POPULARITY
Lester Kiewit speaks to Dr Haytham, an orthopaedist from Gaza, but who now lives in Italy. He chose to go into this field so he could help heal the broken bodies of Gaza where daily assaults have left many with amputations. He counts children among the patients he has had to operate on.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode of The afikra Podcast, host Mikey Muhanna talks to the director of Diriyah Art Futures, the MENA region's first hub dedicated to New Media Arts, established by the Ministry of Culture of Saudi Arabia. Haytham Nawar discusses DAF's focus on the intersection between art, science, and technology, aiming to create a hub for new media and digital art in Saudi Arabia and beyond. The conversation covers the hub's emerging artists program, which includes mentorship, workshops, and exhibitions, as well as the challenges of building and sustaining such an innovative institution. Nawar also delves into the history of New Media Arts in the Arab world and shares insights on the role of AI in contemporary art practices.00:00 Introduction01:04 Exploring Art Futures and New Media Arts02:57 The Importance of art education in the Arab region05:29 Inside the Diriyah Art Futures hub07:02 Emerging New Media Artists Programme and pedagogical approach16:21 Historical Context of New Media Arts21:55 Challenges and future of New Media Arts in the Arab World27:29 Inaugural Exhibition: Art Must Be Artificial33:24 The Role of AI in art and ethical considerations37:50 Future vision and sustainability of Diriyah Art Futures42:30 Final thoughtsHaytham Nawar is an Egyptian artist, designer, scholar, and educator. He is the director of Diriyah Art Futures, the MENA region's first hub dedicated to New Media Arts, established by the Ministry of Culture of Saudi Arabia. He is also the founder and director of Cairotronica, a festival of electronic and new media arts in Cairo.Connect with DAF
The afikra podcast is back with a new season hosted by Mikey Muhanna. We kick off with an episode in partnership with Fujifilm and Gulf Photo Plus with Iranian academic, philosophical author, and artist Nadia Maftouni, who delves into the groundbreaking contributions of Ibn al-Haytham to modern science. Known as the father of modern optics, Ibn al-Haytham's extensive work on camera obscura, empirical science, and mathematics laid the foundation for future scientific advancements. Maftouni explores his methodology, significant works like the "Book of Optics," and how his concepts influenced later scholars such as German astronomer and mathematician Johannes Kepler. Additionally, Maftouni sheds light on Ibn al-Haytham's time under house arrest and his enduring impact on science and philosophy.00:00 Introduction01:34 Historical Background of Camera Obscura03:16 Ibn al-Haytham's Contributions to Optics04:50 Ibn al-Haytham's Methodology and Scientific Approach06:49 Ibn al-Haytham's Influence on Later Scientists07:51 House Arrest and Major Works12:07 Philosophical Views and Scientific Method16:19 Transmission of Knowledge to Europe17:45 Ibn al-Haytham's Legacy and Influence31:44 Conclusion and Final ThoughtsNadia Maftouni is an Iranian academic, philosopher, author, and artist. She's a leading scholar of Farabian, Avicennian, and Suhrawardian philosophy, and also specializes in Jurisprudence and Islamic History. She is a professor at the University of Tehran, a Senior Research Scholar at Yale Law School, and serves on the History of Philosophy Quarterly editorial board. Explore Gulf Photo Plus
The date of recording for today's show is September 12, 2024. That's important because our show today is topical and a little time sensitive. I started this In The Now format of episode to highlight certain countries and destinations who have experienced events (whether internally or externally) that have disrupted their tourism numbers. A few weeks ago I was chatting with my good friend Haytham Atwan, who is one of our top partners in Egypt. He mentioned that tourism in Egypt took a 60% hit due solely to the conflict happening in Israel and Palestine. Knowing that tourism is a major source of support for the Egyptian people, this really hurt to find out. So we put together this episode to give you some background on the history of tourism to Egypt and how things are in the country today from locals who experience it every day. Haytham joins me as well as the enthusiastic Egyptologist, Henry Ayoub. We talk about everything from the Arab Spring, to State Department ratings, to the smiling faces of children you'll see greeting you all throughout your trip to Egypt. If you've been on the fence about visiting this spectacular country, I hope hearing this episode will help you decide. On another very personal note, I'd like to dedicate this episode to my dear friend Clark Kotula. Avid listeners will remember that Clark was a guest on two past shows, and was the driving force behind our first “In The Now” Episode on Ecuador. Clark - though you are gone, you inspire me every day, and I will keep using this platform to honor your memory and inspire travel across the corners of our beautiful earth. I hope you listen to this episode with an open heart and an open mind. Learn more at www.luxtravelinsider.com Connect with me on Social: Instagram LinkedIn
Ibn Al-Haytham dit Alhazen, grand savant du Onzième siècle, père de la méthode scientifique et l'optique moderne Nous sommes au 11è siècle. Dans son « Traité d'optique », le physicien, d'origine perse, Ibn al-Haytham dit Alhazen écrit : « Celui qui cherche la vérité n'est pas celui qui étudie les écrits des anciens et qui, suivant sa disposition naturelle, place sa confiance en eux, mais plutôt celui qui doute d'eux et qui conteste ce qu'il reçoit d'eux, celui qui se soumet à la discussion et à la démonstration, et non aux dires d'un être humain dont la nature présente toutes sortes d'imperfections et de carences ». Ibn Al-Haytham, figure majeur de la science dans le monde médiéval, bien avant l'italien Galilée au dix-septième siècle, a mis sur rail la méthode scientifique, il est considéré, aujourd'hui, comme le père de l'optique moderne et nous rappelle l'apport du monde arabo-musulman dans le domaine des sciences. Invité : Jean Pestieau, professeur émérite à l'UCL. Sujets traités : Ibn al-Haytham, physicien, médiéval, Galilée, optique moderne, arabo-musulman Merci pour votre écoute Un Jour dans l'Histoire, c'est également en direct tous les jours de la semaine de 13h15 à 14h30 sur www.rtbf.be/lapremiere Retrouvez tous les épisodes d'Un Jour dans l'Histoire sur notre plateforme Auvio.be : https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/5936 Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.
(NOTAS COMPLETAS Y ENLACES DEL CAPÍTULO AQUÍ: https://www.jaimerodriguezdesantiago.com/kaizen/195-el-poder-de-las-herejias/)«La verdad se busca por sí misma; y al buscar aquello que se busca por sí mismo, uno solo está preocupado por encontrarlo... El buscador de la verdad no es quien estudia los escritos de los antiguos y confía en ellos, sino más bien quien duda de su fe en ellos y cuestiona lo que recogen, quien se somete al argumento y la demostración, y no a los dichos de un ser humano cuya naturaleza está llena de todo tipo de imperfección y deficiencia. [...] Si aprender la verdad es su objetivo, es su deber hacerse enemigo de todo lo que lee, y [...] atacarlo desde todos los lados. También debe sospechar de sí mismo [...] para [...] evitar caer en cualquier prejuicio o indulgencia. Si sigue este camino, se le revelarán las verdades [...]»Algo parecido a esta defensa del pensamiento crítico dejó escrito el primer personaje de los muchos que vamos a mencionar hoy. Digo parecido, porque lo hizo en árabe antiguo y esto es una traducción más que modernizada. Su autor fue Hasan Ibn-al-Haytham, más conocido en Occidente como Alhazen y considerado por muchos como el primer científico. Y nació en el año 965, en un mundo en el que no existían los relojes, ni los telescopios, ni los microscopios, ni casi nada de lo que hoy nos es normal. Comenzó estudiando la religión, pero pronto acabó desencantado con sus dogmas incuestionables y con la manera en la que volvía a unas personas contra otras. Así que decidió volcarse en la búsqueda de la verdad objetiva, pura e imparcial. Se dedicó a estudiar a fondo la realidad.Y así, 8 siglos antes de que se inventara la fotografía, Alhazen fue el primero en dar una explicación completa a un fenómeno que se conocía desde tiempos de la antigua Grecia: cómo, en una sala oscura con una única apertura en uno de sus muros, al colarse los rayos de luz por ella, se proyectaba en la pared opuesta la imagen del exterior, invertida tanto horizontal como verticalmente. Es lo que siglos más tarde, Kepler llamaría cámara oscura. La palabra «cámara», de hecho, viene del árabe y de los textos de Alhazen, que influyeron a gente como Leonardo da Vinci, Descartes o el propio Kepler. Y es que en sus libros sobre óptica fue capaz de desmontar las teorías griegas sobre el funcionamiento de la luz, que aún en su época se consideraban correctas, y de describir, a través de sus experimentos, la anatomía y el funcionamiento de nuestros ojos, como un sistema óptico. Para escribir esos libros, eso sí, Alhazen tuvo que recurrir a medidas extremas. Tras despertar la ira del califa de turno, tuvo que hacerse el loco, literalmente. Sólo recluyéndose en su casa durante años pudo dedicarse a descifrar la realidad. Y es que, Alhazen, como muchas de las personas que cambiaron el mundo, fue considerado un hereje.Y hoy vamos a celebrar la herejía, porque se me han juntado distintas lecturas que he ido acumulando en los últimos meses con una idea que tengo a medio cocinar sobre la necesidad que tenemos de poner a prueba mucho de lo que damos por sentado en nuestra sociedad, en nuestras empresas… y en nuestra vida en general. Eso sí, no sé muy bien qué va a salir de aquí, ya te lo digo. Patrocinador del capítulo: PortobelloStreet.es ¿Te gusta kaizen? Apoya el podcast uniéndote a la Comunidad y accede a contenidos y ventajas exclusivas: https://www.jaimerodriguezdesantiago.com/comunidad-kaizen/
Dr. Haytham Kaafarani is a trauma surgeon at Massachusetts General Hospital. We caught up with him after he recently gave a phenomenal talk at the Canadian Surgical Forum in Vancouver earlier this year. Dr. Kaafarani talked about his work in Lebanon after the explosion in 2020, his research on intra operative adverse events, and ultimately on his work as surgeons as second victims. This episode is a clarion call for surgeons everywhere to develop these support systems for each other. Links: 1. Intraoperative Adverse Events in Abdominal Surgery: What Happens in the Operating Room Does Not Stay in the Operating Room. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27805961/ 2. Derivation and validation of a novel severity classification for intraoperative adverse events. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24702887/ 3. The Surgeon as the Second Victim? Results of the Boston Intraoperative Adverse Events Surgeons' Attitude (BISA) Study. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28093300/ 4. Design and Impact of a Novel Surgery-Specific Second Victim Peer Support Program. https://journals.lww.com/journalacs/abstract/2020/06000/design_and_impact_of_a_novel_surgery_specific.16.aspx
The conversation is in English, after a short introduction in Swedish. Haytham el-Wardanys poetiska essä "Sömnboken" undersöker sömnens potential och dess koppling till motstånd, förändring och revolution. Haytham el-Wardany (född 1972) är en egyptisk författare, bosatt i Berlin. Med "Sömnboken", en säregen kartläggning av sömnens alla möjligheter, presenteras han för första gången på svenska. New York Review of Books beskriver boken som ett verk "fullt av tankar och känslor, som kristalliserats till märkvärdiga former". Vad är sömn och vad gör den med de sovande? Är den individuell men inte personlig? Kan en kollektiv dröm föras in i sömnens sfär och få ett eget liv? I efterdyningarna av den arabiska våren söker Haytham el-Wardany svar på frågor som blivit akuta under protesterna på Tahrirtorget i Kairo, där demonstranterna sov tillsammans natt efter natt. Vad händer när människor sover på allmän plats, när de blundar inför reklamtavlornas budskap och drömmer sig bort? Eller när de lägger en amulett under kudden, trotsar uppmärksamhetssamhällets krav på ständig tillgänglighet och somnar mitt på dagen? I samarbete med förlaget Nirstedt/litteratur. Från 25 oktober 2023 Jingel: Lucas Brar
Zondag 3 september 2023, Nerdlab Dit is een extra lange comeback-aflevering. Vanaf volgende week monteer ik de episodes. Beloofd! YouTube: Komt eraan Facebook: www.facebook.com/lvproducties Instagram: www.instagram.com/kapotkastenal/ Patreon: www.patreon.com/kapotkast
Our guests for this Together are Eileen Lahi, an influencer from Estonia, and Haytham Borhan, an entrepreneur from Egypt. Discover how this unique couple was able to overcome the many traumas of life, from a tragic stillbirth to postpartum depression. Eileen and Haytham also uncover the fascinating interplay of their diverse cultures and personalities. Join us as we get to know them both and learn of their compelling tale of resilience and unity.
