prakash/dp/B001TE2EM8 - You Are Radically Loved by Rosie Acosta: https://www.amazon.com/You-Are-Radically-Loved-Self-Love/dp/0593330153 - Radically Loved is now part of the iHeartMedia Podcasts: https://www.iheartmedia.com/podcasts.- Have a specific topic in mind? Email us at info@radicallyloved.com. - Download BUILD YOUR DAILY MEDITATION RITUAL and other freebies at https://www.radicallyloved.com/free-stuff!- FREE Action Guide! Sign up at https://www.radicallyloved.com/episode-show-notes, and I'll send it right away!Stay updated!- Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rosieacosta/- Twitter: https:twitter.com/rosieacosta- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/radicallylovedrosie - TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@itsrosieacosta
Cinzia Tani"Quella notte a Valdez"Vallecchi Firenzehttps://www.vallecchi-firenze.it/L'Alaska con la sua natura selvaggia, i ghiacciai, la tundra, il permafrost, le grandi foreste, le lunghe notti invernali e il sole a mezzanotte durante l'estate. Malaya Bennett è la bellissima e temeraria figlia di Lawrence, antropologo di Boston, e di Anik, una inuit che contesta il lunghissimo oleodotto che ha cambiato drasticamente la vita del paese dopo la scoperta del petrolio. Il fratellastro Koko, ribelle e aggressivo, è nato dalla violenza subita da Anik quando aveva diciotto anni. Lo sceriffo non ha individuato il colpevole perché lei non ricorda più nulla di quella notte. L'estate del 1988 arrivano a Valdez, terminal dell'oleodotto, i petrolieri Brendan Peterson e Desmond Morris con le loro famiglie, che sconvolgeranno la vita dei Bennett e della città.Cinzia Tani è autrice e conduttrice di programmi televisivi, tra cui FantasticaMente, Italia mia benché, La Rai @ la carte, Visioni private e Il caffè. Insegna Storia sociale del delitto alla facoltà di Sociologia dell'Università La Sapienza di Roma, e nel 2004 è stata nominata Cavaliere su iniziativa del Presidente della Repubblica Italiana Carlo Azeglio Ciampi.Ha pubblicato per Mondadori: Assassine (1998), Coppie assassine (1999), Nero di Londra (2001), Amori crudeli (2003), L'insonne (2005), Sole e ombra (2007, premio Selezione Campiello), Lo stupore del mondo (2009), Charleston (2010), Io sono un'assassina (2011), Il bacio della dionea (2012), Mia per sempre (2013), Il capolavoro (2017). Per Rizzoli ha pubblicato Donne pericolose. Passioni che hanno cambiato la storia (2016), Darei la vita. Grandi donne di grandi uomini (2017), Figli del segreto (2018) e Donne di spade (Mondadori 2019)IL POSTO DELLE PAROLEascoltare fa pensarehttps://ilpostodelleparole.it/
Congo, pet chimp of science writer and TV personality Desmond Morris, was considered a novelty in the art world when his paintings were displayed in the 1950's. But, on 20th June, 2005, three of his works went under the hammer at prestigious London auction house Bonham's - and sold for £12,000. Morris - zoologist, surrealist and author of the bestselling science book The Naked Ape - had the perfect experience to support the monkey in his artistic career, and was rewarded when his chimp's paintings were displayed at the ICA, lauded by Dali, and purchased by Prince Philip. In this episode, Arion, Rebecca and Olly explain how Congo's approach to art differentiated him from other primates; question whether Morris really was truly able to determine, as he claimed, that financial reward ruins artistic impulses; and reveal how Congo's status as the world's most advanced painting ape might soon be under threat… Further Reading: • ‘Bidders go ape for chimpanzee art' (BBC News, 2005): http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/4109664.stm • ‘Congo and the ‘Biology of Art'' (Zoological Society of London, 2021): https://www.zsl.org/blogs/artefact-of-the-month/congo-and-the-biology-of-art • ‘Meridian Tonight: Desmond Morris and surrealist art ‘ (ITV, 2012) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uvzGV3LnWIE For bonus material and to support the show, visit Patreon.com/Retrospectors We'll be back tomorrow! Follow us wherever you get your podcasts: podfollow.com/Retrospectors The Retrospectors are Olly Mann, Rebecca Messina & Arion McNicoll, with Matt Hill. Theme Music: Pass The Peas. Announcer: Bob Ravelli. Graphic Design: Terry Saunders. Edit Producer: Sophie King. Copyright: Rethink Audio / Olly Mann 2022. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Four people have been indicted in connection with an elaborate scheme to move large amounts of crystal meth into Oahu and Maui, FBI and law enforcement officials announced Monday in a news conference on Maui. The individuals charged include Maliu Tauheluhelu, Maafu Pani, Touanga Niu and Desmond Morris. Morris remains at-large. According to the indictment, Tauheluhelu ― the lead defendant ― “led a criminal organization that distributed methamphetamine and cocaine and operated illegal gambling businesses” within Hawaii, said Ken Sorenson, of the U.S. Attorney's Office in Hawaii. “The indictment charges a long-running and sophisticated scheme to move large amounts of crystal methamphetamine from the mainland into Oahu and also into Maui and to launder the proceeds of their illicit drug business,” he added, at a news conference. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In Episode 53, Gregg welcomes John Stewart. John is an Australian-based evolutionary theorist and a core member of the Evolution, Complexity and Cognition Research Group of the Free University of Brussels. He is the author of Evolution's Arrow: The Direction of Evolution and the Future of Humanity, and has developed The Evolutionary Manifesto, which proposes the needed emergence of "intentional evolutionaries" who are people who see the emergent processes of greater cooperation and evolvability and recognize the need for a global movement in this direction. In this podcast, he narrates his vision with Gregg, and they discuss the overlap and difference with UTOK. - - -
Rodrigo Pacheco es de los mejores y más preparados periodistas de negocios de habla hispana, ha impartido conferencias a cámaras empresariales, líderes de negocios, empresas y universidades, con el enfoque de transmitir un análisis de México y su desenvolvimiento económico influido por factores políticos y sociales. Tiene una visión internacional y global, actualmente es el titular de Imagen Empresarial, colabora en distintos espacios informativos de Grupo Imagen Multimedia y publica una columna semanal en el Periódico Excélsior. Es miembro del consejo editorial de la Revista ISTMO del IPADE. Es licenciado en Relaciones Internacionales egresado del Tecnológico de Monterrey. En esta entrevista con Rodrigo platicamos de: ✨El concepto del dinero ✨ ¿Por qué en 2021 hubo tantas empresas unicornio en México? ✨El sistema económico y la entrada de criptomonedas ✨La parte primitiva de los seres humanos y por qué nos rige este aspecto ✨El impacto de no ver como humanidad los efectos a largo plazo de nuestras decisiones actuales Libros que se menciona: ✨The psychology of money, de Morgan house https://amzn.to/3foOATw ✨ En español: “¿Cómo piensan los ricos?” https://amzn.to/34IdueN ✨ El misterio del capital, de Hernando Soto https://amzn.to/3fryl88 ✨ El mono denudo, de Desmond Morris https://amzn.to/3Kl85uL Películas y vídeos que se mencionan: ✨Don't look up https://www.netflix.com/mx-en/title/81252357 ✨The Egg, Andy Weir ✨Arrival https://www.netflix.com/bd/title/80117799 Podcast de los que hablamos: ✨Fall of civilization https://fallofcivilizationspodcast.com https://open.spotify.com/show/44DE64rRpX1cFIQUlqQtvi?si=muHtYNcMRHWvd5-FS3biUA ✨Lex Fridman entrevista a Stephen Wolfram: https://open.spotify.com/episode/4oRi0gmKAKlgpG9anDShHk?si=FZhs9xidSxqZxPGfqxIBhA ✨Lex Fridman entrevistando a Elon Musk https://open.spotify.com/episode/1E3ESPFzTHiAxJVXQPiRGd?si=zybbof0VTzWw54db7lz42A ✨Lex Fridman entrevistando a Ray Dalio: https://open.spotify.com/episode/6pbsJ5T7Zl9Wx1OeMt4PLH?si=vNGxe86pTF2Bwhg56SA_-A ✨Inteligence matters (podcast del axdirector de la CIA Michael Morell): https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/intelligence-matters/id1286906615 ✨People I (almost) admire: https://open.spotify.com/show/4tINcXckbPUk6dsK3eQD21?si=37b975afb8624591 ► SÍGUENOS EN: ◄ ☘️ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCt2r8LeKpms_rf2zw_jYO-Q ☘️ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mentores_con_maite/ ☘️ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mentoresconmaite ☘️Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2O952j0tyXgDCW5APgYpzN?si=HgB3vsMVRWSZYdk1ge5AAQ ☘️iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/mx/podcast/mentores/id1524837156 Contacto: info@mentoresconmaite.com ➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖ ► SÍGUELO EN: ◄ ☘️http://www.rodrigopacheco.mx ☘️https://twitter.com/Rodpac?s=20 ➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖ Este SET es patrocinado por mi empresa Yes to Value, una empresa que se dedica a dar “Performance mentoring” (mentoría en desempeño) a través de programas de inteligencia emocional, cultivar hábitos, aprender a vivir incómodos, mindfulness y despertar inteligencias. El enfoque está en generar excelencia y satisfacción dentro de las empresas y en la vida de las personas de manera simple y eficaz. Si eres dueño de negocio o colaboras en alguna empresa contáctame si quieres que llevemos estos programas, serán impactantes, benéficos y ayudará a generar un ambiente laboral en el que es inspirador trabajar y crecer. Escríbeme a: cursosmaite@gmail.com ➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖ Maite Valverde de Loyola: ✨Creadora y host de MENTORES ✨Fundadora y directora de “Yes to Value”, empresa que ofrece "performance mentoring” a través de conferencias y cursos multimedia sobre entrenar la mente, aprender a vivir incómodos, Mindfulness, disciplina, hábitos, bienestar, desarrollo de inteligencias, reducción de estrés, inteligencia emocional y hablar en público. ✨Fundadora y productora de su canal de YouTube y podcast: Maite Valverde de Loyola ✨Da cursos, conferencias y mentoría en performance, estrategias de comunicación, bienestar, inteligencias (inteligencia emocional y social) y public speaking ✨Tiene una Maestría en Mindfulness (Universidad de Zaragoza - 2017 - 2019) ✨Certificación en Formación Maestros de Meditación (Yoga Espacio, 2 años 2014-15) ✨Más de 10 años ofreciendo contenidos en medios de comunicación sobre: inteligencias, performance, disciplina, hábitos, meditación, estilo de vida, bienestar, logro de metas (ej: con Ricardo Rocha en Telefórmula, Televisa, TVC, Youtube) ✨Mentora de meditación para empresas, universidades y grupos privados (desde 2014). ✨Practicante de meditación ( más de 10 años) ✨Fue productora y titular de su programa Dimensión 11:11 (103.3FM 2017-2019, Radio Fórmula. De lunes a viernes 11pm) ✨Da terapia individual basada en Mindfulness y trabajo corporal ✨Es parte del equipo que está formando la siguiente generación de maestros certificados de Yoga Espacio (2019-2020) ► SÍGUELA EN: ◄ ☘️ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCIH7z1i8IapYfN33NvI7ssQ ☘️ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/soy.maite.txu ☘️ Instagram: www.instagram.com/maitevalverdedeloyola/ ☘️ Podcast iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/mx/podcast/maite-valverde-de-loyola/id1463115047 ☘️ Podcast Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1QJS3ZLfAWxKHzIHMKN13J?si=IGcvBQ48RKu217m5mioaMg Contacto: cursosmaite@gmail.com
We discuss the concept of the "stimulus struggle" from Desmond Morris' 1969 book "The Human Zoo."