Ibn Al-Haytham: The Father Of Modern Optics
In this week's episode, we're breaking down all of the information we have on a very important templar – none other than Reginald Birch. Birch plays a major role in multiple Assassin's Creed games, including Assassin's Creed 3, Assassin's Creed Liberation, and Assassin's Creed Rogue. He also plays a major role behind-the-scenes in comics and books. Listen now to learn about how this one templar may have been the reason Haytham isn't an assassin. Check out our website! cupspodcasting.com We've launched a Patreon! Join us as a subscriber, and at certain tiers, you can even join us ON THE SHOW! https://www.patreon.com/aclorecast If you enjoyed our podcast, give us a rating and review on Apple and/or Spotify! We'll even read your review out on the show! Join our The Cups Podcasts discord server where we dive deeep into Dragon Age discussions. https://discord.gg/fxR2WVDNhP Come hang out on the Robots Radio discord server to join the fun! https://discord.gg/AW5Wc4kgZb You can also find us on Twitter at @assassinscreedlorecast, and you can dm us or email us at assassinscreedlorecast@gmail.com. Sources: Assassin's Creed 3 Assassin's Creed: Forsaken Assassin's Creed Wiki: Reginald Birch Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
You just finished a difficult case in which a complication occurred. Feelings of guilt, sadness, and anxiety are pouring over you. You can't help but think you are a terrible surgeon, maybe even a terrible person. Does this sound familiar? Complications have profound psychological impact on surgeons. Find out how one surgeon decided to do something about it by creating a peer support program. Join Jessica Millar and Patrick Georgoff as they discuss the second victim syndrome with Dr. Haytham Kaafarani (@hayfarani). References: The Surgeon as the Second Victim? Results of the Boston Intraoperative Adverse Events Surgeons' Attitude (BISA) Study: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28093300/ Design and Impact of a Novel Surgery-Specific Second Victim Peer Support Program: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31857209/ When Things Go Wrong: The Surgeon as Second Victim: https://pubmed.ncbi. nlm.nih.gov/30480564/ Please visit https://behindtheknife.org to access other high-yield surgical education podcasts, videos and more. If you liked this episode, check out our recent episodes here: https://behindtheknife.org/listen/
This week's episode is another character deep dive – this time, featuring Haytham Kenway. We discuss Haytham's childhood, his family and the roles Edward and Jennifer played, as well as how he came to join the Templars and the Templar influence on him throughout his life. Listen now to find out all you need to know about Haytham! Check out our NEW WEBSITE! cupspodcasting.com We've launched a Patreon! Join us as a subscriber, and at certain tiers, you can even join us ON THE SHOW! https://www.patreon.com/aclorecast If you enjoyed our podcast, give us a rating and review on Apple and/or Spotify! We'll even read your review out on the show! Join our The Cups Podcasts discord server where we dive deeep into Dragon Age discussions. https://discord.gg/fxR2WVDNhP Come hang out on the Robots Radio discord server to join the fun! https://discord.gg/AW5Wc4kgZb You can also find us on Twitter at @assassinscreedlorecast, and you can dm us or email us at assassinscreedlorecast@gmail.com.Sources: Games: Assassin's Creed 3 Assassin's Creed Rogue Books/ Comics: AC: Forsaken Wiki: Haytham Kennway Music by Pipeman Studios Website designed by H-I-T Media Solutions Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dinsdag 25 april 2023, Studio Mi Casa Sommige punten begreep ik pas achteraf. Als je Haytham en Merlijn iets wil horen zeggen dat sens maakt, kan je volgende week dinsdag naar de finale van het Gents Slampioenschap gaan kijken. In deze podcast is het al geen haar snijden. Al is het antwoord waarschijnlijk 'die fiets'. https://www.facebook.com/events/1255756005350768 YouTube: https://youtu.be/6kQWeQUl0OI Facebook: www.facebook.com/lvproducties Instagram: www.instagram.com/lovapr/ Patreon: www.patreon.com/kapotkast
Haytham and Brian join the show to share the story of how Nationwide and Kinetic worked together initially as an investment, and then to build an MGA backed by Nationwide to help reduce worker injury through the application of Kinetic's IoT-based intervention that helps stop dangerous movements as they're happening. Their story is the first case in the new book in The Future of Insurance series, Volume III. The Collaborators. Brian Anderson is a partner at Nationwide and a former management associate in the company's Financial Leadership Rotation Program. Prior to joining Nationwide, Anderson was an intern at JPMorgan Chase in data analytics. Brian also worked as a venture fellow at Innovate Indiana Fund, where they served on the board of directors for Apex Therapeutics, Cause.it, and Fathom Voice. Anderson began their career as an intern in business development and M&A at Cephalon, Inc. (Teva Pharmaceuticals). Anderson has an NBA from the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University, and a B.A. in economics from Colorado College. Haytham Elhawary is cofounder and Chief Strategy Officer of KINETIC. Guided by a mission to help the front-line worker stay safe and healthy, he has led the development of a smart wearable device to reduce workplace injuries. KINETIC is reinventing workers compensation insurance by including its wearable technology as part of the policy. Elhawary holds a PhD in biomedical engineering from Imperial College London and a Mechanical Engineering degree from University of Navarra in Spain. His professional experience includes the development of medical robots at both Philips Electronics and Harvard Medical School. Prior to launching KINETIC in 2014, Elhawary served as Executive Director of the Zahn Innovation Center, a hardware startup incubator. Elhawary and his company are based out of New York, where he also writes theatre reviews and loves to do improvised comedy. Haytham Elhawary is co-founder and CEO of Kinetic They started in 2014 to build tech to reduce workplace injuries, primarily in frontline workers This was inspired by watching his mother, a nurse, get injured a lot from moving patients, and seeing the impact it had on her life Brian Anderson is a Partner at Nationwide Ventures They met Haytham in 2016, and were impressed by what the team had built Given Nationwide Venture's focus on things that connect to the company's mission, this appealed to them, as did how far the team at Kinetic got on a shoe string budget Nationwide chose to invest in Kinetic at that time, and see if there were opportunities for the insurance side of the business to work with Kinetic It was hard to get investment in the safety tech space because most VCs weren't thinking about that back then, making Nationwide a very rare and appropriate kind of investor for Kinetic when they met Brian talked about how, as investors, you need to be open to net new ideas if they want to find exciting new opportunities rather than letting your biases close you down to them The VC team introduced Kinetic to the Workers Comp team to look into a pilot opportunity, but the net result of the pilot wasn't strong, so Kinetic went off on their own and found self-insureds to test with and grow Not working out in that pilot wasn't a loss, though, as both teams learned a lot from it to see where it may not work, why, and what they can do instead, which was useful After 4 years and close to 35k workers wearing the device, Kinetic had data on dramatic reduction in injuries – 53% fewer injuries and over 70% fewer lost days from injuries – proving the impact their solution can have With that knowledge, they looked at how they can accelerate their impact, and learned about the MGA model as a way to sell insurance connected to the impact of their device That lead to Kinetic working with Nationwide E&S as the capacity for their insurance product The VC team opened the introduction, but it took the team at Kinetic being prepared, knowing their data, understanding what needed to be done, etc., to get the E&S team to get on board The two teams met in the summer of 2021, and were writing policies by December, which is incredibly fast They had talked to multiple carrier partners, but some things really stood out about Nationwide's approach Kinetic wanted to distribute the product themselves through their own broker relationships, and wanted to underwrite with their data They didn't want to do the more core insurance things like regulatory compliance or claims because they lacked the skills and people to do it right, and Nationwide was happy to manage those things They also were upfront about not knowing everything about what they're trying to do because it's the first time they were doing it, and Nationwide was open and understanding about it being a learning process for both of them There are always risks of a big company moving at its own speed, which can be too slow for a startup, and Nationwide was able to move very fast here The Venture team was helpful in trying to problem solve speed issues, but never forced anything or demanded it, instead working to be collaboratively internally Kinetic finished their first year 12x ahead of Nationwide's projections for premium, and the loss ratio is 20 points better than the industry number This shows that the idea is viable, the technology is helping protect people, and giving it away with the insurance is proving to be the right answer This episode is brought to you by The Future of Insurance thought leadership series (future-of-insurance.com) from Bryan Falchuk. Follow the podcast at future-of-insurance.com/podcast for more details and other episodes. Music courtesy of Hyperbeat Music, available to stream or download on Spotify, Apple Music, and Amazon Music and more.
While al-Haytham's visual theory was a clear triumph, his work also had a more subtle but profound effect. His treatment of light as a quanitity which was related to but independent of vision was an important step on the path to our modern understanding of optics. In this episode we explore the other parts of his 'Book of Optics' as well as the achievement of his forgotten contemporary Ibn Sahl.Contact: thecompletehistoryofscience@gmail.comTwitter: @complete_sciMusic Credit: Folk Round Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
Sam Haytham is the founder of KIRO ACTION. KIRO ACTION is a social good enterprise designed to forward a societal benefit with real-world housing solutions. We provide a version of our homes sold at-cost (or gifted) to address homelessness, poverty, and crisis response for various levels of government and non-profits. ★ Support this podcast ★
The Greek Philosophers had long debated the nature of vision, without any definitive conclusion. They were divided, between the belief that it was either a stimulus entering the eye or a visual ray projected from the eye. This debate however, was finally settled by the great Hasan Ibn Al-Haytham, who developed the first modern theory of vision. In this episode we explore Al-Haytham's optical work as one of the first great experimentalists who investigated the nature of light and his development of a new theory of perspective. Contact: thecompletehistoryofscience@gmail.comTwitter: @complete_sciMusic Credit: Folk Round Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
For today's episode, we want to repurpose one of the best episodes of the last 12 months. My interview with Haytham Kaddoura, CEO of SmartStream Technologies, a global company leader in financial transaction management solutions. In this episode, we discussed how you could drive a successful turnaround by covering some interesting topics like: Regardless of your position, you need to be accessible to your people. The importance of creating a culture where people can take risks. Factors that will affect your turnaround in your workplace. Tips to enable your team to be successful from home. “When you love what you are doing you get to apply the “Let's build it together” mindset which will eventually become the norm and be invested in the successful transition.” To connect with Haytham Kaddoura, you can connect with him on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/haytham If you would like to get more information about Andrea's work, go to: www.andreapetrone.com Subscribe to the weekly insight via email at: https://www.andreapetrone.com/blog/ To connect with Andrea on Social Media: LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/in/andreapetrone/ Twitter – https://twitter.com/ie_andrea Read the article related to this podcast: https://www.andreapetrone.com/how-to-lead-a-company-turnaround-to-success/
In this episode, Dr. Michael Maddaus talks with Haytham Kaafarani, MD, MPH, associate professor of trauma and critical care at Massachusetts General Hospital and chief patient safety officer and medical director for The Joint Commission. They discuss Second Victim Syndrome, the often-dramatic psychological impact of an adverse event on the physician—typically operative and one for which the surgeon often feels directly responsible. Dr. Kaafarani is an international expert on second victim due to his direct personal experience with the psychological impact of adverse events, as well as his role in two seminal studies of Second Victim Syndrome in surgeons. Listen as Drs. Maddaus and Kaafarani share insights on the emotional toll that an adverse event can take on the life of a surgeon and talk about the importance of peer support for a better recovery. They explore how Dr. Kaafarani became an expert regarding Second Victim Syndrome and how he developed his 5-step peer support program. This discussion will help listeners reflect on their own experiences with major adverse events and understand their part in boosting institutional support. “The Resilient Surgeon” is a program from the Society designed to inspire cardiothoracic surgeons to be their best selves, in and out of the OR, using scientifically proven tools and recovery strategies of the world's top performers. Learn more about STS wellness efforts at sts.org/wellness.
We gotta go fast this month as we discuss Sonic Adventure 2, the game many fans would call the peak of the series. We're joined by Sonic superfan Haytham to guide us through this Dreamcast classic, most of us for the first time. Why are Knuckles and Rouge's levels so bad, and why did one of us play this game twice? This plus all the horny Sonic character talk you expect, because of course. Also the creator of Sonic was arrested for insider trading while we recorded this episode, did we do this? Next month: Live A Live for the SNES and Nintendo Switch Follow us on Twitter Email us at egfpodcast@gmail.com Join our Discord Follow us on Instagram --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/gamefair/message
James chats with Kinetic Insurance CEO Haytham ElhawaryKinetic Insurance is an MGU, pioneering change in Workers Compensation with the first product-led Insurtech offering in the market. Our smart wearable technology is included with all our policies which has been proven to reduce the incidence of workplace injuries. By automatically detecting unsafe postures, Kinetic wearables provide workers with feedback whenever a high-risk motion occurs to improve their biomechanics, resulting in fewer injuries, reduced claims, missed works days and an overall safer work environment. Kinetic gives our limited broker distribution network a differentiating and proven risk mitigation strategy to bring to their clients. Backed by Nationwide and leading New York and Silicon Valley Venture firms, we all share the excitement in defining the future of Workers Comp Insurance. Kinetic-insurance.com iiabcal.org
Haytham Elgawly is a serial entrepreneur born and raised in Jersey City, NJ. He has no quit in him. He started out parking cars and throwing house parties before working in the corporate world. Soon he was styling Sean “Puffy” Combs and launching his own brands. Now he's starting a new retail experience called Medusa is his home town. Haytham is also the founder of a non-profit organization; Chilltown C.H.I.L.L.dren (Changing How Im Living Life) that teaches and empowers creatives how to independently create, market, and sell their own brands in collaboration with his printing company 6IX AM PRINTING. Haytham's infectious energy and creative soul is a sure magnet for success. Always passionately creating for a better tomorrow he is an inspiration to his fellow peers, the creative community, and Jersey City. ✈️: @theclrprt
Chickens are coming home to roost during Governor Al Haytham's reign. Join us for rebellions, Leovigildian punishments, and the ever-lovable Muhammed the Saracen in Al Haytham's episode! Tracks used "Castanets, Multi, A (H4n).wav" by InspectorJ (www.jshaw.co.uk) of Freesound.org "acoustic_flamenco_imitation.wav" by Noise Collector of Freesound.org Recommendations Story Graph reading tracker A Room with a View Anti- Recommendations Star Trek: The Motion Picture
Maandag 22 augustus 2022, De Centrale Tussen twee geiten door zijn er wat audioproblemen, voor de rest valt het anime.
In this episode of The Scope Forward Show, Praveen Suthrum interviews Dr. Haytham Gareer, Chief Medical Officer, Geneoscopy (RNA stool testing company). In November 2021, a month after Dr. Haytham Gareer joined Geneoscopy as CMO, the company raised $105 million in funding. The company is developing an RNA analysis platform to detect colorectal cancer (to be launched in 2023). A clinical study showed that when compared against the gold-standard colonoscopy, the platform demonstrated better sensitivity data in detecting advanced adenomas and colorectal cancer than other non-invasive tests. Dr. Gareer says Geneoscopy is going to increasing the number of colonoscopies being performed. However, it's obvious to me that digital biology is disrupting not just GI but many other specialties that are diagnosing cancer. I couldn't hold my curiosity and asked quite directly. Should gastroenterologists be worried about them? Should Cologuard be worried? Should Medtronic with its AI-based polyp detection system be worried? Because when there's a test that's going to detect adenomas with a fair degree of accuracy, why bother with diagnostic procedures? Dr. Gareer had a different and interesting view. As readers of Scope Forward, you already know my take. With more data, digital biology innovations such as RNA and DNA tests combined with machine learning would get extremely sophisticated. It'll even be able to predict things that we just can't with traditional approaches. Dr. Haytham completely agreed.
Our series continues with an innovative start-up and a local homebuilder taking different, but plausible approaches to solving Austin's housing crisis. ABJ Managing Editor Will Anderson meets up with KIRO ACTION HOUSING Founder Sam Haytham at SXSW. Haytham takes on the homeless crisis at its root cause: lack of accessible shelter. At the other end of the spectrum, ABJ Residential Real Estate Reporter Michelle Pitcher invites Brohn Homes Co-President Aaron Boenig to share what he and his team are doing to drive down the price of new construction homes across the region.
Chaldean Christian and quantum expert Haytham Allos joins Caz to explore how miracles like walking on water, healing people and having glorified bodies can be explained through quantum physics. It also explains the devil's counterfeits. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Highlights from their conversation include:KINETIC and how Haytham got there (1:07)The problem KINETIC is trying to solve (4:39)What KINETIC's device work (8:33)Selling as an IoT enabled business (12:14)Monetizing around insurance (15:08)Adapting as a CEO (18:47)Brokerage, the MGA model, & underwriting (20:30)Rapid-fire round: labor shortages across supply, favorite hardware product, the outlook for the New York City startup ecosystem (23:48)Dynamo is a VC firm led by supply chain and mobility specialists that focus on seed-stage, enterprise startups. Find out more at: https://www.dynamo.vc/.
If you are interested in learning about disaster preparedness, please tune in to out latest episode of The Lebanese Physicians' Podcast discussing the results of the Beirut Blast Assessment for Surgical Services (BASS) Multicenter Study which was recently published in the Annals of Surgery as a result of a collaboration among 4 major medical centers in Beirut (AUBMC, LAUMC-RH, CMC Beirut, and HDF-Beirut) and the Center for Outcomes and Patient Safety in Surgery (COMPASS) at the Massachusetts General Hospital. In this episode co-hosted with Dr. MohammadAli Jardali, we discuss with Dr. Haytham Kaafarani, director of COMPASS, and Dr. Jamal Hoballah, Chairman of the Department of Surgery at AUBMC, the events surrounding the Beirut Blast, how the hospitals dealt with this mass casualty event, and lessons learned from this big disaster. We discuss disaster preparedness both at the emergency medical services level and at the hospital level. You can also listen to the audio version of this podcast on the following: Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-lebanese-physicians-podcast/id1545290394?i=1000547985363 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/1Q9kiwXDwwFYWltAGVQNiu?si=h-RLJHPfTw6M6HXo_fo3lg The YouTube version is on: https://youtu.be/fJmREG78ZxU #beirutblast #lebanon #disasterpreparedness
In this event, we talked to Haytham Nawar and Danah Abdulla about the future of education. Tasmeem Doha 2022: Radical Futures is an inclusive and multi-faceted view of the future, one that not only speculates on technological advancements—but on future threats and changes whether environmental, geographical, cultural, or social. Now more than ever, we must ask pertinent questions, raise critical dialogues, and respond with clarity.Created & Hosted by Mikey Muhanna, afikra Edited by: Ramzi RammanTheme music by: Tarek Yamani https://www.instagram.com/tarek_yamani/About Tasmeem Doha 2022: Radical Futures:Tasmeem Doha 2022: Radical Futures is an inclusive and multi-faceted view of the future, one that not only speculates on technological advancements—but on future threats and changes whether environmental, geographical, cultural, or social. Now more than ever, we must ask pertinent questions, raise critical dialogues, and respond with clarity. Join the live audience: https://www.afikra.com/rsvp FollowYoutube - Instagram (@afikra_) - Facebook - Twitter Support www.afikra.com/supportAbout afikra:afikra is a movement to convert passive interest in the Arab world to active intellectual curiosity. We aim to collectively reframe the dominant narrative of the region by exploring the histories and cultures of the region- past, present, and future - through conversations driven by curiosity. Read more about us on afikra.com
For our end-of-year book list, we made up our own categories -- from “best poet I hadn't heard of before” ” to “best book about cannibalism” to “best book that lived up to the hype” -- and added a few more along the way. It's a journey through 10 books that struck us and stayed with us this year. Show Notes Best literary cookbook for children (MLQ):Arab Fairy Tale Feasts, Karim al-Rawi, ill. Nahid Kazemi. Read the review by Marcia and her 10-year-old. Best book I've been waiting for years to see published (Ursula): Ahmed Bouanani's La Septieme Porte, a history of Moroccan cinema from 1907 to 1986. Bouanani was a writer, poet and film-maker who was censored and blacklisted; the manuscript of this book was nearly destroyed in a fire, and was painstakingly put back together by his daughter, Touda Bouanani. Best collection of poetry by a poet previously unknown to me (MLQ):Except for This Unseen Thread, Ra'ad Abdulqadir, tr. Mona Kareem, published by Ugly Duckling Presse Best book I'm reading even if I haven't gotten far (Ursula): Ahmed Naji's prison memoir حرز مكمكم; read an excerpt in English translation at the University of Michigan website, translated by Khaled Mattawa. Best book about cannibalism (MLQ): Physician on the Nile: A Description of Egypt and Journal of the Famine Years, by Abd al-Latif al-Baghdadi, ed. & tr. Tim Mackintosh Smith Best book I've ordered someone for Christmas (Ursula): The Annotated Arabian Nights, ed. Paulo Lemos Horta, tr. Yasmine Seale Best gift book for under $20 (MLQ): Midnight in Cairo, by Raphael Cormack, which reminded Marcia of Zeinab Zaza's “يتامى الإسكندرية,” a historical police procedural set in 1930s Alexandria that focuses on the precarious lives of women. Best book that actually lived up to the hype (Ursula):The Book of Sleep, by Haytham al-Wardani, translated by Robin Moger. BONUS CATEGORY: Best Arabic-language list in translation in 2021, Seagull Books Best introduction to a novel (MLQ): Balqis Sharara's introduction to the re-issue of her late sister Hayat Sharara's When Darkness Falls. You can read it, tr. Hend Saeed, on ArabLit. Best book about the “Syrian refugee crisis” (Ursula):The Wrong End of the Telescope, by Rabih Alameddine We also say goodbye to Humphrey Davies (1947-2021). There is a digital memorial in progress at arablit.org/humphrey/.
What does it take to bring a company to success again?I had a brilliant conversation at "The World Class Leaders Show” with Haytham Kaddoura, CEO of Smartstream Technologies.Haytham is Dubai-based and he has experience in investment advisory, asset management, corporate restructuring, strategy formulation, and execution for boards of some of the most prominent corporations across the GCC and the greater Middle East and North Africa region.By listening to the show, you'll learn:1) How to lead your people and make them feel safe and heard2) Why a great culture is key3) How to involve your clients in the process4) Lead in the Covid19 era “When you love what you are doing you get to apply the “Let's build it together” mindset which will eventually become the norm and be invested in the successful transition.”Show notes: How to Lead a Company Turnaround to Success - Andrea Petrone To connect with Haytham Kaddoura, you can connect with him on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/haytham If you would like to get more information about Andrea's work, go to: www.andreapetrone.com Subscribe to the weekly insight via email at: https://www.andreapetrone.com/insight/ To connect with Andrea on Social Media: LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/in/andreapetrone/ Twitter – https://twitter.com/ie_andrea Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Arab graphic design emerged in the early twentieth century out of a need to influence, and give expression to, the far-reaching economic, social, and political changes that were taking place in the Arab world at the time. But graphic design as a formally recognized genre of visual art only came into its own in the region in the twenty-first century and, to date, there has been no published study on the subject to speak of. A History of Arab Graphic Design (AU of Cairo Press, 2020) traces the people and events that were integral to the shaping of a field of graphic design in the Arab world. Examining the work of over eighty key designers from Morocco to Iraq, and covering the period from pre-1900 to the end of the twentieth century, Bahia Shehab and Haytham Nawar chart the development of design in the region, beginning with Islamic art and Arabic calligraphy, and their impact on Arab visual culture, through to the digital revolution and the arrival of the Internet. Highlighting the work of key designers and stunningly illustrated with over 600 color images, they look at how cinema, economic prosperity, and political and cultural events gave birth to and shaped the founders of Arab graphic design. Holiday Powers is Assistant Professor of Art History at VCUarts Qatar. Her research focuses on modern and contemporary art in Africa and the Arab world, postcolonial theory, and gender studies. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Arab graphic design emerged in the early twentieth century out of a need to influence, and give expression to, the far-reaching economic, social, and political changes that were taking place in the Arab world at the time. But graphic design as a formally recognized genre of visual art only came into its own in the region in the twenty-first century and, to date, there has been no published study on the subject to speak of. A History of Arab Graphic Design (AU of Cairo Press, 2020) traces the people and events that were integral to the shaping of a field of graphic design in the Arab world. Examining the work of over eighty key designers from Morocco to Iraq, and covering the period from pre-1900 to the end of the twentieth century, Bahia Shehab and Haytham Nawar chart the development of design in the region, beginning with Islamic art and Arabic calligraphy, and their impact on Arab visual culture, through to the digital revolution and the arrival of the Internet. Highlighting the work of key designers and stunningly illustrated with over 600 color images, they look at how cinema, economic prosperity, and political and cultural events gave birth to and shaped the founders of Arab graphic design. Holiday Powers is Assistant Professor of Art History at VCUarts Qatar. Her research focuses on modern and contemporary art in Africa and the Arab world, postcolonial theory, and gender studies. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
Arab graphic design emerged in the early twentieth century out of a need to influence, and give expression to, the far-reaching economic, social, and political changes that were taking place in the Arab world at the time. But graphic design as a formally recognized genre of visual art only came into its own in the region in the twenty-first century and, to date, there has been no published study on the subject to speak of. A History of Arab Graphic Design (AU of Cairo Press, 2020) traces the people and events that were integral to the shaping of a field of graphic design in the Arab world. Examining the work of over eighty key designers from Morocco to Iraq, and covering the period from pre-1900 to the end of the twentieth century, Bahia Shehab and Haytham Nawar chart the development of design in the region, beginning with Islamic art and Arabic calligraphy, and their impact on Arab visual culture, through to the digital revolution and the arrival of the Internet. Highlighting the work of key designers and stunningly illustrated with over 600 color images, they look at how cinema, economic prosperity, and political and cultural events gave birth to and shaped the founders of Arab graphic design. Holiday Powers is Assistant Professor of Art History at VCUarts Qatar. Her research focuses on modern and contemporary art in Africa and the Arab world, postcolonial theory, and gender studies. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/middle-eastern-studies
Arab graphic design emerged in the early twentieth century out of a need to influence, and give expression to, the far-reaching economic, social, and political changes that were taking place in the Arab world at the time. But graphic design as a formally recognized genre of visual art only came into its own in the region in the twenty-first century and, to date, there has been no published study on the subject to speak of. A History of Arab Graphic Design (AU of Cairo Press, 2020) traces the people and events that were integral to the shaping of a field of graphic design in the Arab world. Examining the work of over eighty key designers from Morocco to Iraq, and covering the period from pre-1900 to the end of the twentieth century, Bahia Shehab and Haytham Nawar chart the development of design in the region, beginning with Islamic art and Arabic calligraphy, and their impact on Arab visual culture, through to the digital revolution and the arrival of the Internet. Highlighting the work of key designers and stunningly illustrated with over 600 color images, they look at how cinema, economic prosperity, and political and cultural events gave birth to and shaped the founders of Arab graphic design. Holiday Powers is Assistant Professor of Art History at VCUarts Qatar. Her research focuses on modern and contemporary art in Africa and the Arab world, postcolonial theory, and gender studies. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/art
I interview Seb Falk on "The Light Ages", with my guest J. A. Velasco. We get right to the core of Seb's book and discuss whether people in the middle ages were doing science; we talk about whether people in the middle ages saw themselves as collaborating and competing with each other; and, finally, we look at some fascinating individuals and how they thought about the world, from Robert Grosseteste, Roger Bacon, Petrus Alphonsi, and Ibn al-Haytham.After the interview I spend some time with J unpacking the concept of medieval science and think further about what it means for an activity to be "scientific". For more discussion on "The Light Ages", check out the Forum page on my website: https://www.pleaseexpand.com/forum. I look forward to hearing what you have to say about it!