First Draft Episode #320: Sarah MacLean Sarah MacLean, New York Times bestselling author of romance novels, including Nine Rules to Break When Romancing a Rake, A Rogue By Any Other Name, and many more, talks about Bombshell, the first book in her new Hell's Bells series. Sarah also co-hosts the Fated Mates romance podcast. Links to Topics Mentioned In This Episode: The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne Anne Rice, author of Interview With the Vampire and The Vampire Lestat Sarah Rees Brennan, author of Unspoken, The Demon's Lexicon, and In Other Lands and more Carrie Ryan, author of The Forest of Hands and Teeth, Daughters of Deep Silence, and more Aprilynne Pike, author of Wings, Glitter, and more Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl, co-authors of Beautiful Creatures Dr. Jennifer Lynn Barnes, professor studying fiction and the brain, and also author of The Inheritance Games, The Naturals, Little White Lies and more Nora Roberts, author of Visions in White, The Next Always, and Year One also publishes as J.D. Robb, author of the In Death series Bella Andre, author of The Look of Love, Game For Seduction, and more Good and Mad: The Revolutionary Power of Women's Anger by Rebecca Traister Sadie Doyle, author of Trainwreck: The Women We Love to Hate, Mock, and Fear . . . and Why Mona Altahawy, author of Seven Necessary Sins of Women and Girls Gangs of London by Ryan McDonald Alice Diamond and the Forty Elephants by Brian McDonald Peaky Blinders (TV show) Sophie Jordan, author of Firelight, Foreplay, and more Tessa Dare, author of The Duchess Deal, Romancing the Duke, and more Desmond Morris, author of The Naked Ape A Hunger Like No Other, first in the Immortals After Dark series by Kresley Cole Christina Lauren, author of The Unhoneymooners, The Soulmate Equation, and Beautiful Bastards
Jan van Hooff briefly recapped what was previously discussed in episode 44 of iBuzz, saying how he grew up in Burger's Zoo and studied biology at the University of Biology. Jan discusses how he initially got his biology kick from working in the institute of Sven Dijkgraaf, who is famous for his input towards the discovery of echolocation in bats during World War II. Jan states that Dijkgraaf himself was inspired by Lazzaro Spallanzani. He observed that bats could still navigate when blinded, but not when their ears are plugged. Building on this Dijkgraaf noted that bats could distinguish different shapes using different calls. Jan also noted that Donald Griffin simultaneously discovered echolocation in bats and dolphins. His work triggered an interest from the Navy, which allowed the development of sonar in submarines. Jan noted that Dijkgraaf and his team also discovered the use of electroreception in sharks, enabling them to find prey in the sand. This work triggered many physiological discussions, namely the distinction between mind and matter and the dualism between mind and body. Jan stated this debate fascinated him, saying “this work on the sensory mechanism of animals of which we have come from a subjective picture, fascinates me really. This piqued my interest in animal behaviour”. Jan then went on to say that the writings of Konrad Lorenz and Niko Tinbergen (the fathers of Ethology; the study of animal behaviour) further inspired him to study animal behaviour. Especially the concept that behaviour is a function of the brain and is, therefore, a measurable concept. Further reading on Charles Darwin book ‘The expression of the emotions in man' where Darwin wrote about primate expressions, which can be used to inform others of their intentions and feelings. Jan wanted to know more, so approached Niko Tinbergen in the 1960s, who referred him to Desmond Morris, the curator of mammals at London Zoo. Jan explained that London Zoo was ideal due to the primates being housed in easily viewable cages. This allowed the observations of species-specific expressions. He further noted play behaviours which the primates seemingly enjoyed. In that respect, Jan admits he was different from the objective behaviourists of the time. Jan study progressed from the observation of primates' expression, by comparing it to that of humans. He had a specific interest in human laughter, a behaviour specific to humans despite the cultural variations. Jan wraps it up by talking about work at London Zoo, stating that primate behaviours can be treated as taxonomic characteristics which reflects a psychological process. Jan goes on to say that next time he will discuss his return to Burger's Zoo to work with his brother to update the no longer acceptable animal enclosures. Listen to the last episode with Jan van Hooff HERE Learn more about Jan van Hooff HERE Read about the history of echolocation HERE Become a member of PAWS HERE
We're back to read alongs this week! We're big Kylie Scott fans here at Fated Mates, and we talked about her Stage Dive series all the way back in Season One on our very first interstitial, and now we're doing a deep dive. We'd intended to do book three, Lead, but we ended up talking about all four, and honestly, rereading this was pretty great for us. We hope it was great for you, too. Our next read along, sometime in July, is Cat Sebastian's wonderful Unmasked by the Marquess. Get it at Amazon, Apple Books, B&N, Kobo, or Bookshop.org.Thank you, as always, for listening! Please follow us on your favorite podcasting app, and if you are up for leaving a rating or review there, we would be very grateful!Show NotesSarah has a book coming on August 24th! Preorder Bombshell now. You won't regret it.Everyone is struggling with getting dressed again. It's a 1001 in the 1001 Dark Nights series as an homage and allusion to Scheherazade, the story-teller of the Arabian Nights. We also love the VIP series by Kristen Callihan, and the 4th book in that series, Exposed, comes out next month, July 2021.On our upcoming episode with Susan Elizabeth Phillips, where she told us that back in the day, “rock stars, actors, and athletes” were not allowed in the early days of romance. We aren't sure why, but we speculate that it was fear of putting “sex, drugs, and rock and roll” and other high roller lifestyles on page. If you want to join the OSRBC group (Old School Romance Book Club) on Facebook, make sure to answer the three questions if you want to be admitted.Beverly Jenkins liked the Stage Dive series, too.Andi Arndt is the narrator of all Kylie's books, including the entire Stage Dive series, and Jen thinks she is terrific. The Captains' Vegas Vows has a similar set up to Lick: waking up married in Vegas, and only one of them remembered what happened. “Retcon” is a word that started out as shorthand for retroactive continuity, and here's a piece from Merriam-Webster explaining its remarkable elasticity.Hyperemesis gravidarum is the medical term for severe morning sickness, which affects about one percent of pregnant people. DC comics claims that Batman doesn't go down, but the internet and everyone else on twitter and even Zach Snyder disagred. But in all seriousness, maybe it's just another interesting data point about America turning back towards the Hays Code and continuing to remove sex from all kinds of media.Thelma and Louise does have a great ending, you can't argue with that. And since 2021 is the 30th anniversary of the film's release, there are lots of interesting retrospectives on the movie.Desmond Morris is an English zoologist who outlined the 12 stages of intimacy -- hey, humans are animals, too! Our July interviews will be with Susan Elizabeth Phillips, Nicola Yoon, and Nikki Sloane. Our July read-along is Unmasked by the Marquess by Cat Sebastian.
"Caribbean teams should tailor programs for their players' skillset" said Des Morris. A wonderful discussion with former SVG baller, now coach and inventor of the volley king Desmond Morris. We also discussed Liverpool, Manchester city, Messi, Winifred Schaefer, Yawd ballers aka Jamaican players and much more. Stay safe and one love, fam.
Autor: Desmond Morris Título: El zoo humano Clasificación: Ensayo, Ciencia Editorial: DeBolsillo Páginas: 9-34 Contiene: -Introducción -Capítulo primero: Tribus y supertribus --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/anarkademia/message
Aflevering twaalf van Radio Horzelnest staat geheel in het teken van een klassieker uit de biologiebibliotheek: ‘The Selfish Gene' (1976) van de Britse etholoog en evolutiebioloog Richard Dawkins. Hiervoor hebben we uitgenodigd evolutiebioloog en bio-informaticus dr. Rutger Vos. Rutger is werkzaam als universitair docent bij het Instituut voor Biologie en als onderzoeker bij Naturalis Biodiversity Center. Overigens heeft ook Dawkins een indirecte band met Leiden, hij studeerde en promoveerde aan de Universiteit van Oxford onder de Nederlandse etholoog en Nobelprijswinnaar Niko Tinbergen, alumnus en later ook hoogleraar aan de Universiteit Leiden. In 1976 vestigde Dawkins zijn naam als populairwetenschappelijk schrijver met ‘The Selfish Gene'. Op de omslag van de eerste uitgave uit 1976 prijkt een Monty-Python-achtige tekening van de bevriende bioloog Desmond Morris, waarop we een landschap zien met enkele fantasmagorische levensvormen. In dit boek doet Dawkins iets opmerkelijks. Volgens hem heeft een wetenschapper de mogelijkheid om naast het aanleveren van nieuwe feiten of hypothesen, een nieuwe manier van kijken te introduceren. Dawkins wenst een genetisch perspectief te openen op het leven, en specifiek de biologie van zelfzuchtigheid en altruïsme; sterk beïnvloed door het werk van biologen, zoals Bill Hamilton, Bob Trivers, Ronald Fischer, John Maynard-Smith en George Williams. De centrale boodschap van dit boek bleek voor menigeen lastig te verhapstukken. De mens is geen kers op de kosmische taart, eindpunt van de evolutie, of auteur van zijn eigen leven maar evenals andere organismen is hij een waggelende wegwerprobot die zijn leven in de waagschaal legt voor van het overleven van zijn genen. Met Rutger Vos gaan we in gesprek over enkele thema's die ter sprake komen in ‘The Selfish Gene' waaronder zelfzuchtig & altruïstisch gedrag, kin-selectie & groepsselectie, evolutionair stabiele strategieën, universeel darwinisme en natuurlijk memen. Veel luisterplezier!
Volvemos al tema de la pandemia y del coronavirus: ¿Será que volteamos los gráficos para que parezca que están disminuyendo los casos y que todo mejora? Mencionamos: El proyector del Planetario Humboldt se apaga: https://www.cinco8.com/periodismo/el-proyector-del-planetario-humboldt-se-apaga/ El Zoo Humano, Desmond Morris: https://books.google.com.mx/books/about/El_Zoo_humano.html?id=0A8wAAAACAAJ&hl=es-419 Liliana Rivas en Twitter: @lirivass > Síguenos en Instagram: https://instagram.com/ensayoyerrar Nos escuchas en Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Anchor, Ivoox, Castbox, Listennotes y Youtube: https://youtube.com/ensayoyerrar Únete al canal de Telegram: https://t.me/ensayoyerrar + Recuerda consultar a tu científico más cercano y si no tienes escríbenos a nosotros en Instagram @ensayoyerrar y en Twitter @cquevedoa & @gflorezm. Nuestros avatares: María Velásquez De Lucía @oma.creates Intro/Outro: Stomps and Claps (Scott Holmes, 2019). Licencia Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ensayoyerrar/message
Merhaba, Alıç Ağacı'nda Çiy Tanesi podcast serimizin onbirincisinde yine özel bir konuğumuz vardı: Gülşah Güler. Gülşah Soma'lı. Hayalini gerçekleştirmiş. Çatısı gökyüzü olan alanlarda, binalardan bağımsız, doğada “Doğa Tarihi çalışan bir Antropolog”. Paleontoloji ve Paleoantropoloji alanında çalışıyor. Başta Gergedangiller (Rhinocerotidae) ailesi olmak üzere çeşitli memeli hayvan gruplarının evrimi ve sistematik sınıflandırma çalışıyor. Çalışmaları günümüzden yaklaşık 23–5 milyon yıl öncesinin, Miyosen Dönem, Anadolu'sunu anlamaya yönelik. Üniversiteden bu yana kazı alanlarında. 2010 yılından bu yana T.C. Kültür ve Turizm Bakanlığı Paşalar Doğa Tarihi Kazısında Kazı Alan Sorumlusu. Sinema ve belgesel çekim teknikleri, çocuklarla doğa tarihi çalışma yöntemleri, doğa bilimleri, ekoloji ve müzecilikle ilgili. Gülşah'la paleoantropolog olma yolculuğunu, paleoantropologların ne iş yaptıklarını, Anadolu'da dinozor fosili olup olmadığını, eskiden Anadolu coğrafya olduğu ve milyonlarca yıl boyunca geçirdiği değişimleri, fosillerin neden önemli olduklarını, fosillerin uzmanlar dışında neden toplanmaması gerektiğini konuştuk. Kitap önerileri de oldu: Conrad Philiph Cottak - Antropoloji, İnsan Çeşitliliğine Bir Bakış Sibel Özbudun - 50 Soruda Antropoloji Neil Shubin - İçimizdeki Balık Dimitra Papagianni, Michael A. Morse - Neandertal: Modern Bilim Onların Hikayesini Yeniden Yazdı Frans De Waal -İçimizdeki Maymun, Biz Neden Biziz? Desmond Morris - Çıplak Maymun Derek Turner - Paleontoloji ve Evrim Stephen Jay Gould - Yaşamın Tüm Çeşitliliği Roger Lewin - Modern İnsanın Kökeni Nurdan İnan - Paleontoloji Fosil Bilimi David Sloan Wilson - Herkes İçin Evrim, Darwin'in Teorisi Hayata Bakış Açımızı Nasıl Değiştirir? Gülşah'a bu sohbet için çok teşekkür ediyoruz. Sevgilerimizle, Güneşin Aydemir & Burcu Meltem Arık
Toll trieben es die Künstler des Irrationalen. Mit einem Augenzwinkern wirft der englische Künstler und Verhaltensforscher Desmond Morris ein Blick auf das Leben der Surrealisten. Eine Rezension von Sven Ahnert
Bevor Desmond Morris zu einem der bekanntesten Zoologen Englands wurde, war er surrealistischer Maler und stellte u.a. mit Miró aus. Jetzt erzählt er amüsante Geschichten über Salvador Dali, Man Ray und Co. Von Eva Hepper www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Lesart Hören bis: 19.01.2038 04:14 Direkter Link zur Audiodatei
Bevor Desmond Morris zu einem der bekanntesten Zoologen Englands wurde, war er surrealistischer Maler und stellte u.a. mit Miró aus. Jetzt erzählt er amüsante Geschichten über Salvador Dali, Man Ray und Co. Von Eva Hepper www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Lesart Hören bis: 19.01.2038 04:14 Direkter Link zur Audiodatei
Um episódio inspirado numa inesperada abordagem anónima de um ouvinte que pediu dicas para perceber melhor esta envolvência entre futebol e sociedade que foi agitada pelo episódio Marega. Lembrei-me do livro de Desmond Morris. Está lá tudo. A Tribo do futebol explica o principio de tudo, para o bem e para o mal, no universo do futebol. Se houver mais uma pessoa interessada neste ensaio, já valeu a pena falar esta meia hora.
The team had an assignment this week. Scott, Jeff, and Reneé assigned the others a piece of media to enjoy (okay, so maybe enjoy isn't quite the right word). Jeff's pick was the early aught film Grandma's Boy. Keeping in character, Scott assigned Godfrey Reggio's film Koyaanisqatsi, *sung in a dark, sepulchral basso profondo.* Reneé said, let's change it up and listen to PJ Harvey's debut album Dry. The team discuss and dare we say .. insult each other's picks? All in good fun of course! Discussion includes reference to zoologist Desmond Morris, Pierre Bordeaux, the habitus theory, and The Bridges of Madison County. _ Follow us on Facebook | Twitter _ Reneé Bibby is a graphic designer, writer, and teacher. / Tweet + Instagram: @special feather Jeff Snyder is a Tucson native who received his B.A. in Anthropology from the University of Arizona. He is the founder of The Bandwagon Fans channel on YouTube, an underwater portrait photographer, and a soldier since 1998. Scott Griessel lives in South Tucson, Arizona with his wife, Anna, who produces What the What. Together they see to the needs of two demanding cats and operate Creatista, a film, video and photography production company. He doesn’t have a superpower, but is pretty good at making breakfast. Anna Harrison Griessel likes to quietly make things happen behind the scene at What the What Podcast and at Creatista.com. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/wtwpopcast/message
This week we note that the Swedish Skeptics' article from last week concerning Thomas Erikson's nonsense personality book “Surrounded by Idiots” has gotten some attention from other skeptics, among other things Pontus was a guest on the last episode of the Skeptic Zone podcast to talk about it. In history this week we talk about Desmond Morris and his role in the Aquatic Ape hypothesis and then Pontus Pokes the Pope about the fact that the two living popes are at odds regarding celibacy and also that the charity money from Peter's Pence goes straight into the coffers of the Vatican. In the news this week: Contrary to what you may have heard, Finland does not plan to go to a four-day working week, in Russia 800 science papers have been retracted and the Eurobarometer shows that EU citizens are concerned about climate change. Andrew Wakefield will screen the new film Vaxxed II at a public venue in Notting Hill, the Goop Lab will feature the Dutch “Iceman” Wim Hof, an Italian court has against scientific consensus ruled that mobile phones cause brain tumours and John Cook is publishing a comic book about climate change denial. We hope Skeptics will help translate it! We end by handing a Really Wrong Award to the UK Home Office and the Ministry of Justice for believing in lie detectors. Enjoy! Segments: Intro; Greetings; This Week; Pontus Pokes the Pope; News; Really Wrong; Quote and Farewell; Outro; Out-takes Events Calendar: http://theesp.eu/events_in_europe
Research presented by the late Desmond Morris, and other sexologists would argue that they are.