In this episode of the Seen Jeem Podcast, Sally Howell interviews author Safia Elhillo about her latest book, Home is Not a Country. The novel in verse explores themes of diasporic belonging through the experiences of the main character, 15-year-old Nima. Elhillo reads several excerpts from the book including "America," "Nostalgia Monster," "Haytham," and "Baba." Recordings of the readings are available on our website at seenjeempodcast.org. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/seenjeempodcast/message
Pastor Bill: [0:00] Hello and welcome to season 3 episode 52 of the Berean Manifesto: Faith, Hope, and Love for the Modern Christian. Tonight we are going to be talking about something that may, make some people feel rather passionate about one way or another. We are not here to tell you how to think, or what to believe, but your present the way we see things and what evidence we can provide that led us to believe certain things that way. If you then want to walk away from this conversation and go well the evidence they provided I don't agree with, that, that's good evidence and I'm going to continue believing the way I believe. That's great. At the end of the day we're both going to walk away agreeing that Jesus was born as a man died for you know... what's the right words... the propitiation of our sins, not our actions but sin nature, so that we can walk in a relationship with God so that we have the hope of looking forward to an eternity with Him. You're going to walk away sharing that belief, I know, I'm not doing a soft open I mean I'm doing a soft open I'm not doing a hard open. Um no, I'm talking to Biggs on Twitch, he says, "well how was your week?" as if he's like don't forget guys everything goes bad if you don't do a warm up first. Um yeah, so we will be looking at some scriptures tonight and we will be talking a bit about this Universal Bible Tome that Newms and I both have because it's got some great things that we need to talk about and so that's that's where we are. Tonight's episode is called, "Not Inerrant but Infallible" Peekaboo my little Groggy is joining us on Twitch welcome Groggy, glad you're here tonight. Pastor Newms: [2:23] Oooo, one of these days he's gonna get you for saying that. Pastor Bill: [2:24] My little Groggy, my little Groggy. Oooh he's several states away what's he going to do? Come to Texas and finally meet me face-to-face? Ooh, I'm scared. We'll go have some barbecue or something together, that'd be awesome. All right, so how was your week pastor Newms? Pastor Newms: [2:59] We started a new war in Star Trek last night. That's really been it I've not done a ton this week, was pretty much mainly focused on work celebrated the fifth of November yesterday. So other than that yeah it was pretty good. I got a new mask I got a nice new mask I like my new. Pastor Bill: [3:26] Yeah you did, your Guy Fawkes mask. Pastor Newms: [3:29] Yes yes to celebrate the. Pastor Bill: [3:34] And for those of you listening to podcast not watching live he picked up an all black mask with golden highlights to make it look like Guy Fawkes, also reminiscent of the V movie - V for Vendetta. Yeah that he watches on November 5th every year because that's how his brain works. There are certain movies that you have to watch on certain days, Mean Girls on October third and V is for Vendetta on November 5th. Biggs on Twitch says Groggy's going to drive his Corvette and have a road trip down to Texas, Biggs is volunteering Groggy for a road trip to Texas in his Corvette that's lovely I look forward to seeing. Alright, so? Pastor Newms: [4:26] How was your week Pastor Bill. Pastor Bill: [4:27] How was my week? Um, well my week was was pretty good I mean. See the problem with asking about the whole week is I don't really remember whole weeks I remember like I can tell you what I did today and probably what I did yesterday. But I can also tell you useless information like. I don't know, useless information about things in history that nobody cares about but stuff about me and my week I just I just draw a blank you know, yeah so I went and had barbecue yesterday for lunch at this alien establishment built around the Aurora alien just down the road and it was great barbecue. First time I've ever been able to say that because you know everything is subjective and then in my subjective opinion it's the first great barbecue that I've had so. So yeah, so that's that and I did some work around the house this week just fixed some stuff that need to be fixed and. Pastor Newms: [5:41] You messed with some computer rigging of things was that this week or was that last week graphic stuff. Pastor Bill: [5:47] I can't remember. Pastor Newms: [5:50] I don't remember. Pastor Bill: [5:51] I don't remember what I've done this week but I guess that's a good sign because I mean is it wasn't a bad week. Pastor Newms: [5:57] Right exactly yeah. Pastor Bill: [5:59] So nothing bad happened, so I'm thankful for that they can see you know that's a good place to start. But like you said we, we in Star Trek Fleet command we had a down week no story arc which was just kind of frustrating but we did have, after a few days of almost literally nothing in the game, they finally dropped a Crucible Of War event which is a three-day just grind of hostiles to which Newms looked at it and went this is just my daily what I do in the game what are you guys complaining about, and I'm like no no this is considered Star Trek grind and he's like this is just what I do daily I don't understand what's wrong with you guys. Yeah, but for me, I was I was tired of seeing the color red personally but I don't play games the same way that Newms does which has been a point of conversation over the past four days that I'm glad we can move on to different conversations now. Things about how we don't like the people we're allied with in a current War, but we're going to be good soldiers and fight the good fight anyway and and hope for the war to end soon so we can go back to not liking the people that were allied with. So that's that that was my week and so now I guess we'll do Getting to Know the Pastors and since this is an even-numbered episode season 3 episode 52 that means that Newms will pull a card from his box and we will answer. Pastor Newms: [7:39] Alright as not how we're going to be able to read the question all right. Pastor Bill: [7:46] Yeah you can't read the back of the car. Pastor Newms: "If you could have one book instantly memorized cover to cover, which book would you choose?" Pastor Bill: [8:03] Um that would have to be Grey's Anatomy. Pastor Newms: [8:10] The book, there's a book? Pastor Bill: [8:14] Yeah it's the book that's got the man sprawled out on the front of it and his arms are in different positions it's a medical textbook. Pastor Newms: [8:23] Oh okay, why? Pastor Bill: [8:27] Oh you you thought I meant like a novelized version of the show Grey's Anatomy I'm talking about the medical textbook Grey's Anatomy. Pastor Newms: [8:37] But why. Pastor Bill: [8:39] Because I want to know everything and that's a really good place to start. Pastor Newms: [8:54] This is one of those I can't answer there's too many valid answers that that I can't formulate a decent answer to it. Pastor Bill: [9:10] Now if you thought either one of us were going to say the Bible then welcome to the Berean Manifesto, It's good to have you here. We don't give flaky answers, we avoid the obvious flaky answers and go for deep meaning stuff obviously every Christian would want to have the Bible memorized. Pastor Newms: [9:32] But that's not a book it's a collection of books. Pastor Bill: [9:34] That's a collection of books but it's bound as a and sold as a single unit. Pastor Newms: [9:40] No but that was my thought was I can't pick a single book because it is in and of itself not a single book. Pastor Bill: [9:48] It's an anthology but it is it's a work of it's an anthology work you know. Pastor Newms: [9:57] Yeah. Pastor Bill: [9:59] Bound as a single book anyway. Pastor Newms: [10:04] But then I was so many other books on my on my you know this just in I don't know man. Pastor Bill: [10:11] Just the one you'd want to memorize I mean just like. Pastor Newms: [10:13] See I do. Pastor Bill: [10:14] And then you could be sitting back one day on a on a stranded Island on a on the beach and some strain on the middle of the ocean and be like all right I'm going to walk my brain through. Yeah ABatBrain on Twitch says coding for dummies. Pastor Newms: [10:36] The problem with memorizing a coding book would be the fact that one the language is changed constantly so memorizing one feature wouldn't the concept stay the same but that's not the hard part of coding the concepts are the easy part the hard part of coding is the syntax. Pastor Bill: [10:57] Biggs is throwing shade I'm surprised it took them this long to start throwing shade, we're 16 minutes and he's throwing shade at me for drinking apple juice and then sipping my dr. pepper. Pastor Newms: [11:10] You are nasty but we all know that already so I don't know why anyone. Pastor Bill: [11:14] It's not like I'm pouring both of them in my mouth at the same time. Pastor Newms: [11:17] You're nasty, you're always nasty, it's fine we love you for it. But you nasty. Pastor Bill: [11:27] See now Zaydees got to go straight for the cheat they didn't which says all Edgar Allan Poe's work and the original Beowulf I don't know that you can find that all printed in one book. Pastor Newms: [11:37] Olive olive. Pastor Bill: [11:39] To memorize. Pastor Newms: [11:40] All of Poe actually we own all in one book if you're classifying an anthology as one book. Pastor Bill: [11:49] Because you said and Beowulf. Pastor Newms: [11:50] Beowulf yeah I know that's where that's where your. Oh dummy must be blanked out it's coming across on this platform it might not on Twitch because. Pastor Bill: [12:10] So true. Pastor Newms: [12:12] You I think Biggs you actually have your filter set on. Cuz it's coming across twitch correctly so I think it's because you have your profanity filter on and I guess dummy is one of the no no words on. On Twitch yet comes across perfectly fine so yeah that's that's that's on your side Biggs I'll have to show you how to turn that off at some point. Pastor Bill: [12:46] HPuffPhoenix says all of Grimm's Fairy Tales. Well if you can't answer do we need to pull another card because nobody got to know you well. Pastor Newms: [13:07] "Through the use of a time machine you are traveling back to the year 1850." Pastor Bill: [13:12] No, I'm not - that ain't happening. Pastor Newms: [13:15] You may take with you one and only one product or invention from the modern error what would you take with you to impress and all our forebears? None of it because they would burn you at the stake. Pastor Bill: [13:27] The Time Machine they would be impressed and then I would come home I aint staying in and 1850. Pastor Newms: [13:34] But even that they would burn you at the stake they would destroy you they would call you now no no man. I'll go forward, hopefully it's better that direction I need some robotic I need some robotic limbs I need a brain to computer interface. Pastor Bill: [13:54] It just gets worse than both directions from here trust me I can guarantee it he just gets worse in both directions. I trust Phoenix says no she's just knowing that to a bat brain is quoting Monty Python she's a witch will she float. Pastor Newms: [14:25] Big big guns of the only thing I. Pastor Bill: [14:29] Take big gun you just wipe them out and be like that fixes the problem. Pastor Newms: [14:33] Like it's really like dot dot dot dot dot dot dot as they're getting you know and just deal with it move on because it's not. Pastor Bill: [14:43] You wipe yourself out no no these are smart bullets they won't hit anything that's close to my own DNA so I'm not wiping out any of my ancestors. Pastor Newms: [14:53] Well you couldn't the rule the true laws of time wouldn't allow that sorry. Pastor Bill: [14:58] Well they would. Yes it's like a stream you can throw a rock in the Stream and divert the stream but it's just going to reconnect and and and do the same eventuality anyway. Pastor Newms: [15:14] Because as soon as soon as you killed someone who, destroyed you you've now destroyed the ability to go back and kill any of them it doesn't I don't believe in the fragmentation of time I believe in the straight one, line anyhoo that is not what we're talking about tonight we are. Pastor Bill: [15:37] I believe in I believe in similar eventual outcomes. In regards to changing time you believe in self-fulfilling, if you go back in time and change something it was because you already did that before, yeah that's what you believe and that's the perfect leave at that's just as valid as believing that time is ruled by three magical Wizards that sit outside of time and are part reptilian and. Because you're talking time travel that's 100%. Pastor Newms: [16:17] Theoretical today. Pastor Bill: [16:24] You'd think if time travel was possible we'd know by now well no you wouldn't not if you can't time travel back further than the machine you created then you wouldn't know it or anyway. Pastor Newms: [16:39] There's a lot of time paradoxes that can happen in time paradoxes are no fun. Pastor Bill: [16:44] See this is how you get to know the pastor's you're learn more about us right now than you probably bargained for what we believe about time travel and get it. Okay oh he's puffing smoke a wrote a book speaking of streams did you know that if a beaver's dam gets messed up they don't have the mental capacity to process it was destroyed and be upset, they simply just start over. I mean I think it's less of that and more of the they're not sure how to pump all the water back out after they patch the hole it's just flooded there's no choice. Pastor Newms: [17:36] You got to start over. Pastor Bill: [17:37] They don't have hydraulic pumps or anything. Pastor Newms: [17:40] Got to start over all right. Pastor Bill: [17:57] You and I were both raised I'm gonna go out on a limb and say. To believe that the Bible from cover to cover is the inerrant word of God spoken about in John 1:1. The word was with God the Word was God. Pastor Newms: [18:22] No I was not taught that part I was taught that that word, became flesh so that that word was the motive that's what I was taught but I was taught that the word of God is inspired inherent and infallible yes. Pastor Bill: [18:42] Inspired inerrant and infallible. And I was raised believing that it was inerrant, I can't remember too much emphasis being put on the inspired part I was kind of downplayed I think and the infallible definitely, and then I was taught to believe that, when it's Edward in John 1:1 it was specifically talking about this the 66 books and that these 66 books, became a living flesh being who was the person Jesus. And that's what I taught I was taught that this was. Everything Jesus was made up of its whole mental capacity as whole everything was this and a lot of Evangelical churches, that I know of have taught that are still teaching that, that this is tantamount to equal with Jesus and equal with God and therefore is Holy in and of itself. You can't write in it you can't question it you can't study it you can't comparatively, analyze it you have to be respectful of it it's Untouchable it's basically all the definitions you give to an idol. That's what that is and. Pastor Newms: [20:28] Yeah see and I wasn't taught anywhere close to that in most I can't say like when I was like our little little kid because some of those churches were a little fun but. Even you know schools and stuff that I went to didn't go that far. Not saying I agree with everything they did teach about the Bible but. I didn't go that far that far. That actually cuz we haven't had that part of the conversation before and that explains some other feelings that you have. And because if I was taught that I would definitely have some more issues around it in how you speak sometimes but continue. Pastor Bill: [21:23] See your learning stuff two decades in and you're still learning stuff about. Pastor Newms: [21:28] Because you don't love me enough to tell me these things ahead of time. Pastor Bill: [21:30] Little just come out like they they wait until the right time then they pop out and I'm like bleep yeah here you go below information right, so where you stand today in all of your study and all of your prayer and all of your belief and all of your everything do you still stand 100% on this inspired inerrant and infallible. Position. Let me just stop you right there if your beliefs weren't messy then you wouldn't be giving this topic the respect it deserves. Pastor Newms: [22:18] Well yeah so. I believe that scripture is inspired the problem is the definition of scripture, the problem is the definition of all and the problem is and then that then takes the next steps and continues through the inerrancy and the infallibility now I believe. That God in the Holy Spirit. Kept the ideals and the overarching importance, of the Bible too its form and protected against. Complete and total an ally Annihilation I don't necessarily agree that, there is a specific version a specific and that's where you start getting into the issues of inherent C and infallibility is because, translations, translate certain aspects completely different and can mean completely different things and how they translate it and that is where you start to get into the messy part of this conversation in my opinion. Pastor Bill: [23:45] Okay so let me let me boil that down to a much simpler statement okay you believe that all scripture is god-breathed and therefore inerrant. Scripture we haven't defined what scripture is in that statement. But that you believe what second Timothy 3:16 Says all scripture is god-breathed and then we take that step to say well it is therefore then inerrant you also believe that. The Bible is this collection of 66 books is infallible. It's not necessarily inherent from cover to cover but infallible. Pastor Newms: [24:33] Yes I do not believe the Bible goes against God in any way and I do not believe I don't believe there's errors written. Pastor Bill: [24:45] No well you you've left room for. Pastor Newms: [24:50] Well now you're cutting out and I can't hear you so. Pastor Bill: [24:52] Sorry you've left room for historical inaccuracies. To contradict yourself but in infallibility you've said that even if those details are reported different that the message it teaches has been. Simply put the inerrancy of the Bible means that someone believes that and then we're not talking about the inerrancy of the word scripture, because we'll talk about the definition of the word scripture here a little bit we're talking about specifically the 66 books. The Theology of the inerrancy of the Bible those 66 books, it means that you believe that every sentence within its text is reliably historically and