Lord Baker was Chairman of the Conservative Party at the time of Margaret Thatcher’s fall. He’d been given the job with specific aim of keeping in No 10 - and until November 1990 all seemed to be going fine. But Mrs Thatcher lost her temper with Geoffrey Howe in cabinet - he resigned - and gave a devastating speech to parliament calling for her to go. Even then he thinks she could have survived had she been willing to schmooze backbenchers, appoint a decent campaign manager, and face down her cabinet. Had she done so - her chairman thinks she would have gone on to an unprecedented fourth election victory Previous episodes include interviews with politicians Tom King, John Gummer, John Wakeham, Lord Mackay - and officials Robin Butler, Caroline Slocock,Charles Powell, Barry Potter and Desmond Morris
Today, more than one-half of the world's population lives in cities. In every corner of the world, people are moving to cities at a rapid and geometric pace. The urban migration taking place today is both historic and inevitable. Our cities represent the ultimate triumph and organizing principle of humanity. They are more than either the concrete jungle portrayed by Billy Wilder in the Lost Weekend, or the human zoo, that Desmond Morris claimed. The great San Francisco columnist, Herb Caen, one said of cities, “that they should not be judged just by their length and width, but by the broadness of their vision and the height of their dreams.” They are, in some ways, the ultimate achievements of mankind. Few understand them better than Monica L. Smith, a professor of anthropology and professor in the Institute of the Environment and Sustainability at the UCLA where she holds a chair in Indian Studies and serves as the director of the South Asian Archeology Laboratory in the Cotsen Institute of Archeology. She is the author, most recently of Cities: The First 6,000 Years My conversation with Monica Smith:
A tremendously helpful study on the nature and practice of praise and worship in the Bible with clear advice as to how we can all move into a greater freedom in this area! Desmond Morris wasn't the first to draw attention to the subject of body language, or people-watching as he calls it, because the Word of God beat him to it by a few thousand years: and nowhere is this seen more clearly than in the understanding we can gain from the Scriptures on this subject. The Bible shows us how, by using our bodies, we can actually experience a greater control over our emotions and inward mental condition. Hang-ups and inhibitions are squarely faced and dealt with, and Beresford sends out a heart-felt plea that all pressure techniques, along with all forms of public coercion, be completely halted. This talk will be of tremendous benefit to both the freest, and most inhibited, of believers.
I Episode 3: Miss Microbiome! In this weeks episode we talk about missing out parts of last weeks episode, Quotes from Desmond Morris, The FABULOUS Angelica Huston in The Witches, Having IBS-d, Your Microbiome, Stress + your Microbiome, Sugar + UR gut health, Some Podcasts I love at the moment, More Angelica Huston in the Witches, The most exciting area of scientific research at the moment, Upcoming episodes, childhood TV themes and much, much more! Don’t forget to let us know your views + reviews by leaving one plz, subscribing or emailing us using hola@feelthefacade.com
Entertainment Marketing - Event Marketing and Digital Marketing by Laurent Lootens - Lapin Quotidien
After working for more than a decade as a General Manager for employers like TNT Express, Brussels Airport, Dachser, BAFI and Aviapartner, Philippe Fierens decided to start his own business and to be an entrepreneur. "My wife gave me a wake up call. My life was all about work and there was no balance. Since I started ExSeCo, a company in executive search, I am much happier", says Philippe. He loves Desmond Morris and walking on graveyards to put things in the right perspectives. He also talks about how he selects his candidates. I really enjoyed this talk. Hope you will enjoy it too! You can reach him via https://www.linkedin.com/in/philippe-fierens-bba2a33/
Evolutionary Psychology and Sex In this episode, Rebecca tells us about Evolutionary Psychology, examining our roles and interactions through a biological and historical lens. Listen in as she compares our human proclivities to our great ape relatives. Animal Roles – Not an Excuse Our rules and culture help us to maintain our civility, but males and females still have biological roles. Hear Rebecca talk about the basic ideas of a male's desire to spread his seed and a female's inclination to be choosy and selective. Evolution of Lust and Romance While nature and nurture are the major contributing factors to our biology and we share some main characteristics with great apes, there are still major differences between humans and other great apes. Enjoy the show as Rebecca presents a unique series of examples comparing and contrasting sexual differences between great apes and humans. What happened to Estrus? Listen to Rebecca talk about ideas relating to Desmond Morris, famed author of The Naked Ape. Hear some of the modern and historical adaptations that humans have developed as open signs of Estrus are not as readily visible as they are in our great ape relatives. Great Apes and Humans Rebecca presents a viewpoint on Modern Civilization and the inclination towards war and aggressive tendencies. We enjoy some interesting commentary discussing the variations of sexual proclivities in the great ape world and the fascinating habits of one particular species, the Bonobo. How do these perspectives help humans? Tune in to hear Rebecca offer a personal anecdote. We learn the importance of the nose in choosing a mate and how this can help us better understand our similarities to the great apes, and more importantly develop a better understanding between partners. “Understanding our evolutionary past helps us seem, yes, more animalistic, but more human.” Conflict in Power Listen as Rebecca helps to develop further, the understanding of the inequality of power between men and women and the unfortunate consequences. On the Romantic Side What is the importance of a kiss? How does a kiss play a part in romantic behaviors? Join in to hear about the importance of kissing and other romantic behaviors. Is there romance in suicide or jumping out of trees? Find out as Rebecca presents this issue and others within historical and cultural contexts. Listen as Rebecca clarifies the purpose of the texts of the Atharvaveda, the Knowledge Storehouse of Procedures for Everyday Life, and the Kamasutra. We enjoy some lighthearted banter as the discussion continues, comparing these ancient texts with a modern take on kissing tips from Bustle.com. The Importance of Size It's not what you think, as Rebecca clarifies some of her own perspectives along with research that demonstrates women's preferences for something bigger, but it's not about the genitals. Tune in and find out. About Rebecca Coffey Rebecca Coffey is an award-winning science journalist and television documentarian. Over the course of her long career, she has contributed regularly to Scientific American and Discover magazines and to major market newspapers. She is a commentator for Vermont Public Radio and a columnist for PsychologyToday.com. Coffey is also a novelist and a humorist. Links and How to contact Rebecca Coffey Other Books by the Author: Anna Freud's Story (She Writes Press, 2014). A novel. Nietzsche's Angel Food Cake: And Other Recipes for the Intellectually Famished (Beck and Branch, 2013). Humor. Unspeakable Truths and Happy Endings: Human Cruelty and the New Trauma Therapy (Sidran Press, 1998). Nonfiction. More information: https://RebeccaCoffey.com and https://ScienceandLust.com. More info on the Better Sex Podcast: Web - https://www.bettersexpodcast.com/ Sex Health Quiz - http://sexhealthquiz.com/ If you're enjoying the podcast and want to be a part of making sure it continues in the future, consider being a patron. With a small monthly pledge, you can support the costs of putting this show together. For as little as $2 per month, you can get advance access to each episode. For just a bit more, you will receive an advance copy of a chapter of my new book. And for $10 per month, you get all that plus an invitation to an online Q&A chat with me once a quarter. Learn more at https://www.patreon.com/bettersexpodcast Better Sex with Jessa Zimmerman https://businessinnovatorsradio.com/better-sex/More info and resources: How Big a Problem is Your Sex Life? Quiz – https://www.sexlifequiz.com The Course – https://www.intimacywithease.com The Book – https://www.sexwithoutstress.com Podcast Website – https://www.intimacywithease.com Access the Free webinar: How to make sex easy and fun for both of you: https://intimacywithease.com/masterclass Secret Podcast for the Higher Desire Partner: https://www.intimacywithease.com/hdppodcast Secret Podcast for the Lower Desire Partner: https://www.intimacywithease.com/ldppodcast
Evolutionary Psychology and SexIn this episode, Rebecca tells us about Evolutionary Psychology, examining our roles and interactions through a biological and historical lens. Listen in as she compares our human proclivities to our great ape relatives.Animal Roles – Not an ExcuseOur rules and culture help us to maintain our civility, but males and females still have biological roles. Hear Rebecca talk about the basic ideas of a male’s desire to spread his seed and a female’s inclination to be choosy and selective.Evolution of Lust and RomanceWhile nature and nurture are the major contributing factors to our biology and we share some main characteristics with great apes, there are still major differences between humans and other great apes. Enjoy the show as Rebecca presents a unique series of examples comparing and contrasting sexual differences between great apes and humans.What happened to Estrus?Listen to Rebecca talk about ideas relating to Desmond Morris, famed author of The Naked Ape. Hear some of the modern and historical adaptations that humans have developed as open signs of Estrus are not as readily visible as they are in our great ape relatives.Great Apes and HumansRebecca presents a viewpoint on Modern Civilization and the inclination towards war and aggressive tendencies. We enjoy some interesting commentary discussing the variations of sexual proclivities in the great ape world and the fascinating habits of one particular species, the Bonobo.How do these perspectives help humans?Tune in to hear Rebecca offer a personal anecdote. We learn the importance of the nose in choosing a mate and how this can help us better understand our similarities to the great apes, and more importantly develop a better understanding between partners.“Understanding our evolutionary past helps us seem, yes, more animalistic, but more human.”Conflict in PowerListen as Rebecca helps to develop further, the understanding of the inequality of power between men and women and the unfortunate consequences.On the Romantic SideWhat is the importance of a kiss? How does a kiss play a part in romantic behaviors? Join in to hear about the importance of kissing and other romantic behaviors. Is there romance in suicide or jumping out of trees? Find out as Rebecca presents this issue and others within historical and cultural contexts.Listen as Rebecca clarifies the purpose of the texts of the Atharvaveda, the Knowledge Storehouse of Procedures for Everyday Life, and the Kamasutra. We enjoy some lighthearted banter as the discussion continues, comparing these ancient texts with a modern take on kissing tips from Bustle.com.The Importance of SizeIt’s not what you think, as Rebecca clarifies some of her own perspectives along with research that demonstrates women’s preferences for something bigger, but it’s not about the genitals. Tune in and find out.About Rebecca CoffeyRebecca Coffey is an award-winning science journalist and television documentarian. Over the course of her long career, she has contributed regularly to Scientific American and Discover magazines and to major market newspapers. She is a commentator for Vermont Public Radio and a columnist for PsychologyToday.com. Coffey is also a novelist and a humorist.Links and How to contact Rebecca CoffeyOther Books by the Author:Anna Freud’s Story (She Writes Press, 2014). A novel.Nietzsche’s Angel Food Cake: And Other Recipes for the Intellectually Famished (Beck and Branch, 2013). Humor.Unspeakable Truths and Happy Endings: Human Cruelty and the New Trauma Therapy (Sidran Press, 1998). Nonfiction.More information:https://RebeccaCoffey.com and https://ScienceandLust.com.More info on the Better Sex Podcast:Web - https://www.bettersexpodcast.com/Sex Health Quiz - http://sexhealthquiz.com/If you’re enjoying the podcast and want to be a part of making sure it continues in the future, consider being a patron. With a small monthly pledge, you can support the costs of putting this show together. For as little as $2 per month, you can get advance access to each episode. For just a bit more, you will receive an advance copy of a chapter of my new book. And for $10 per month, you get all that plus an invitation to an online Q&A chat with me once a quarter. Learn more at https://www.patreon.com/bettersexpodcastBetter Sex with Jessa Zimmermanhttps://businessinnovatorsradio.com/better-sex/
Evolutionary Psychology and SexIn this episode, Rebecca tells us about Evolutionary Psychology, examining our roles and interactions through a biological and historical lens. Listen in as she compares our human proclivities to our great ape relatives.Animal Roles – Not an ExcuseOur rules and culture help us to maintain our civility, but males and females still have biological roles. Hear Rebecca talk about the basic ideas of a male’s desire to spread his seed and a female’s inclination to be choosy and selective.Evolution of Lust and RomanceWhile nature and nurture are the major contributing factors to our biology and we share some main characteristics with great apes, there are still major differences between humans and other great apes. Enjoy the show as Rebecca presents a unique series of examples comparing and contrasting sexual differences between great apes and humans.What happened to Estrus?Listen to Rebecca talk about ideas relating to Desmond Morris, famed author of The Naked Ape. Hear some of the modern and historical adaptations that humans have developed as open signs of Estrus are not as readily visible as they are in our great ape relatives.Great Apes and HumansRebecca presents a viewpoint on Modern Civilization and the inclination towards war and aggressive tendencies. We enjoy some interesting commentary discussing the variations of sexual proclivities in the great ape world and the fascinating habits of one particular species, the Bonobo.How do these perspectives help humans?Tune in to hear Rebecca offer a personal anecdote. We learn the importance of the nose in choosing a mate and how this can help us better understand our similarities to the great apes, and more importantly develop a better understanding between partners.“Understanding our evolutionary past helps us seem, yes, more animalistic, but more human.”Conflict in PowerListen as Rebecca helps to develop further, the understanding of the inequality of power between men and women and the unfortunate consequences.On the Romantic SideWhat is the importance of a kiss? How does a kiss play a part in romantic behaviors? Join in to hear about the importance of kissing and other romantic behaviors. Is there romance in suicide or jumping out of trees? Find out as Rebecca presents this issue and others within historical and cultural contexts.Listen as Rebecca clarifies the purpose of the texts of the Atharvaveda, the Knowledge Storehouse of Procedures for Everyday Life, and the Kamasutra. We enjoy some lighthearted banter as the discussion continues, comparing these ancient texts with a modern take on kissing tips from Bustle.com.The Importance of SizeIt’s not what you think, as Rebecca clarifies some of her own perspectives along with research that demonstrates women’s preferences for something bigger, but it’s not about the genitals. Tune in and find out.About Rebecca CoffeyRebecca Coffey is an award-winning science journalist and television documentarian. Over the course of her long career, she has contributed regularly to Scientific American and Discover magazines and to major market newspapers. She is a commentator for Vermont Public Radio and a columnist for PsychologyToday.com. Coffey is also a novelist and a humorist.Links and How to contact Rebecca CoffeyOther Books by the Author:Anna Freud’s Story (She Writes Press, 2014). A novel.Nietzsche’s Angel Food Cake: And Other Recipes for the Intellectually Famished (Beck and Branch, 2013). Humor.Unspeakable Truths and Happy Endings: Human Cruelty and the New Trauma Therapy (Sidran Press, 1998). Nonfiction.More information:https://RebeccaCoffey.com and https://ScienceandLust.com.More info on the Better Sex Podcast:Web - https://www.bettersexpodcast.com/Sex Health Quiz - http://sexhealthquiz.com/If you’re enjoying the podcast and want to be a part of making sure it continues in the future, consider being a patron. With a small monthly pledge, you can support the costs of putting this show together. For as little as $2 per month, you can get advance access to each episode. For just a bit more, you will receive an advance copy of a chapter of my new book. And for $10 per month, you get all that plus an invitation to an online Q&A chat with me once a quarter. Learn more at https://www.patreon.com/bettersexpodcastBetter Sex with Jessa Zimmermanhttps://businessinnovatorsradio.com/better-sex/
En este episodio: -La batalla por la Isla de las Especias. -El Delirio de la canela. -La sed de sal. -La receta mística. -La pimienta y el poder. -El ajo y el aliento del diablo (Fragmento de Desmond Morris). -El orégano, la menta y el jengibre. -La ruta de las especias. -El extraordinario sabor de la vida. Música: -The Sixth Catharsis, Oceanscent. -Funky Suspense, Bensound. -Jazzfrenchy, Bensound. -Madoka, Explore. -Mezcal y Sangrita, Bazzmatazz. -Wannabe, Spice Girls (instrumental)
Edição de 13 Julho 2018 - "A Tribo do Futebol", de Desmond Morris
De neanderthalers waren dom, lomp en bruut, dáárom zijn ze uitgestorven. Dit is misschien wel het grootste misverstand over deze prehistorische mensensoort. Maar de neanderthaler lijkt meer op ons dan we dachten. Sterker nog, onderzoek naar onze genen verraadt: ze leven voort in ons. Waaraan merk je dat?Presentatie: Lucas Brouwers, Gemma Venhuizen en Hendrik SpieringProductie Mirjam van Zuidam@lucasbrouwers // GemmaJV / @hendrikspiering
Anders dan de meeste zoogdieren is de mens al evoluerend zijn vacht verloren. Waar en waarom zijn we dat haar eigenlijk kwijtgeraakt? In deze pilot van NRC-podcast Onbehaarde Apen duiken wetenschapsredacteuren Lucas Brouwers, Hendrik Spiering en Gemma Venhuizen in alle theorieën die er rondom deze vraag bestaan.Presentatie: Lucas Brouwers, Gemma Venhuizen en Hendrik Spiering.Productie: Mirjam van Zuidam.@lucasbrouwers // @hendrikspiering // GemmaJV // @nrcwetenschap
Nearly five million people in the United States have Alzheimer’s disease. In 30 years, that number is estimated to be 16 million In today’s episode, Ken and Dawn interview Dr. Stephen Cunnane, a Canadian physiologist whose extensive research into Alzheimer’s disease is showing how ketones can be used as part of a prevention approach that helps delay or slow down the onset of Alzheimer’s. Cunnane is a metabolic physiologist at the University of Sherbrooke in Sherbrooke, Quebec. He is the author of five books, including” Survival of the Fattest: The Key to Human Brain Evolution,” which was published in 2005, and “Human Brain Evolution: Influence of Fresh and Coastal Food Resources,” which was published in 2010. He earned his Ph.D. in Physiology at McGill University in 1980 and did post-doctoral research on nutrition and brain development in Aberdeen, Scotland, London, and Nova Scotia. From 1986 to 2003, he was a faculty member in the Department of Nutritional Sciences at the University of Toronto where his research focused on the role of omega-3 fatty acids in brain development and human health. He also did research on the relation between ketones and a high-fat ketogenic diet on brain development. In 2003, Dr. Cunnane was awarded a senior Canada Research Chair at the Research Center on Aging and became a full professor at the University of Sherbrooke. He has published more than 280 peer-reviewed research papers and was elected to the French National Academy of Medicine in 2009. Links: Lower Brain 18F-Fluorodeoxyglucose Uptake: Castellano et al AD dPET J Alz Dis 2015 Brain glucose and acetoacetate metabolism: Nugent et al dPET YE Neurobiol Aging 2014 Energetic and nutritional constraints on infant brain development: Cunnane & Crawford J Human Evol 2014 Inverse relationship between brain glucose and ketone metabolism in adults: Courchesne-Loyer et al PET KD JCBFM 2016 A cross-sectional comparison of brain glucose and ketone metabolism in cognitively healthy older adults: Croteau et al. AD MCI CMR Exper Gerontol 2017 A 3-Month Aerobic Training Program Improves Brain Energy Metabolism in Mild Alzheimer’s Disease: Castellano et al. exercise ketones JAD 2017 Show notes: 3:33: Dawn mentions that Stephen was born in London but that his family emigrated to Canada when he was an infant. She asks him about growing up in a suburb of Montreal. 4:02: Ken mentions that he has been told by a reliable source that as soon as Stephen got into high school he spent a lot of time in the chemistry lab, where sometimes created mischief. 4:58: Dawn asks if it is true that Stephen nearly flunked out of college when he first started. 5:16: Dawn comments that Stephen got his PHD in physiology at McGill University which is when his interest in science really caught on and asks how that came about. 5:55: Stephen talks about communicating with Desmond Morris while Stephen was working on his post-doc. 8:03: Dawn asks about Stephen’s post-doctoral research, for which he traveled to Aberdeen London and Nova Scotia; as well as what prompted his interest in nutrition in the brain. 9:01: Dawn mentions that in 1986 Stephen became a faculty member in the department of nutritional sciences at the University of Toronto. She asks how he ended up teaching nutrition when he didn’t have a degree in nutrition. 10:33: Stephen talks about accepting a senior Canada Research Chair at the Research Center of Aging and a full professorship at the University of Sherbrooke. 11:57: Ken talks about Stephen’s interest in human evolution how it eventually led him to research the nutritional importance of shore-based foods and omega-3 fatty acid in particular in the development of human’s brains. He asks Stephen to talk about his work leading up to the hypothesis that humans evolved near the water.