literally the accurate and true words of God. That means you hang your hat on every statement as being 100% this happened, this is true the details are perfectly accurate and in no way biased or influence by culture, that's what the Theology of inerrancy of the Bible teaches and a lot of people when they say I believe in the inerrancy of the Bible they don't realize. What they're claiming about the Theology of, the inerrancy of the Bible right and so whenever we have this conversation with people about will do you believe in the inerrancy of the Bible a most people don't understand what that theology actually teaches, and if they would take time to actually go through line by line what that theology teaches it's likely they would partially agree with that but not fully agree with that, you're saying you can't hear me right now which is fine. Pastor Newms: [27:07] You're breaking up real bad. Pastor Bill: [27:08] They would say they partially agree with the Theology of inerrancy but not fully agree when they go through line by line what that theology teaches, the infallibility of the Bible as a theology, teaches that the text within the Bible is reliably capable, of communicating the intended message that God and the author that God inspired wanted communicated. So God inspired the author to write the author wrote down and the actual message the intended information, was communicated and that even if there are contradictions and slight details I'm breaking up again. Why are we having such a hard time, even though it may be slight problems in slight details as in Matthew saying one thing happened and Mark saying it happened differently because two people have two different perspectives, that's okay because two people can tell the same story and the story still be true even though two people look at it differently. That's infallibility not inerrancy okay so let's talk about what the definition of scripture, actually is okay the Greek word means holy writ. Or it can be used for anything that's written it's graph a graph graph a, scripture make sure I'm using the right word yeah graphe, it's graphe a any document that's written down by hand is can you can use the word graphic for, it's the word scripture and so when they use the word scripture in the Bible though as as writers of, documents that they intend to, inspire people to live a certain way or correct certain things about Doctrine so basically we're talking about every book of the New Testament, when they're intending to teach and they use the word scripture they don't mean any written document they literally mean a holy writing okay, so when we go and we look at, what the defining Mark is for understanding what a scripture is and when they were. Struggling for hundreds of years starting in I want to say. What year was that by 367 ad they had it, pretty well figured out but the struggle started in I want to say it was 150 ad. They were struggling with what New Testament books to endorse as quote-unquote scripture and they didn't have they hadn't land it on, the books that we have right now there were several books that get left out of the original, thing that people were advising people to read as a new testament and then there's this, modern overwhelming teaching, that it was just understood that everything we believed to be the Old Testament was always, considered scripture was always used for teaching was always used for correcting was always scripture right that the Old Testament was always scripture except, when you go back and you look at the things that, Paul quoted the things that Peter quoted the things that Jesus himself quotes, um now I know for sure Jesus but I'm stretching for Paul and Peter you're not going to find them quoting. From Old Testament books that aren't part of the law collection and the prophets collection, which means Joshua Judges Ruth first and second Samuel first and second Kings first and second chronicles Ezra Nehemiah Esther job Psalms Proverbs Ecclesiastes and Song of Solomon, none of these books when Jesus walked the Earth were actually considered scripture, and even Jesus himself I know for sure because I went and did the researcher there today he never quotes from any of those books. He references Genesis Exodus Leviticus Numbers Deuteronomy Isaiah Jeremiah Lamentations Ezekiel Daniel Hosea Joel Amos Obadiah Jonah Micah Nahum habakkuk Zephaniah haggai Zechariah Malachi and Psalms which are the books of the law, and all of the minor and major prophets as well as Psalms these are the only books that Jesus ever referenced. All the gospels where we have everything that he ever said. As recorded I mean obviously he said of the things you know cause you can't say pass me the salt, without saying pass me the salt and obviously they didn't write down when he was out of meal and was like they're gonna get some of that salt because you know surely he did, ask for things surely he used regular words surely they had regular conversations sure they at some point he was like man, I gotta go take a dump so I'll be back in a few. I mean obviously you didn't use those words but the equivalent of hey man I got to go take care of this I'll be back and they didn't write that down in the Bible. Only references these specific books and it's the same books that you find, being referenced by the rest of the New Testament and you got all these books that weren't referenced, because they weren't really considered scripture they were considered poetry they were considered history, they were considered other things they weren't considered to be scripture but then today we quote from things like, Joshua and judges and Esther and job and Proverbs and we go well the scripture says we find no evidence anywhere in the Bible. That leads us to believe any of those books were considered scripture until-- a hundred and fifty a d-- We don't even have a historical reference to those being scripture until a hundred and fifty a d-- And at some point someone decided Well all this Jewish collection is all scripture now when it wasn't before now I'm not opposed, to having Revelations and gain New Revelations and God doing a new thing that's how Revelations work you know I'm not one of those people that and we talked about this a couple weeks ago, when someone says well they didn't start teaching that until so and so as their main point that's a red flag, that's that shouldn't be your main point right because God can can make New Revelations on the same scripture so I'm not opposed to that but when we are defining what is scripture. We can't point to a collection of books that didn't even start to be collected as that collection. Until over a hundred years after the death of Christ. We can't just blanket say all of this description. That's not how that works even Paul himself in some of his writings he'll say. Now this is what I believe I don't want you to take it as a command from the Lord this is my opinion blah. Now obviously that's not scripture that's Paul even categorically saying this is not scripture this is my personal opinion right. And so. We have to understand that in second Timothy 3:16 when it says all scripture is dot-dot-dot gonna go god-breathed. Paul is not talking about a collection of 66 books that some is going to start putting together. 90 - 60 years after he writes that that's not what he's referencing. We know that's always referencing because we know Paul's not a prophet, never claimed to be a prophet never met any prophecies and that would most definitely be a prophecy, to say you know we're gonna put together a thing and we're gonna call it the Bible and it's gonna be scripture and then you've got Jude. Referencing a do what's called a deuterocanonical, deuterocanonical deuterocanonical Book of Enoch okay so there's apocryphal books meaning their books that were believed to have been written after Malachi, but before Matthew, better than included in most Jewish studies modern Jewish studies and in most Catholic Bibles those are the apocryphal books then you got to deuterocanonical canonical canonical books. That are books that Christians around the world have adopted as Canon. But the Catholic church does not endorse and the Jewish belief is that yeah it would be good for you to read it but it's not part of your required studies, like The Book of Enoch okay scripture can exist in those books. And there was something I wanted to talk about where did you go why is that zooming out. Pastor Newms: [38:28] Hey Pastor Bill you have a hole in your shirt. Pastor Bill: [38:34] Stop that. I know, the cat did it. Makes me angry. Pastor Newms: [38:43] I was like at the at the moment it's right next to the p in your name it's just right there just. Pastor Bill: [38:51] Why is my computer trying to make me zoom in or zoom out right now that doesn't make any sense oh maybe because my arm is on the keyboard I'm reaching over my keyboard. Okay so by 353. What year was that 364 all. Pastor Newms: [39:18] I'm not good with the years. Pastor Bill: [39:23] 367 by 367 ad there were was a collection of books that they believed were authentic, New Testament scripture, okay so we're talking 267 years after the time of Christ a bunch of churches and their leadership finally decided that of the Ada, eight zero gospel accounts that had been found, and the numerous letters claimed to have been written by Paul or Peter or James or Jude or, judah's Bartholomew I mean the list goes on and on and on all these letters that they had that didn't make it. They came up with a system for deciding what should be a new testament book what shouldn't be New Testament book and they were actually using these words by them Old Testament and New Testament, number one was Apostolic did it come from an apostle did one of the Apostles of Christ pin this work, that was number one if it if they did then it automatically made the first cut they automatically went okay this goes in the in the good pile, surprisingly enough only Matthew Mark Luke and John, of 80 gospels those are the only four that met the first run even though mark, I didn't actually meet Jesus, it's believed that Mark was only writing down Peters words because Peter was old and was having vision problems and couldn't couldn't right you know he's got that old arthritic thing going on and so Mark was writing down Peters words, number two authentic does it have the ring of Truth did it sound when read out loud. To those people like it was something that was worthy of being included in a holy document, or did it sound like it was written by Joe Schmo down the road who is just a normal guy was it eloquent or was it simpleton. Number three ancient has it been used from the earliest of times do the ideas taught in this writing. Line up with and builds upon the ideas that the church in general, has taught over the years for instance. By this time he had agree all agreed on what the Trinity was on the belief of the trinity, and if any phrase in any of these books these writings that were being considered made it sound like the author, did wasn't endorsing the trinity then it got kicked out accepted. Were most of the known churches using this writing. And at this time only 23 of the now 27 books that we have were actually in wide use, 23 of them and then the others were added because they met a certain amount of these other criteria. Number 5 accurate, does it conform to the theological teachings of the church. In the year 360 ad. If it didn't agree with the teachings of the church and 360 ad for whatever reason it was disqualified. And that's how they came to agree loosely. What the 27 books of the New Testament would be now we know that Paul wrote a lot of letters and we know that you know they're out there, and there's a lot of arguments online that point to a lot of scriptures. And a lot of non scriptures in my opinion that say things like the words that were delivering to you are scripture. Except when you go back and read them it says things like the words that we did deliver to you in person. Our God breathed inspired of God and now we're writing you a follow-up letter, because that it ended up you need encouragement you'd fallen off the trail you've blah blah blah so you don't actually have the original teachings, that Paul and Peter and all these guys were going around teaching because they weren't writing those down they were delivering them orally. We only have their follow-up letters highlighting the areas where their people were struggling with or needed encouragement in only the hard things we don't have any of the easy stuff, that they actually taught face-to-face which is very frustrating to me all right. Um because it would be nice to have all that other stuff. Are you with me so far Pastor Newms everything you want to add or contract or whatever. Pastor Newms: [45:29] Well so we are 51 minutes and a now I'll say it. English is a terrible language. Pastor Bill: [45:40] English is so hard so hard. Pastor Newms: [45:43] And so there's a lot that. You know people teach in Herrin see teacher people teach infallibility and they don't agree on what those words even mean, I was reading one article today that taught the up. Pastor Bill: [46:02] Ah Zaidee. Pastor Newms: [46:06] Of the opposite of what we're talking about right now which is what most people believe inherently and infallible seemed means they were teaching the exact opposite that. The infallibility means it's never ever ever inaccurate and its inherent meaning it it can't be proven wrong and it was like wait that. Pastor Bill: [46:32] That's backwards of what the rest of the world believes those words mean come on. Pastor Newms: [46:37] It's so it I mean it's a problem. Pastor Bill: [46:40] Yeah that's the problem. Pastor Newms: [46:41] And you know I think. Over time we have stretched, what our beliefs are from individuals and groups of individuals who had goals in mind, and sadly I think that has tainted. Some of the translations and some of the beliefs that the modern church has because of that. You know it's one of them things. Pastor Bill: [47:30] It's one of them things it really is okay so if you don't have anything else you want to talk about about the definition of scripture the word scripture or what is you know. Pastor Newms: [47:43] So you know for me I believe. The 66 books that we have are all important I think they are all. They all at some point meet the definition of scripture that's given in. Timothy but I don't necessarily believe every aspect in them. Does because of situations like where Paul says this is my opinion where Paul says bring me my coat you know there's nothing we can get doctrinally, that brick that builds up the church or that is used for Doctrine and bring me my coat, the rest of the writings around that are really good and I believe that. You know God did Keep. You know preserved the knowledge that we need in those books. But. You know there is that aspect of you can't trust a single translation several of the translations are wrong in my opinion in different places, because of how they translate the Greek or the Hebrew or. Things like that whereas some are really good. Which is why I study with it at least 3 anytime I study because. Different people translated each time. But that's that's my thing and then you have the Council of nicaea later the other councils that came after the times you're talking about. Pastor Bill: [49:50] For total councils. Pastor Newms: [49:54] And well there were four that talked about scripture correct. Pastor Bill: [49:59] Right for that dealt with what are we where are we calling cannon not exclusively dealt with what are we calling Cannon but dealt with what are we calling. Pastor Newms: [50:08] But there were there were other councils that, determined things that determined what they would like like what you were mentioning of hey it has to be one of the beliefs that the church holds those other. Councils are where those were set. And so it is interesting to look at some of those historically and how that shaped modern Christianity. And of course my favorite story ever comes from one of them so but anyway. We're not going to we're not going to tell it today we're not going to tell us today on purpose so that way people are like which news is favorite story and then they'll have to hear it at some point. Pastor Bill: [51:01] The man. Pastor Newms: [51:04] Because we'll get to it we're getting to the season where it's going to be used well we can't get through November and December without it coming up but stay with us you'll get it. What else did you want to say Pastor Bill while you're looking through your nose. Pastor Bill: [51:22] So I actually was looking at my notes I was reading the letter of. The thinness and effing Asia's the first person in 83 67 this was his Easter letter, to Believers that was revealed at the Pascal Festival where we get the first complete list of the 66 books that, we hold to be Cannon because I like. I like his his sixth paragraph in this letter he's talking about you know here's here's the Old Testament books here's the New Testament books, and then he sums up what I think is a very very very important point, that the church forgot over the years that allowed this, to leave the status of what it is and become what I growing up was taught that it was okay, and and I read what he said here he says after giving the list he does one paragraph for Old Testament one paragraph for New Testament he says, these are Fountains of Salvation that they who thirst may be satisfied with the living words they contain in these alone is proclaimed the doctrine of godliness, let no man add to these, neither let him take out from these for concerning these Lord put to shame the Sadducees and said he do are not knowing the scriptures and he reprove the Jews saying, search the scriptures for these are they that testify of me so let me. Kind of modernize that some he said these 66 books are what you need to know. To understand your salvation, and all the details for salvation that you need to know are within these books and the other books that, people have gone to they don't have the doctrines in them that you need for salvation they're not wrong, they're not invalid. But this is your basis of understanding salvation the doctrine of understanding salvation exists Within These pages. That was his point study these these 66 books to understand salvation. In nowhere in there did he say. This alone is the exhaustive word of God and nowhere in there did he say that every jot and Tittle of these 66 books, is the inspired word of God he said the doctrine of salvation that you need. Is Within These pages and that's true this is probably, the most important collection of writings ever. But when I go to the Old Testament and I see instructions to the Israelites about the right way and the wrong way to sell your daughter into slavery, and I see instructions to the priest about how to decide if a woman has been unfaithful to her husband. And cause