One of the major criticisms of social media is that it's disconnecting us, as individuals, from society and from real physical interactions. But if a key element of 'tribe' is communication and connectivity then the digital world arguably holds unlimited bounds for tribes. Mumsnet for instance has changed how we view mums as a social group. While marketers and advertisers may have seen them as a target market, they probably never thought they would be an ever-connected all-powerful tribe who could even make politicians quiver in their boots. In this weeks' episode of The Digital Human, Aleks Krotoski asks if rather than separating us, the digital world is helping us revive old tribal connections. If the internet has heralded the death of distance, what do these new kind of tribes look like? And do we relate to each other in different ways now that so much of our lives are lived online? Contributors: zoologist Desmond Morris; author of The Patter Michael Munro; academic and journalist Meredith Clark; internet activist Ethan Zuckerman and digital anthropologists Daniel Miller and Elisabetta Costa. Producer: Caitlin Smith.
Dr. Kenneth Ford is Founder and Chief Executive Officer of the Florida Institute for Human & Machine Cognition (IHMC), a research institute that is home to world-class scientists and engineers focused on building technology that extends human cognition, perception, locomotion and resilience. He received his Ph.D. in Computer Science from Tulane University and is the author of hundreds of scientific papers and six books, with interests in an array of areas including artificial intelligence, cognitive science, and human performance under extreme conditions. Ken is also co-host to the popular and respected STEM-Talk podcast which recently won first place in the 12th Annual People’s Choice Podcast Awards in the Science and Medicine category. Many leaders in the areas of health and exercise physiology appear on STEM-talk, with a focus on the scientific elements behind extending human longevity and performance. Ken is here with us today to talk about some current projects at IHMC, artificial intelligence, ketosis, and his favorite cutting-edge training methods. Here’s the outline of this interview with Ken Ford: [00:04:16] Episode 49 of STEM-Talk, first place People's Choice Awards in the Science and Medicine category. [00:06:43] Current projects. [00:07:10] Dr. James Allen, World Modelers. [00:08:54] Economic modeling, weather modeling for crop failure. [00:09:45] Cognitive orthotics. [00:10:36] Dr. Dawn Kernagis, brain glymphatic system. Podcast: Human Performance and Resilience in Extreme Environments. [00:11:52] Artificial gravity. [00:12:34] The double secret selection committee. [00:13:56] Extending human capabilities. [00:16:35] Locomotion for paraplegics. [00:17:31] Humans in extreme environments. [00:19:51] Space flight and aging. [00:20:41] Few rules but strong culture and a flat organisational structure. [00:22:07] Growth mindset. [00:22:41] Choosing people rather than an agenda. [00:28:09] Fostering a network of friends and experts. [00:28:46] Barry Barish, STEM-talk Episode 10. [00:31:37] Understanding the limits of knowledge. [00:32:47] Do the big tech companies have too much power? [00:35:51] EU 2.5$ penalty for Google. [00:36:45] Google D.C. influence operation. [00:38:36] Duckduckgo. [00:39:10] The term artificial intelligence. [00:42:41] The danger of a superhuman AI. [00:44:21] HAL 9000. [00:45:09] Dropped a physics. [00:45:58] Driverless cars. [00:51:52] Ketogenic diet. [00:53:23] The benefits of ketones. [00:53:55] Signalling functions of beta hydroxybutyrate (BHB) and acetoacetate. [00:54:26] Study: Shimazu, Tadahiro, et al. "Suppression of oxidative stress by β-hydroxybutyrate, an endogenous histone deacetylase inhibitor." Science 339.6116 (2013): 211-214. [00:55:11] Study: Newman, John C., et al. "Ketogenic diet reduces midlife mortality and improves memory in aging mice." Cell metabolism 26.3 (2017): 547-557. [00:55:57] Study: Sleiman, Sama F., et al. "Exercise promotes the expression of brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) through the action of the ketone body β-hydroxybutyrate." Elife 5 (2016). [00:57:03] Study: Roberts, Megan N., et al. "A ketogenic diet extends longevity and healthspan in adult mice." Cell metabolism 26.3 (2017): 539-546. [00:58:03] Podcast: Why Your Diet Isn’t Working: Undereating and Overtraining, with Megan Roberts. [00:58:24] Podcast: The Keto Masterclass with Robb Wolf. [00:59:38] Virta Health, results with 0.5 - 1 mmol/L of BHB. [01:00:11] Study: Shimazu, Tadahiro, et al. "Suppression of oxidative stress by β-hydroxybutyrate, an endogenous histone deacetylase inhibitor." Science 339.6116 (2013): 211-214. [01:01:01] Study: Cunnane, Stephen C., et al. "Can ketones compensate for deteriorating brain glucose uptake during aging? Implications for the risk and treatment of Alzheimer's disease." Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1367.1 (2016): 12-20. [01:02:53] Exogenous ketones. [01:05:26] Exercise. [01:06:33] Hierarchical sets. [01:07:11] Art DeVany. [01:08:17] Episode 30 of STEM-Talk. [01:10:15] Eccentric movements. [01:10:41] Study: Schoenfeld, Brad J., et al. "Hypertrophic effects of concentric vs. eccentric muscle actions: a systematic review and meta-analysis." The Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research 31.9 (2017): 2599-2608. [01:13:37] Blood flow restriction training. [01:14:41] Episode 34 of STEM-Talk. [01:16:31] Dr. Jim Stray-Gundersen, Dr. Adam Anz. [01:18:13] Kaatsu and Go B Strong (discount code: IHMC). [01:18:43] Vibration platform training. [01:19:16] Power Plate. [01:21:12] Electrical muscle stimulation (EMS). [01:22:56] PowerDot. [01:26:41] Kettlebells. [01:27:04] Pavel Tsatsouline. [01:28:21] Strong First, Coaches Mark Reifkind and Tracy Reifkind. [01:29:15] Why not cardio? [01:30:36] Zoo humans. Book: The Human Zoo: A Zoologist’s Classic Study of the Urban Animal, by Desmond Morris [01:32:12] Study: Fain, Elizabeth, and Cara Weatherford. "Comparative study of millennials' (age 20-34 years) grip and lateral pinch with the norms." Journal of Hand Therapy 29.4 (2016): 483-488. [01:34:56] Don't be normal. [01:38:07] Finding versus inventing a purpose. [01:41:45] Cal Newport. [01:43:19] IHMC.us newsletter.
Welcome, aggressive vs assertive donuts, history of the word "bitches" in the show title, women in music, body image & plastic surgery, viewer mail- bodily rights (abortion) "child in the woods" argument, abortion bill, sex, marriage and divorce, reproduction, Desmond Morris, body scent and sexual signals, Florynce Rae "Flo" Kennedy, Bless their Heart- Flat Earther Mic Hughes rocket launch,"secretly" gay, combat penis response.
Every mammal has mammary glands, but only humans have permanent, rounded, full-on breasts. Why? What are breasts really for, anyway? The answers matter, because they influence how we see each other and see ourselves. Florence Williams walks up the largest breasts in the world (they’re in England) and talks to Oxford’s Desmond Morris, author of the classic, The Naked Ape.
In 1967 the zoologist and broadcaster, Desmond Morris, wrote about humans in the same way that animals were described. The Naked Ape provoked criticism from religious thinkers and feminists alike, but it was an instant bestseller. His idea that we're not so different from our animal cousins was revolutionary at the time. Farhana Haider speaks to Desmond Morris about his provocative book.Photo: Desmond Morris author of the Naked Ape. Credit: BBC
In 1967 the zoologist and broadcaster, Desmond Morris, wrote about humans in the same way that animals were described. The Naked Ape provoked criticism from religious thinkers and feminists alike, but it was an instant bestseller. His idea that we're not so different from our animal cousins was revolutionary at the time. Farhana Haider speaks to Desmond Morris about his provocative book. Photo: Desmond Morris author of the Naked Ape. Credit: BBC
Natalie Marsh joins Uncomfortable Conversations to discuss the problems of unconventional, exceptional thinkers trying to thrive in a conventional world. Neuro atypicals, including those with Low Latent Inhibition (LLI), Autism, ADHD, and so on, must learn to construct their own societies in a world not made for how they naturally are, in spite of their great gifts. From the episode of Prison Break where Michael Scofield is diagnosed with Low Latent Inhibition: "People who suffer from low latent inhibition see everyday things like your or I do…but where we just process the image…they process everything. Their brains are more open to incoming stimuli and the surrounding environment. Other people’s brains, yours and mine, shut out the same information. We have to do it in order to keep our sanity. If someone with a low IQ has low latent inhibition, it almost always results in mental illness. But, if someone has a high IQ, it almost always results in creative genius." A genius is someone who is able to push the limits of normal conceptions of intellectual ability. Intelligence is the ability to categorize information. They are the next step in the evolution of the human psyche, in at least one specific domain. However, everyone symbolizes information differently, accounting for the various traits we associate with different “types” of genius. A person can be extremely capable in one domain of thinking (such as mathematics or language), but weak in others because of how they conceptualize the necessary factors. A great painter understands the symbolic concepts of color and proportion. A musician’s ears are equipped to pick up sound better, and his mind to rearrange it meaningfully. Geniuses and divergent thinkers are often socially isolated from average minds because they do not have a way to communicate effectively. The way they perceive the world is just too different. It often leads to a life of quiet desperation or rapid revolutionary innovation. Societies change over time as minority subgroups rapidly become more successful than the majority norms which randomly bred them. This is how humanity becomes more intelligent over time. Neuroatypicals today are analogous to the random genetic mutations that ultimately change the entire DNA of a species. In the modern world, we are arbitrarily born into and conditioned to be part of social groups we never chose for ourselves. We are limited by trying to understand the world through the group we were born into. Social outliers question these rules and branch off on their own to form new groups with new rules. If you can live as an outlier but still meaningfully participate in society as it is, you can have the best of both worlds and still push the world in a positive direction. All you have to do is be able to adapt. Society has prepared many conventional paths that are designed to give the average person an averagely successful life. For extreme outliers, these established paths are ideological death sentences. They must be willing to explore and design their own lifestyles, brick by brick, to find their own highest happiness. They need an indomitable will to match their powerful intellect. Confidence is often mistaken for arrogance or narcissism. This is ironic in comparison to the fact that our culture glorifies specific types of acceptable exceptionalism, so long as they do not threaten the average mind too far. It is okay for someone to claim to be superior in a very specific way, so long as you have other ways to bolster your own ego. We don’t mind if someone is taller, faster, better at playing the piano, and so on, because we know we have other qualities. The moment a claim of superiority is generalized enough to apply to everyone and threaten their ego, a dominance dispute is created. The world resists. People of average intelligence can feel very threatened when faced with intelligence as an objective concept that can be measured and compared on an equal playing field. No one wants to consider the possibility that their brain does not work as well as someone else’s. It was not until recently that outlying behaviors, such as nerdy and geeky pastimes, became socially celebrated. Nowadays, it seems that nearly every big budget movie has its roots in books, video games, and comics, which were once shunned and specialty pursuits to be ashamed of. The story of outlying behaviors is already changing. Focus on your own evolution. The only person you can be responsible for is yourself. Do not be limited by your attachment to society. Build your own society so that you can be yourself to the maximum possible degree. Pain is what tells us that something in our lives need to change. When you feel friction in your social life, question what is wrong and what you can alter to create the life that is best suited for you. People will fight you because you are different. Your existence challenges them, forcing them to consider that reality might be different than they are comfortable dealing with. You disrupt the foundations of their identity, so they lash out. This is why they hate you on an existential level. Until they are ready, you cannot co-exist in the same space as they do. If you just a little bit different than the norms of your environment, you may be celebrated for what makes you superior. If you are extremely different, you will be demonized and disadvantaged. People of IQ 120-140 find themselves as leaders among averagely intelligent people. People of IQ 150 or higher may find it impossible to interact at all. If two normal people give birth to an exceptional person, they will struggle to raise and guide them effectively because the offspring will outgrow them much sooner than they or society are prepared to accept. A young child might quickly become smarter and more mature than his parents before he even becomes a teenager. These are the children who will suffer the most, resenting their own gifts and failing to apply them productively. They need guides and role models who can meet them where they are. As normal society progresses in its acceptance of outliers, it will become easier for unconventional young people to follow their path and find their place in the world. Things mentioned: Low Latent Inhibition group on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/151833815112 Prison Break: Michael Scofield's Low Latent Inhibition (LLI) diagnosis: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JDliPQAJIsY UCWG 006: Does Knowledge without Power Lead to Idle Suffering? Matching Intellect with Boldness of Action: https://gregorydiehl.net/ucwg-006-knowledge-power-lead-idle-suffering-matching-intellect-boldness-action/ UCWG 027 - Are You Self-Aware Enough to Parent Your Own Offspring? Unschooling and Unconventional Child Rearing in Vilcabamba, Ecuador: https://gregorydiehl.net/ucwg-027-self-aware-parent-offspring-unschooling-unconventional-child-rearing-vilcabamba-ecuador/ Travel As Transformation by Gregory V. Diehl: http://amzn.to/2fDzgkM IQ and the Problem of Social Adjustment by Grady Towers: http://www.triplenine.org/Portals/0/Docs/download/IQ_and_the_Problem_of_Social_Adjustment.pdf The Naked Ape by Desmond Morris: http://amzn.to/2rQVque
Nach einer länglichen (!) Abschweifung über malende Tiere redet Markus über das Buch „Der nackte Affe“ des britischen Zoologen und surrealistischen Künstlers Desmond Morris. Benjamin erklärt (ab 56:05) mithilfe des Konzepts der „Aboutness“ des Philosophen Arthur C. Danto, warum viele moderne Kunstwerke nicht mehr so aussehen wie Kunstwerke. Ab 1:34:55 gibt es einen Nachklapp. Folge … Folge 033 – „Der nackte Affe“ & „Aboutness“ der modernen Kunst weiterlesen
Jackie Brown arrived in Deia on Mallorca’s north coast in 1959 and, on her first night in the village, met artist, and later eminent archaeologist, Bill Waldren. A few months later, Jackie married Bill and they lived in Deia and Palma on and off for many years. Jackie has now returned to Deia and she gave Shirley Roberts a candid interview about her extraordinarily full life. Over the years, Jackie, Bill and their four daughters survived considerable adversity – not least of which being their always precarious financial circumstances – but this is not merely a tale of tenacity, this is a story of survival in a bygone age and a vivid portrait of a unique and celebrated village undergoing profound changes. Added to that, what begins as social history becomes a chronicle of the interactions of a number of leading writers, artists, musicians and scientists of the twentieth century, whose paths crossed because of their connections to Deia and to the Waldrens. Luke Rhinehart, Desmond Morris, Robert Graves, Richard Branson and the origins of EarthWatch – all of these and many more play a part in Jackie’s life and she in theirs. This interview is why radio and podcasting were invented. It was first broadcast on August 30th. For more of Shirley Roberts’ wonderful interviews, and for many tales of adventure, visit Boat Radio The Port of Sóller Radio Programme is a Boat Radio / Sollerweb production You'll find Shirley at www.sollerweb.com
Jackie Brown arrived in Deia on Mallorca’s north coast in 1959 and, on her first night in the village, met artist – later eminent archaeologist – Bill Waldren. A few months later, Jackie married Bill and they lived in Deia and Palma on and off for many years. Jackie has now returned to Deia and she gave Shirley Roberts a candid interview about her extraordinarily full life. Over the years, Jackie, Bill and their four daughters, survived considerable adversity – not least of which being their always precarious financial circumstances – but this is not merely a tale of tenacity, this is a story of survival in a bygone age and a vivid portrait of a unique and celebrated village undergoing profound changes. Added to that, what begins as social history becomes a chronicle of the interactions of a number of leading writers, artists, musicians and scientists of the twentieth century, whose paths crossed because of their connections to Deia and to the Waldrens. Luke Rhinehart, Desmond Morris, Robert Graves, Richard Branson and the origins of EarthWatch – all of these and many more play a part in Jackie’s life and she in theirs. This interview is why radio and podcasting were invented. To hear more of Shirley Roberts’ wonderful interviews, go to our ‘Listen again’ page or visit www.SollerWeb.com
Bowen White author of Why Normal Isn't Healthy. Besides appearing on the front page of the Wall St. Journal and on national television programs such as CBS This Morning, Desmond Morris' The Human Animal and the PBS series The Promise of Play, Dr. Bowen White is often interviewed by radio, newspaper and magazine journalists. He has eight years of experience as a weekly TV health commentator for Kansas City's CBS-TV affiliate and also had a three year stint writing a weekly newspaper column, entitled Patient Potential, for the Kansas City Business Journal Bruce Oliver has traveled to every state in the U.S. and to over 46 countries including the British Isles, Russia, Egypt and China on river cruise lines like AmaWaterways and American Cruise Lines, on luxury cruise ships, and on escorted and independent tours. For several years he's worked as a luxury travel adviser and he develops joint ventures with businesses, groups and individuals in the food, wine and art industries to help them grow their business while hosting amazing trips of a lifetime for their clients. Bruce is recognized by the industry and has been awarded the 2013 Travel Weekly Magellan Silver Award and the 2014 Enfield's Best Cruise Agency. His company, the Virtual Luxury Network and Cruise with Bruce Enterprises is affiliated with Palm Coast Travel and the 6000 member travel cooperative, the Signature Travel Network
Zoologist, writer and broadcaster Desmond Morris chose 'Alexander's Ragtime Band' by Ella Fitzgerald and 'Be Cool' by Honor Heffernan.