a miscarriage and shrivel up their womb. These are not details that the book is intended for. These are details of what God dealt with those people according to their culture at that time that is part of an overall story to understand why. Why Jesus why Jesus says a man human why Jesus sacrifice what does that mean to me. I don't look at the Old Testament and go, these are instructions on how I'm supposed to live my life I need to go get some dust and mix it in with some water and mix it in with this plant that by the way would probably just make a gross kind of tea and not cause any kind of miscarriage. And it's probably just. A way to tell the man to grow up and love his wife so that she's not feeling like she needs to go out and look for justification in the arms of another man. Because I can almost guarantee you one hundred percent of the time when that happened that, the woman was found innocent because even the tone of the text is satirical in nature like, getting off on a tangent I've seen so many videos using that as God endorses abortion right here in this shit I'm like that's not. Text means at all breathe okay yeah I like bit so often, you know in my later teenage years and grown up you'd hear like Bible stands for basic instructions before leaving Earth, and it's interesting that that yeah but it's so interesting in that and that what is it called anagram, anyway it's so interesting that that lines up so well when it literally has nothing to do with why it's called Bible but it's so accurate, yeah the Bible is the basic instruction and I do mean basic as in, you know I'm over it that's so Elementary I mean Ian basic as in you build a foundation for a building, and you build on top of that Foundation that's the Bible this is the foundation of our Christian beliefs and then we build on top of it, and too often we've got so many Christians standing outside of the building worshipping the foundation. Instead of building on top of the foundation. But that's my personal experience okay so this Universal Bible don't let the name, throw you because it first it through me until I actually looked at what was inside of it before I bought it as far as universal what they mean is it's got what every. Christian sect will say sect considers to be Canaan scripture so what the Samaritan believers, hold as Canon Bible what the Hebrew Believers hold his Cannon Bible what the Orthodox Believers holders can in Bible what the Catholics hold his Cannon Bible but the Syriac Believers holds Canada Bible but the Ethiopian, Believers hold as Cannon Bible and then what the pro majority of, North American Believers are the Protestants what the Parsons hold as the Canon Bible okay. And so you've got all the the books that you would expect to have you know all the 39 Old Testament books you've got all the 27 New Testament books, then you've got other things that you wouldn't expect that like I said in the words of this this guy, Athanasius they're good they're not the basis of the doctrine of salvation, but they're good for enriching your Christian faith and your walk you've got the epistle to the Ladeoetians written by Paul, you've got a book called the acts of Paul and Thecla you've got a third Corinthians letter, you know First Corinthians second with is now a third Corinthians letter that Paul had written. And then you've got the apart for apocryphal and deuterocanonical books first as draws second as dress 1st 2nd 3rd and 4th Maccabees the Epistle of Jeremiah the prayer of Azariah the book of Baruch, the prayer of Manasseh Bell and the Dragon, interesting story wisdom of sirach wisdom of Solomon not to be confused with the Song of Solomon because it's not, the parts of Esther that were removed they're here, um Tobit Judith Susanna Enoch, all three books merged into one text jubilees first Clement the Ascension of Isaiah Shepherd of hermas the Didact I don't know he said that detach, The Apocalypse of Baruch did counting of Josephus of the 6th Jewish War, and the fourth Bucca book of Barack. These are all the books that are considered Canon by any believers, and then you've also got Psalms chapter 151 which isn't in, the partisan Canon Bible which is interesting. And yeah so if you wanted to get a look into all that all the extra books and see you know. What is considered Canon by other believers who have gone yeah this is this is great stuff to have, um to know to enrich your faith to grow shoot us a message and I can send you the link to where you can go get this it won't be one of those I'll get a kickback when you buy it because, we're not going to do that that's that's pointless, if you want this resource then I'm more than happy to send you the link and I'm not going to get anything out of it but it's really great and, it's a little difficult to navigate because of just just the way they've laid out the chapters and there's no you know names at the top of the pages too, just open randomly and see where you are but there is a, table of contents so you can find the beginning of a book and then work your way forward to where you want to be it does have the the first numbers and all that so but yeah there's so much more, that Christians have identified as Canon that exists, outside of the 66 books that more or less the Catholic Church, decided for the Protestants that we would hold as Cannon so. Is scripture inerrant yes. Is every jot and Tittle of the Bible scripture not in my opinion based off of my research. Is the Bible infallible yes I believe all 66 books do the job of being available to teach the message intended. Now of course those words can be twisted and corrupted and taught wrong and on and on and on and on. They are available to teach the message intended and capable of and so. When you're moving forward in your Christian walk and you're trying to decide well what do I believe where do I go what do I do this is that Foundation if you start to believe something, that then this directly contradicts. Then we need to understand, what is that contradiction and why does it exist, is that contradiction because you don't fully understand what is they believe or is that contradiction that you don't fully understand the content matter here, is it because there's a cultural thing being taught in a certain part of script of, there goes it's hard to get around these words of just blanket calling it scripture because of the way I was raised you know is there a context thing where it's a cultural you know cautionary Tale, which happens a lot so yes we face those issues we've got a question from someone on Twitch, the call themselves haitham 9 kin way I hope I said that right it's hard with you switch to him sometime is it wrong that I love Jesus even though, I'm assuming that was supposed to be the word gay they put geh and so. I'm gonna say it's not wrong to love Jesus no matter who you are or, how you are or what you're into and we don't normally use those kind of words in this context what you've gone you know forward with and saying there, but no it's not wrong to love Jesus Just As You Are, and if something in your life needs to be different that's not my call, that's not Pastor newms is call that's not anyone's call except for between you and God, if you love Jesus and you pursue Jesus and you pursue relationship with God and you study the Bible, and that is then up to you, if you feel like something in your life is wrong and if you feel like that needs to change that's between you and God. Can I love cows even though I'm not a Christian someone else asks on Twitch I think you're confusing Christianity with Hinduism, and you can love cows even if you're not a Hindu well the twitch chat is really popping right now it's nice. Pastor Newms: [1:07:19] Yeah. Pastor Bill: [1:07:21] All right so we're 13 minutes over our normal time so we will head and wrap this up, I want everyone out there to understand that we want everyone to be able to be a part of what we're doing, and they have a safe space here no matter who you are, what you believe or what your orientation is Haytham 9 Kenway I would love to have a conversation with you off of the live about having a relationship with Jesus and, your question was there can I ask Jesus for forgiveness I'm really really gay and I think there's a lot of stigma, that you're dealing with in that question alone and so there's a lot to unpack there that I'd like to unpack off the air. What do you asking forgiveness for cuz if it's for being yourself then you know, that's a stigma that you're going to need to deal with that has nothing to do with your relationship with Jesus, because you come to Jesus as you are but we're going to wrap this up for tonight, this podcast comes out on Wednesday nights at 7 p.m. Central Standard Time anywhere that you can get podcasts every Sunday night at 6:30 p.m. Central Standard time we're here live and you can join us live, and be a part of the conversation and ask questions and we always have a theme that we're going with on the Sunday nights and so we'd love to have people, come in and join the conversation and so for tonight we're going to sign off and we love you guys I hope you have a great week. Pastor Newms: Stay safe. Pastor Bill: And, "Until next time..."
I have tried to give the maximum short intro about the Mega Game Assassin's Creed. In detail we may see in the Upcoming episodes! Happy listening
L'histoire vécue par de nombreux Syriens sous le régime d'Hafez El-Assad puis de son fils Bachar. Haytham, désormais réfugié en France, raconte la tentative de révolution syrienne et la guerre qui a suivi. Invité : Haytham Al-Aswad, co-auteur avec Nicolas Hénin de "Haytham, une jeunesse syrienne" (Editions Dargaud)
Gregory Wrightstone is a geologist with more than 35 years of experience researching and studying various aspects of the Earth's processes. He earned a bachelor's degree from Waynesburg University and a master's from West Virginia University, both in the field of geology. He was recently accepted as an Expert Reviewer for the UN's Intergovermental Panel on Climate Change. His science and fact-based approach exposes many of the alarmist myths concerning our changing climate. Gregory is a strong proponent of the scientific process and believes that policy decisions should be driven by science, facts and data, not a political agenda. In addition, he believes that we should use all of the Earth's resources for the betterment of mankind and do it as good stewards."Gregory Wrightstone is a man of true science, firmly in the tradition of (Arab natural philosopher) al-Haytham... His mission is to distinguish what is from what is not in the climate debate. He has splendidly succeeded."- Christopher Monckton, Viscount of BrenchleyMemberships: Expert Reviewer Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change - 6th Assessment Report (AR6)American Assoc. for the Advancement of ScienceAAPG Division of Environmental GeosciencesGeophysical Society of PittsburghGeological Society of AmericaAppalachian Geologic SocietyAmerican Scientific AffiliationPittsburgh Geologic SocietyHouston Geologic SocietyOhio Geologic SocietyMedia Sites:http://rsmedia.ushttp://ThePatrioticReport.comCowboy Logic: http://cowboylogic.ushttp://StreamingTalkRadio.comOpener Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/dark-sunglasses-single/1556788431Rumble: https://rumble.com/user/RocciStucciMediaPODCAST: https://www.spreaker.com/show/rocci-stuccis-situation-room
هيثم خلايلة يا فلسطيني | Haytham Khalaily Ya FalastiniSupport the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/falastini)
Our guest today is my friend Hytham Atwan, owner and CEO of Nubia Tours in Egypt. Egypt is certainly not a destination that needs an introduction, but if you haven’t thought much about it - I want you to know that it’s more than the pyramids of Giza and getting your Insta photo air kissing the sphinx. It’s a complicated country - where to see it RIGHT, you need to have relationships on your side. Otherwise you’ll miss that dinner in the home of a local and access to otherwise “roped off” areas of the pyramids, or find yourself on a crowded Nile cruise being herded around vs a private experience. Hytham and I discuss some tidbits on insider experiences you can have in Egypt, why it’s such an important destination, some Celebrity guests Hytham has entertained, and how the country is a microcosm of our wider world. See photos and Listener Perks at www.luxtravelinsider.com Connect with me on Social: Instagram LinkedIn
Tracy and Holly talk about the animated version of Ibn Al-Haytham's story, Omar Sharif, waffle cones, and what to do with holiday leftovers. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Ibn al-Haytham made massive contributions to the world’s understanding of light and vision through experiments that he did during a prolonged house arrest in the early 11th century. He also wrote about medicine, philosophy, astronomy, math and ethics. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Following the Renaissance, Europe had an explosion of science. The works of the Greeks had been lost during the Dark Ages while civilizations caught up to the technical progress. Or so we were taught in school. Previously, we looked at the contributions during the Golden Age of the Islamic Empires and the Renaissance when that science returned to Europe following the Holy Wars. The great thinkers from the Renaissance pushed boundaries and opened minds. But the revolution coming after them would change the very way we thought of the world. It was a revolution based in science and empirical thought, lasting from the middle of the 1500s to late in the 1600s. There are three main aspects I'd like to focus on in terms of taking all the knowledge of the world from that point and preparing it to give humans enlightenment, what we call the age after the Scientific Revolution. These are new ways of reasoning and thinking, specialization, and rigor. Let's start with rigor. My cat jumps on the stove and burns herself. She doesn't do it again. My dog gets too playful with the cat and gets smacked. Both then avoid doing those things in the future. Early humans learn that we can forage certain plants and then realize we can take those plants to another place and have them grow. And then we realize they grow best when planted at certain times of the year. And watching the stars can provide guidance on when to do so. This evolved over generations of trial and error. Yet we believed those stars revolved around the earth for much of our existence. Even after designing orreries and mapping the heavens, we still hung on to this belief until Copernicus. His 1543 work “On The Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres” marks the beginning of the Scientific Revolution. Here, he almost heretically claimed that the stars in fact revolved around the sun, as did the Earth. This wasn't exactly new. Aristarchus had theorized this heliocentric model in Ancient Greece. Ptolemy had disagreed in Almagest, where he provided tables to compute location and dates using the stars. Tables that had taken rigor to produce. And that Ptolemaic system came to be taken for granted. It worked fine. The difference was, Copernicus had newer technology. He had newer optics, thousands more years of recorded data (some of which was contributed by philosophers during the golden age of Islamic science), the texts of ancient astronomers, and newer ecliptical tables and techniques with which to derive them. Copernicus didn't accept what he was taught but instead looked to prove or disprove it with mathematical rigor. The printing press came along in 1440 and 100 years later, Luther was lambasting the church, Columbus discovered the New World, and the printing press helped disseminate information in a way that was less controllable by governments and religious institutions who at times felt threatened by that information. For example, Outlines of Pyrrhonism from first century Sextus Empiricus was printed in 1562, adding skepticism to the growing European thought. In other words, human computers were becoming more sentient and needed more input. We couldn't trust what the ancients were passing down and the doctrine of the church was outdated. Others began to ask questions. Johannes Keppler published Mysterium Cosmographicum in 1596, in defense of Copernicus. He would go on to study math, such as the relationship between math and music, and the relationship between math and the weather. And in 1604 published Astronomiae Pars Optica, where he proposed a new method to measure eclipses of the moon. He would become the imperial mathematician to Emperor Rudolf II, where he could work with other court scholars. He worked on optical theory and wrote Astronomiae Pars Optica, or The Optical Part of Astronomy. He published numerous other works that pushed astronomy, optics, and math forward. His Epitome of Copernican Astronomy would go further than Copernicus, assigning ellipses to the movements of celestial bodies and while it didn't catch on immediately, his inductive reasoning and the rigor that followed, was enough to have him conversing with Galileo. Galileo furthered the work of Copernicus and Kepler. He picked up a telescope in 1609 and in his lifetime saw magnification go from 3 to 30 times. This allowed him to map Jupiter's moons, proving the orbits of other celestial bodies. He identified sunspots. He observed the strength of motions and developed formulas for inertia and parabolic trajectories. We were moving from deductive reasoning, or starting our scientific inquiry with a theory - to inductive reasoning, or creating theories based on observation. Galileos observations expanded our knowledge of Venus, the moon, and the tides. He helped to transform how we thought, despite ending up in an Inquisition over his findings. The growing quantity and types of systematic experimentation represented a shift in values. Emiricism, observing evidence for yourself, and the review of peers - whether they disagreed or not. These methods were being taught in growing schools but also in salons and coffee houses and, as was done in Athens, in paid lectures. Sir Francis Bacon argued about only basing scientific knowledge on inductive reasoning. We now call this the Baconian Method, which he wrote about in 1620 when he published his book, New method, or Novum Organum in latin. This was the formalization of eliminative induction. He was building on if not replacing the inductive-deductive method in Aristotle's Organon. Bacon was the Attorney General of England and actually wrote Novum while sitting as the Lord Chancellor of England, who presides over the House of Lords and also is the highest judge, or was before Tony Blair. Bacon's method built on ancient works from not only Aristotle but also Al-Biruni, al-Haytham, and many others. And has influenced generations of scientists, like John Locke. René Descartes helped lay the further framework for rationalism, coining the term “I think therefore I