Richard Coles and Suzy Klein are joined by tv presenter Kate Humble, Mark Boyle who lived without money for 3 years, and Philip Geddes who brought a stuffed penguin from Antarctica to Hampshire. Pop Idol judge Nicki Chapman shares her love of dressage, John McCarthy takes a dip in the baths of Budapest and Desmond Morris shares his Inheritance Tracks.Produced by Lizz Pearson.
Cutting Through the Matrix with Alan Watt Podcast (.xml Format)
--{ Great Transition isn't Supposition: "World Plan's Chaos is Crazy Like a Fox, As Deindustrialized Nations take Hard Knocks, But Then Old-Type Inhabitants are Dying Off, Leaving the Nations for Multicultural Toffs, A New Supertribe, Desmond Morris said, Would Emerge and Prosper Over the Dead, Private Institutions are Now in Control, Labouring to Complete a Very Old Goal, They're Senior to Governments, They're Lurking In Think-Tanks, Global Meetings, Always Working On Behalf of Their Masters, Very Stealthily, Ensuring a Spacious Planet for Super Wealthy" © Alan Watt }-- Lord Grey, Mandell House and Wilson - US Takeover from British Empire as World Policeman - Rise of Global Organizations to Full Power - Resource Wars - RIIA/CFR, Inner and Outer Party, Groups - G-20 Meeting, Economic Crisis and Global Governance - US "Extraordinary Rendition" Program, Trial in Italy - UK becomes "Addictions Capital of Europe" - Destruction of Cultures, Promotion of Drugs - Failed Countries - Bedroom Tax Should be Axed says UN - Syria Intelligence Manipulation - Scottish Nationalist Party, Use of Taxpayer Cash to Buy Land - Media Distraction by Emotive Topics - Richard Dawkins - David Attenborough and "Evolution" - MP Nigel Evans Charged with Sexual Offences - Wind Farms Killing Eagles - Home Foreclosures. (See http://www.cuttingthroughthematrix.com for article links.) *Title/Poem and Dialogue Copyrighted Alan Watt - Sept. 12, 2013 (Exempting Music, Literary Quotes, and Callers' Comments)
The Essence of Content Marketing The perfect customer is like a beautiful woman, distant and desirable and pursued by countless competitors. An appropriate metaphor, don't you think? Most advertisers want ads that equate to a magical pickup line. “Tell me what to say to this beautiful woman so that she'll rip off her clothes and jump into bed with me.” Some advertisers get downright self-righteous as they demand these magical lines. They lift their chins and sniff, “I want to hold my ads accountable.” In other words, “I want it to work immediately. Tell me how to make this beautiful woman give me what I want. Tell me what to say. I'll say anything.” Advertising people know how to craft these “direct response” messages. And the lines we tell you to say to the woman very often work! Not surprisingly, the “beautiful women” who can be won in a single conversation are mostly interested in money. It's usually about the price. And they tend not to be loyal. Courtship takes a longer path. According to behavioral psychologist Desmond Morris, the strength of a relationship is usually determined by the process that formed it. Relationships that are quickly formed are quickly broken. True courtship is an adventure and adventures take time. You've got to let the woman of your affections get to know you. You do remember that we're talking about business, don't you? All this stuff about beautiful women was just a metaphor for building long-term relationships with customers. If your website or blog provides valuable, insightful content, you're likely to become a sustaining resource that your prospective customer will grow to depend upon. This form of customer courtship is called “content marketing.” Think of it as the advertising equivalent of love letters. Ray Seggern, one of my Wizard of Ads partners, explains customer courtship as the convergence of Story, Culture and Experience. According to Ray: Story is What You Say. (Marketing) It is the personality and promises you put in your messages. Culture is Who You Are. It is the experience your employees have within your company. Experience is What You Do. It is what your customers perceive when they interact with your company. Authenticity occurs when your story and your customer's experience align. When these don't align, you get bad reviews. High Employee Morale is what happens when your story and your culture align. When these don't align, you have cancer in the building. Brand Ambassadors are born when story and culture and experience align. This is when your happy customer chooses to become a member of your family, part of your brand. In other words, the beautiful woman agrees to marry you. And because who you are and what you say and what you do are in perfect alignment, I honestly believe you'll live happily ever after together. Roy H. Williams
An interview with the author Desmond Morris. Feedback to: twitter.com/nickmargerrison
Most women can tell at least one funny story about a tragic first date. In most of these stories, a misguided man spends the entire evening saying, “Here's an example of how wonderful I am…” “Let me tell you what I can do…” “…and that's what makes me special.” Although we're rarely drawn to people who begin all their sentences with “I,” “Me,” and “My,” this first-person perspective remains central to mainstream advertising. And it's why most Americans detest mainstream advertising. “At [name of company,] we…” “Voted the number one…” “Why settle for second best?” This outdated language of self-promotion is known as “AdSpeak.” The new language of marketing is the language of Intimacy. Connectedness. Shared values. The sound of one friend talking to another. Intimate ads are believable because they confirm what the customer already knows. The fact that the advertiser knows it as well – and is willing to admit it – is what surprises and impresses the customer. Click. http://www.sunpop.com/videosamples.php (Connection.) How to Avoid “AdSpeak” in Your Ads. 1. Limit self-reference. Reduce the number of times you refer to your company or your product in your ads. (New York Times bestselling authors Jeffrey and Bryan Eisenberg offer a free, online analysis of ad copy at FutureNowInc.com. Their “http://www.futurenowinc.com/wewetext.htm (We-We Calculator)” scores ad copy instantly. Just copy and paste your ad into the text-block and the software does the rest. 2. Don't say it. Lead the customer to say it. Instead of saying, “We're honest,” say something that only an honest person would say. Let the customer respond, “Wow. That's honest.” 3. Admit the downside. It makes the upside easier to believe. Imagine the impact of a jeweler saying, “A diamond is just a symbol. The important thing is not to forget what it symbolizes.” A behavioral scientist named Desmond Morris wondered why some couples stayed together for a lifetime while other couples divorced. What he found was that couples who stayed together had usually followed similar progressions of intimacy, allowing sufficient time before advancing to the next stage. His theory was that this allowed the couple to more deeply bond during the courtship phase of the relationship. Couples who rushed through these “stages of intimacy” usually didn't form as strong a bond and were far more likely to divorce. WHAT THIS MEANS TO BUSINESS: Customer courtship should begin long before your customer is in the market for what you sell. The customer won “quick and easy” will be lost just as quickly and easily. Let's look at the 12 Stages of Intimacy as they relate to business: 1. Eye to Body * general awareness. In Business: Name Recognition. 2. Eye to Eye * each person knows the other has seen them. In Business: Targeted advertising is purchased to reach the customer. 3. Voice to Voice * conversation. Can be one sided, or a dialogue. In Business: Your ads are read or heard by the customer. 4. Hand to Hand * holding hands. Acknowledgement of possible relationship. In Business: the customer considers visiting your place of business. 5. Arm to Shoulder * closer contact than holding hands. In Business: contact is made in person or by phone. 6. Arm to Waist * indicates a growing familiarity and comfort level in the relationship. In Business: second contact, a repeat visit 7. Mouth to Mouth * Kissing. In Business: a purchase is made 8. Hand to Head * Touching a person's head is highly intimate, a sign of deepening trust. In Business: contact through social media – MySpace, Facebook, Youtube, Blogs 9. Hand to Body * This is the stage where foreplay begins. In Business: a repeat purchase. This person is becoming a real customer. 10. Mouth to Breast * Foreplay continues, obviously. In Business: the customer begins to tell their friends about you. Referrals. 11. Hand to Genitals...
Sue's Lawley's castaway this week is the zoologist turned author and broadcaster Desmond Morris. He made his name with The Naked Ape first published in 1967 in which he persuasively argued the case for viewing man as a 'risen ape' rather than a 'fallen angel'. To him, humans should be observed like any other beast in the animal kingdom. The book has sold more than 12 million copies and has been translated into 23 languages. Dozens more books have followed including The Human Zoo, which compared the social problems of humans living in cities to the behaviour of stressed animals in a zoo. He's also a successful artist - once holding the directorship of the Institute of Contemporary Arts - and he's exhibited his work at galleries around the world.[Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs]Favourite track: Imagine by Alex Parks Book: Tales from Arabia: One Thousand and One Nights by Richard Burton Luxury: Snorkel
Sue's Lawley's castaway this week is the zoologist turned author and broadcaster Desmond Morris. He made his name with The Naked Ape first published in 1967 in which he persuasively argued the case for viewing man as a 'risen ape' rather than a 'fallen angel'. To him, humans should be observed like any other beast in the animal kingdom. The book has sold more than 12 million copies and has been translated into 23 languages. Dozens more books have followed including The Human Zoo, which compared the social problems of humans living in cities to the behaviour of stressed animals in a zoo. He's also a successful artist - once holding the directorship of the Institute of Contemporary Arts - and he's exhibited his work at galleries around the world. [Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs] Favourite track: Imagine by Alex Parks Book: Tales from Arabia: One Thousand and One Nights by Richard Burton Luxury: Snorkel
08 - Desmond Morris, lu par Maya Huguenin