am.” He became by many accounts the father of modern Western Philosophy and asked what can we be certain of, or what is true? This helped him rethink various works and develop Cartesian geometry. Yup, he was the one who developed standard notation in 1637, a thought process that would go on to impact many other great thinkers for generations - especially with the development of calculus. As with many other great natural scientists or natural philosophers of the age, he also wrote on the theory of music, anatomy, and some of his works could be considered a protopsychology. Another method that developed in the era was empiricism, which John Locke proposed in An Essay Concerning Human Understanding in 1689. George Berkeley, Thomas Hobbes, and David Hume would join that movement and develop a new basis for human knowledge in that empirical tradition that the only true knowledge accessible to our minds was that based on experience. Optics and simple machines had been studied and known of since antiquity. But tools that deepened the understating of sciences began to emerge during this time. We got the steam digester, new forms of telescopes, vacuum pumps, the mercury barometer. And, most importantly for this body of work - we got the mechanical calculator. Robert Boyle was influenced by Galileo, Bacon, and others. He gave us Boyle's Law, explaining how the pressure of gas increases as the volume of a contain holding the gas decreases. He built air pumps. He investigated how freezing water expands, he experimented with crystals. He experimented with magnetism, early forms of electricity. He published the Skeptical Chymist in 1660 and another couple of dozen books. Before him, we had alchemy and after him, we had chemistry. One of his students was Robert Hooke. Hooke. Hooke defined the law of elasticity, He experimented with everything. He made music tones from brass cogs that had teeth cut in specific proportions. This is storing data on a disk, in a way. Hooke coined the term cell. He studied gravitation in Micrographia, published in 1665. And Hooke argued, conversed, and exchanged letters at great length with Sir Isaac Newton, one of the greatest scientific minds of all time. He gave the first theory on the speed of sound, Newtonian mechanics, the binomials series. He also gave us Newton's Rules for Science which are as follows: We are to admit no more causes of natural things than such as are both true and sufficient to explain their appearances. Therefore to the same natural effects we must, as far as possible, assign the same causes. The qualities of bodies, which admit neither intension nor remission of degrees, and which are found to belong to all bodies within the reach of our experiments, are to be esteemed the universal qualities of all bodies whatsoever. In experimental philosophy we are to look upon propositions collected by general induction from phenomena as accurately or very nearly true, notwithstanding any contrary hypotheses that may be imagined, until such time as other phenomena occur, by which they may either be made more accurate, or liable to exceptions These appeared in Principia, which gave us the laws of motion and a mathematical description of gravity leading to universal gravitation. Newton never did find the secret to the Philosopher's Stone while working on it, although he did become the Master of the Royal Mint at a pivotal time of recoining, and so who knows. But he developed the first reflecting telescope and made observations about prisms that led to his book Optics in 1704. And ever since he and Leibniz developed calculus, high school and college students alike have despised him. Leibniz also did a lot of work on calculus but was a great philosopher as well. His work on logic All our ideas are compounded from a very small number of simple ideas, which form the alphabet of human thought. Complex ideas proceed from these simple ideas by a uniform and symmetrical combination, analogous to arithmetical multiplication. This would ultimately lead to the algebra of concepts and after a century and a half of great mathematicians and logicians would result in Boolean algebra, the zero and one foundations of computing, once Claude Shannon gave us information theory a century after that. Blaise Pascal was another of these philosopher mathematician physicists who also happened to dabble in inventing. I saved him for last because he didn't just do work on probability theory, do important early work on vacuums, give us Pascal's Triangle for binomial coefficients, and invent the hydraulic press. Nope. He also developed Pascal's Calculator, an early mechanical calculator that is the first known to have worked. He didn't build it to do much, just help with the tax collecting work he was doing for his family. The device could easily add and subtract two numbers and then loop through those tasks in order to do rudimentary multiplication and division. He would only build about 50, but the Pascaline as it came to be known was an important step in the history of computing. And that Leibniz guy, he invented the Leibniz wheels to make the multiplication automatic rather than just looping through addition steps. It wouldn't be until 1851 that the Arithmometer made a real commercial go at mechanical calculators in a larger and more business like way. While Tomas, the inventor of that device is best known for his work on the calculator today, his real legacy is the 1,000 families who get their income from the insurance company he founded, which is still in business as GAN Assurances, and the countless families who have worked there or used their services. That brings us to the next point about specializations. Since the Egyptians and Greeks we've known that the more specialists we had in fields, the more discoveries they made. Many of these were philosophers or scientists. They studied the stars and optics and motions and mathematics and geometry for thousands of years, and an increasingly large amount of information was available to generations that followed starting with the written words first being committed to clay tablets in Mesopotamia. The body of knowledge had grown to the point where one could study a branch of science, such as mathematics, physics, astronomy, biology, and chemistry for their entire lives - improving each field in their own way. Every few generations, this transformed societal views about nature. We also increased our study of anatomy, with an increase in or return to the dissection of human corpses, emerging from the time when that was not allowed. And these specialties began to diverge into their own fields in the next generations. There was certainly still collaboration, and in fact the new discoveries only helped to make science more popular than ever. Given the increased popularity, there was more work done, more theories to prove or disprove, more scholarly writings, which were then given to more and more people through innovations to the printing press, and a more and more literate people. Seventeenth century scientists and philosophers were able to collaborate with members of the mathematical and astronomical communities to effect advances in all fields. All of this rapid change in science since the end of the Renaissance created a groundswell of interest in new ways to learn about findings and who was doing what. There was a Republic of Letters, or a community of intellectuals spread across Europe and America. These informal networks sprang up and spread information that might have been considered heretical before transmitted through secret societies of intellectuals and through encrypted letters. And they fostered friendships, like in the early days of computer science. There were groups meeting in coffee houses and salons. The Royal Society of London sprang up in 1600. Then the British Royal Society was founded in 1660. They started a publication called Philosophical Transactions in 1665. There are over 8,000 members of the society, which runs to this day with fellows of the society including people like Robert Hooke and fellows would include Newton, Darwin, Faraday, Einstein, Francis Crick, Turing, Tim Berners-Lee, Elon Musk, and Stephen Hawking. And this inspired Colbert to establish the French Academy of Sciences in 1666. They swapped papers, read one another's works, and that peer review would evolve into the journals and institutions we have today. There are so many more than the ones mentioned in this episode. Great thinkers like Otto von Guericke, Otto Brunfels, Giordano Bruno, Leonard Fuchs, Tycho Brahe, Samuel Hartlib, William Harvey, Marcello Malpighi, John Napier, Edme Mariotte, Santorio Santorio, Simon Stevin, Franciscus Sylvius, John Baptist van Helmont, Andreas Vesalius, Evangelista Torricelli, Francois Viete, John Wallis, and the list goes on. Now that scientific communities were finally beyond where the Greeks had left off like with Plato's Academy and the letters sent by ancient Greeks. The scientific societies had emerged similarly, centuries later. But the empires had more people and resources and traditions of science to build on. This massive jump in learning then prepared us for a period we now call the Enlightenment, which then opened minds and humanity was ready to accept a new level of Science in the Age of Enlightenment. The books, essays, society periodicals, universities, discoveries, and inventions are often lost in the classroom where the focus can be about the wars and revolutions they often inspired. But those who emerged in the Scientific Revolution acted as guides for the Enlightenment philosophers, scientists, engineers, and thinkers that would come next. But we'll have to pick that back up in the next episode!
We only took a one month break but there are so many new (and a few old) books to talk about! We put together a list of ten titles of interest to start out the Fall with. 1) Etel Adnan's Shifting the Silence (out in September) is the latest by the 95-year-old Lebanese artist and poet. 2) The Fourth Shore, Alessandro Spina, tr. André Naffis-Sahely, is the latest volume of the author's monumental series, The Confines of The Shadow, to be translated. You can read about Spina -- who came from a Syrian family, grew up in Libya, and wrote in Italian -- here. 3) A bilingual collection of the renowned Iraq female poet Nazik al-Mala'ika, Revolt Against the Sun, tr. Emily Drumsta (out in October) 4) The Pillar of Salt is a classic post-colonial novel by the Tunisian writer Albert Memmi, who passed aways this year. Adam Shatz wrote a lovely profile of him in the London Review of Books. 5) Two Half Faces by Moroccan Dutch author Mustafa Stitou, tr. David Colmer (October 2020). You can read some of Stitou's poems here. 6) A Country For Dying, by the Moroccan novelist Abdallah Taia, tr. Emma Ramadan, tells the stories of several immigrants and refugees in Paris, seeking new lives and escape from violence and repression. 7) Straight from the Horse's Mouth Meryem Alaoui tr. Emma Ramadan (September) is narrated by a prostitute in Casablanca. 8) Between Beirut and the Moon, A. Naji Bakhti, is a collection of humorous essays about the author's family and growing up in post-civil-war Beirut. 9) Haytham al-Wardani's Book of Sleep tr. Robin Moger (November) & his newest book in Arabic, Ma La Youmkin Islahu (“That Which Cannot Be Repaired”). Kayfa Ta published Al-Wardani's How to Disappear. 10) Sonia Nimr's Wondrous Journeys in Strange Lands tr. you very own MLQ. We also discussed some recentmovingwritingfromLebanon. And how some ways writers have come together and you can help to support libraries and bookshops there.
recorded 26th February 2020 Gregory Wrightstone is a geologist with more than 35 years of experience researching and studying various aspects of the Earth's processes. He earned a bachelor's degree from Waynesburg University and a master's from West Virginia University, both in the field of geology. He has written and presented extensively on many aspects of geology including how paleogeography and paleoclimate control geologic processes. His findings have allowed him to speak at many venues around the world including Ireland, England, China and most recently India. Gregory is a strong proponent of the scientific process and believes that policy decisions should be driven by science, facts and data, not a political agenda. Gregory Wrightstone is a man of true science, firmly in the tradition of (Arab natural philosopher) al-Haytham... His mission is to distinguish what is from what is not in the climate debate. He has splendidly succeeded. Christopher Monckton, Viscount of Brenchley (source inconvenientfacts.xyz) https://inconvenientfacts.xyz/blog https://twitter.com/GWrightstone https://www.amazon.co.uk/Inconvenient-Facts-Science-That-Doesnt/dp/1545614105 State of the Markets Podcast Paul Rodriguez of https://ThinkTrading.com https://twitter.com/prodr1guez Tim Price of https://Pricevaluepartners.com https://twitter.com/timfprice Podcast links: https://sotmpodcast.com https://anchor.fm/stateofthemarkets https://apple.co/2OUGW6R All podcasts available on youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-tcfr0by81zN6DMn2Oii0A --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/stateofthemarkets/message
Documentary filmmaking as a powerful tool for discussion on human rights. The post Haytham Chamass #jedensvetdoma2020 appeared first on Fred Film Radio.
Documentary filmmaking as a powerful tool for discussion on human rights.Haytham Chamass #jedensvetdoma2020 was first posted on March 21, 2020 at 11:06 am.©2015 "Fred English Channel". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at radio@fred.fm
In this episode, I am going to take a look at the life of Haytham Kenway from his return to The Colonies in 1758 to his death, along with the my personal thoughts on the character. Music by Joseph McDade Visions of the Past on Twitter
Documentary filmmaking as a powerful tool for discussion on human rights. The post Haytham Chamass #jedensvetdoma2020 appeared first on Fred Film Radio.
Documentary filmmaking as a powerful tool for discussion on human rights. The post Haytham Chamass #jedensvetdoma2020 appeared first on Fred Film Radio.
Documentary filmmaking as a powerful tool for discussion on human rights. The post Haytham Chamass #jedensvetdoma2020 appeared first on Fred Film Radio.
Documentary filmmaking as a powerful tool for discussion on human rights. The post Haytham Chamass #jedensvetdoma2020 appeared first on Fred Film Radio.
Documentary filmmaking as a powerful tool for discussion on human rights. The post Haytham Chamass #jedensvetdoma2020 appeared first on Fred Film Radio.
In this episode, I am going to take a look at the life of Haytham Kenway from his birth up to October 9, 1757, along with the character's real-world information. Music by Joseph McDade Visions of the Past on Twitter
This Week in Machine Learning & Artificial Intelligence (AI) Podcast
Today we kick off our KubeCon ‘19 series joined by Haytham AbuelFutuh and Ketan Umare, a pair of software engineers at Lyft. In our conversation, we discuss: Their newly open-sourced, cloud-native ML and data processing platform, Flyte. What prompted Ketan to undertake this project and his experience building Flyte. The core value proposition of Flyte. What type-systems mean for the user experience. How Flyte relates to Kubeflow. How Flyte is used across Lyft. The complete show notes for this episode can be found at twimlai.com/talk/343.
Today on Sojourner Truth: Analysis following the first day of the Senate trial of the impeachment of Donald Trump. Our guest is national affairs correspondent for The Nation magazine, John Nichols. We also discuss the annexation of northern Mexico by the United States and its relationship to the economic growth of the U.S. and U.S. immigration policies today. Chicano liberation and environmental activist Bill Gallegos break it down for us. For our Campaigners for Black Lives series, we speak with Haytham Faraj, the attorney in the case of Kenneth Ross, who was killed by police in Gardena California. Video was recently released that Kenneth Ross was unarmed as well as new information about the police officer who killed Kenneth. Finally, our weekly Earth Minute with Anne Petermann.
Today on Sojourner Truth: Analysis following the first day of the Senate trial of the impeachment of Donald Trump. Our guest is national affairs correspondent for The Nation magazine, John Nichols. We also discuss the annexation of northern Mexico by the United States and its relationship to the economic growth of the U.S. and U.S. immigration policies today. Chicano liberation and environmental activist Bill Gallegos break it down for us. For our Campaigners for Black Lives series, we speak with Haytham Faraj, the attorney in the case of Kenneth Ross, who was killed by police in Gardena California. Video was recently released that Kenneth Ross was unarmed as well as new information about the police officer who killed Kenneth. Finally, our weekly Earth Minute with Anne Petermann.
Haytham Allos has been in the game for more than 20 years, and has a lot to teach us about what it takes to grow your competency as a leader, at every level of leadership. You’ll hear today about how at the young age of 25, he was asked to build his first team (with impressive salary incentives), was put into one of the most stressful career situations he’s ever experienced as a leader. If you stick with us till the end of today’s episode, you’ll hear Haytham’s one brilliant piece of advice on the ONE thing to do when you’re in the thick of some intense leadership growing pains.
La nave de la imaginación viaja en el tiempo para revelar la Europa del siglo 11 y el Norte de África durante la edad de oro del Islam, cuando brillante físico Ibn al-Haytham descubrió el método científico de cómo nos vemos y cómo viaja la luz. Más tarde, William Herschel descubre el infrarrojo y la firma oculta de la luz de cada estrella para finalmente desbloquear una de las claves para el cosmos.
La nave de la imaginación viaja en el tiempo para revelar la Europa del siglo 11 y el Norte de África durante la edad de oro del Islam, cuando brillante físico Ibn al-Haytham descubrió el método científico de cómo nos vemos y cómo viaja la luz. Más tarde, William Herschel descubre el infrarrojo y la firma oculta de la luz de cada estrella para finalmente desbloquear una de las claves para el cosmos.
The post LOF 203 | Haytham Al-Hawaj: NIU Coworking Spaces appeared first on LAUNCH.
Bruce (@BruceWalton) and Kevin (@In_the_Lupe) explore the first two generations in the Kenway family: Edward and Haytham. They discuss Edward’s growth from an insufferable asshole to respected Master Assassin (5:06), Haytham’s troubled upbringing (10:48), and his internal struggle of being raised a Templar while having an Assassin father (18:00). This is an [Expert] level episode, which means some parts of the discussion may not make sense unless you’ve played the game. Expect lots of spoilers.
Philip Ball's story is of Ibn al-Haytham, the first scientist, and his book of optics that defined how we see.
Meet fashion designer/entrepreneur Haytham Elgawly & owner of The Clearport, an airport-themed retail concept. The Clearport is a conceptual retail experience soaring at 30,000 feet above the clouds, located in the heart of Jersey City, NJ. It greets “passengers” with “Arrival/Departure” screens that list brands the store currently carries. At its three terminals (M for men, K for kids, W for women), customers grab security-bin shopping carts. In the TSA body-scanner fitting rooms they not only try on the latest items from Akomplice, BBC, Profound Aesthetics, Public, and many others, but also take selfies of themselves in those styles with the built-in cameras to share on social media. The Clearport also has seating built in with USB-charging ports, and passengers can join The Mile High Club, a redeemable loyalty program. Haytham calls himself Jersey City’s “hometown hero,” not shying away from being one of its tastemakers and forward-drivers of culture, be it fashion, art, or entertainment. He converses with our founder/host Glenn Wiggins about the importance of having a concept, and how he is courageously transforming the consumer’s retail experience.
Les travers d'Internet sont bien connus et ses belles histoires aussi. Ce sont ces dernières que François Saltiel, journaliste et spécialiste des réseaux sociaux, a décidé de mettre à l'honneur dans le livre "Le vendeur de thé qui changea le monde avec un hashtag". Derrière ce titre un peu extrême se cachent 10 histoires de hashtag qui ont eu un impact dans la vie réelle. Women2drive, LoveArmy, MeToo, BlackLivesMatter ... autant de mouvements ou de prises de conscience qui sont nés sur internet. Le plus drôle, c'est que derrière ces mots se cachent parfois de simples individus qui n'avaient aucune idée du mouvement qu'ils allaient provoquer. Comment un simple hashtag provoque des marches mondiales, fait fléchir des gouvernements et provoque des avancées considérables dans le droit de certaines minorités, c'est ce dont on parle avec François Saltiel, au gré de l'Iran, des Etats-Unis et de la France. Mais ce livre est aussi une occasion de se poser des questions sur la superficialité des réseaux sociaux, qui fonctionnent comme une caisse de résonance mais aussi parfois comme une machine à buzz impulsive. Et en deuxième partie, place à Creart'ive, le festival qui aura lieu à la Station Gare des Mines ce dimanche 3 juin. La Matinale reçoit pour en parler Charlotte, Anahid et Julie, respectivement chargées de l'Inattendue Galerie à la MIE Bastille, du dispostif Creart'up et de la communauté SINGA. C'est déjà la troisièmecollaboration entre SINGA, l'association qui a pour mission de créer du lien avec des personnes réfugiées en France, et Creart'up, le dispositif pour l'entreprenariat culturel étudiant. Pour vous donner un avant-goût des belles rencontres initiées par SINGA, on vous laisse écouter l'échange musical en direct de Thibaut et Haytham, qui se sont rencontrés à l'association SINGA. Au programme, de nombreux artistes lauréats des concours Creart'up, mais aussi des ateliers cuisine et du théâtre. Côté chroniques, Vincent nous fait sa propre invitation au voyage, volée dans les pages de "Voyage avec Charley", tandis que Radio Parleur discute avec le collectif "Désarmons-Les" du rassemblement organisé le soir même à l'Hotel de Ville, contre les grenades utilisées par les forces de l'ordre et pour Maxime, mutilé à Notre-Dame-Des-Landes. Présentation : Elodie Hervier / Réalisation : Antonin Simard / Co-interview : Nina Beltram / Chroniques : Vincent et Radio Parleur / Web : Nina Beltram / Coordination : Nina Beltram et Elsa Landard
U.F.O. - Haytham by Steve Jaz, Michel Kroll & Guests
One of the more interesting things to come out of the last few months in my own personal Mixed Mental Arts experience has been hearing more from all of you how these ideas resonate with all of you. In particular, I appreciated a conversation with Matty (@Matt_Maurer on Twitter) about how he appreciated that history could be seen as one long progression. Humanity has always been trying to solve very much the same problems. It is just that over time we have been able to see further because we have had more and more shoulders to stand on. Why are we so much smarter than the people of the past? Well, coming of age in the culture of science, I was led to draw a sharp line between the scientific project and religions. Science was real. It was tangible. It was based on evidence. It was TRUTH. And anyone who disagreed, questioned or thought anything else was an idiot and a fool. However, as I've mentioned elsewhere, in reading the science that simple narrative has become increasingly problematic for me. The people of the past weren't so biologically different. Their brains recognized patterns. Did they not recognize patterns in human behavior that have stood the test of time? Yes. They did. And it wasn't until I was confronted by having to spend time among Christian Fundamentalists that I had to really think hard about what, if anything, made science special. Someone else who has had to think hard about these questions is today's guest sensei in the dojo Mohamed Ghilan. Mohamed was born in Saudi Arabia like yours truly. Unlike yours truly, he has a PhD in Neuroscience, is getting an MD and is a Muslim. As a scientist and a Muslim, he knows full well that the evolution of better and better beliefs and mental tools was going on well before science showed up on the scene. Today, someone like Mohamed is often portrayed in the media as a bit of a unicorn. He's a Muslim AND a scientist. Whaaaaaat?!? Is that even possible?!? But in the first four or so centuries of Islam the majority of "scientists" were Muslim. Richard Dawkins captured the two parts of this story in his now infamous tweet "All the world's Muslims have fewer Nobel Prizes than Trinity College, Cambridge. They did great things in the Middle Ages, though." Dawkins' own tweet creates problems in his narrative that religion is the problem. If Muslims did great things in the Middle Ages, then why is the problem Islam? If Newton was religious AND a scientist AND an alchemist, then why is the problem Christianity or even magical thinking? And what is science anyway? As I've discussed in previous podcasts, some Christians objected to Newton's Theory of Gravity because the idea that the planets moved all by themselves conflicted with their belief that God actively moved the planets. Then, they moved on. Gravity was something they could confirm with their own eyes and to keep Christianity relevant and practical they had to evolve their understanding of God. Did they stop believing in God? Nope. They just adopted a more mature of God. "When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things." - 1 Corinthians 13:11 Were the people who didn't understand Newton's Universal Theory of Gravitation idiots? Nope. In large part, they just didn't have the glassmaking technology to make the kind of telescopes necessary to observe the planets. And The Scientific Method itself evolved over time but some consider the founder of The Scientific Method to have been a Muslim named Ibn al-Haytham due to his emphasis on experimental data and reproducibility of results. Why then are we repeatedly told the story that science and religion are somehow incompatible? By some analyses, a Muslim FOUNDED Science. If we want to popularize science, then isn't it in science's interest to tear down this popular story that science and religion are at odds. Of course, some of the beliefs of science and religion don't overlap, notably on the age of the Earth and the origins of life. But, it turns out that science has found its way back to many of the beliefs that religious people figured out long ago. In my article Was Jesus Christ a Better Neuroscientist than Sam Harris?, I explored my own journey towards the painful realization that in the realm of human affairs science had 2000 years later merely reinvented the wheel. In response, I got a comment from someone named Arslan Atajanov asked "Since when science became a belief system?" Ten years ago, I would have asked the same question as Arslan. Now, I know better. Science has always been a belief system. It is a response to how our minds work. Humans form beliefs. We have always formed beliefs. And apparently by the time of Ibn Haytham there was already awareness that testing one's beliefs against the evidence was a good thing to do. In practice, people do this all the time. Look at Game of Thrones. People had theories about Jon Snow being dead or not. Then, they watched the next season. Oh! He wasn't dead. They changed their beliefs and moved on. But now imagine that what you believed about Jon Snow being dead or alive became tribal. Now, the French believed that Jon Snow was alive. The Americans believed Jon Snow was dead. Real Americans believed Jon Snow was dead. Then Season 6 Episode 1 airs. New evidence surfaces. Yep. It looks like Jon Snow is alive. The French gloat. They insult the Americans' intelligence. How could they have been SO STUPID to have thought that Jon Snow was ever alive? Now, the Americans get defensive and come up with a series of rationalizations to defend their beliefs. It becomes a point of pride and identity. And so, the conflict builds for 150 years after the show originally aired. Pretty soon neither side is looking at the evidence. It has simple become an article of faith for both sides. How do you end this conflict? Well, you point out that before Season 6 aired no one could have known whether Jon Snow was dead or alive and that we all happily kept track with the story for the first five seasons. You could also point out that in this sectarian feud both sides have been losers. We're all better off moving on. Of course, some people have built their whole brand around this idea of incompatibility. That's their shtick. They're not likely to back down anytime soon. I understand that some people are annoyed with hearing about Sam Harris but the Mixed Mental Arts audience is perhaps unusually diverse. We have Christians in the dojo who are trying to figure out how to reconcile their faith with science like Jason Scott Sanders and Kim Ares. And we have numerous Muslims who rather than listening to Bryan and me talk about Islam wanted actual Muslims on the show. You couldn't ask for a better ambassador than Mohamed Ghilan. In this conversation with Mohamed, we clarified what science is. It's a formalization of what humans already do. If you ask me, science has become overformalized. That's why I'm so excited about Mixed Mental Arts. Science has become so bogged down in internal tribal disputes. (A problem Sam Harris has also complained about when he talks about the balkanization of science.) The question is what do you do about that? Well, scientists aren't likely to overcome their tribalism internally. Famous scientists often end up standing in the way of the progress of science as a whole. And if you're someone like Sam who is still imprisoned by his intuitions of authority, then you are stuck there. You complain to Joe Rogan about the fact that people like me have a Twitter account and then complain that scientists don't work together to form better beliefs. Complain. Complain. Complain. What's the solution, Sam? The solution is harnessing the wisdom of the crowds to sift through the evidence and evolve better beliefs. You abandon all intuitions of human authority and make the evidence the authority with the knowledge that you need to take into account all the evidence. And this is where the beliefs of The New Atheists about the Islamic world FAIL as scientific hypotheses. They fit a very selective cherrypicking of the data. They make sense to someone with limited experience of the Middle East. They don't make sense to someone like Mohamed (or even me with my much more limited experience). Well, in this interview, Mohamed focused on corruption and that's a HUGE factor. However, there are others. Muslims don't read. When they do, they don't read widely. The central belief system is not well organized and there is no coherent messaging so people can believe lots of things and CLAIM they're being Muslims. And, on top of all that, there's a focus on past historical greatness that doesn't fit present realities. All those things describe not just Islam. They describe America. Fixing all that takes a lot of work. It's a game of inches. Do you know what doesn't help? Constantly being told that your culture is the problem. It just creates defensiveness. There are problems with Islamic and American culture. And no...I'm not saying they're equivalent. But, in no situation, does indiscriminately criticizing people's culture help establish a bridge. You have to find things of value and then build strength where strength exists and then use that trust to together and reciprocally examine problematic areas. How do I know? Because I just did the opposite of that with The New Atheists. This was the response I got. In the end, The New Atheists have alienated religious people from science and I have alienated the New Atheists from me. But thanks to Sam saying Candyman we can now strip The New Atheists of their credibility to being responsive to evidence. I presented them with the evidence to read and they showed little to no interest in it. They merely defended their beliefs in a blindly emotional (and perfectly understandable) way. We're all down in the muck of being human together and all the belief systems' various claims will have to be tested on the evidence. Fortunately, from The Diffusion of Innovations, we know people choose beliefs that are relatable and usable. We make this science accessible and the best ideas currently available. WILL win. As Scott Radtke pointed out in an email to me "you have chosen the most difficult task of diffusion; the diffusion of ideas. Invisible ideas pushing against mountains of entrenched, equally invisible ideas." We have chosen that task. And as your faithful companion Toto pulls back the curtain on the Wizards, I can guarantee you that they will tell you to pay no attention. I can only pull the curtain back. You must examine the evidence. But with guides like Spiros, Mohamed, Tony Molina, Jon Aguilar and countless great books and thinkers, you are sure to find the way. In the end, we offer you options. It's up to you to decide what is useful, what is not and what you should add that is uniquely your own. That is how you evolve your own Mixed Mental Arts. To that end, you're not going to find a better resource on how to reconcile Islam and science than Mohamed Ghilan. Mohamed blogs at Andalus Online, tweets from @MohamedGhilan and can be found on Facebook here. It was an absolute pleasure to have him in the Mixed Mental Arts dojo and I look forward to helping unwind this utterly unnecessary spat between science and religion with people like him.
Learn about some of the major cosmological models that scientists through the ages have assigned to our universe, even when the known universe was only as big as our solar system. I talk about Claudius Ptolemy, Al-Hasan Ibn al-Haytham, Nicolaus Copernicus, *dreamy sigh* Tycho Brahe, Johannes Kepler, Galileo Galilei, Giordano Bruno, René Descartes, Sir Isaac Newton, Pierre-Simon Laplace, Albert Einstein, Edwin Hubble, and finally the most common cosmological model accepted today (because it wouldn't be current science if everyone agreed on it).
In this episode of Houghton75, we speak to Elaheh Kheirandish, Postdoctoral Associate of the Department of History of Art and Architecture at Harvard. For our current exhibition, she has chosen a copy of Alhazen’s Optics in Latin from 1572. She’ll delve into some of Alhazen’s importance to the science of Optics, and his place in the creation and transmission of scientific learning through the Islamic world and to the west. Find out more about the exhibition and Houghton Library’s 75th anniversary celebrations at http://houghton75.org/hist-75h Transcript and detailed music notes: http://wp.me/p7SlKy-n6 Music by دنگ شو Dang Show http://www.facebook.com/dangshow Additional Music Performed by Mohammad Reza Haeri (setar) and Hormoz Goodarzy (tonbak)
Haytham from Kinetic
Anne-Valérie Dulac examines Frances Yates’ reading of Alhazen’s (Abū ʿAlī al-Ḥasan ibn al-Ḥasan ibn al-Haytham; c. 965 – c. 1040) optics as a possible source for the theory of sight in Love’s Labour’s Lost. Dulac prodes deeper into this bold suggestion and provides a reading of the play’s optics (also linking them to the Sonnets) as mirroring Alhazen – a combination of intromission and extramission, the eye receiving and emitting beams of light. Anne-Valérie Dulac is a senior lecturer in early modern literature at Université Paris 13 - Sorbonne Paris Cité. She is currently working on the forthcoming publication of her doctoral dissertation on Philip Sidney and visual culture, completed under the supervision of Professor François Laroque. Her research interests include Sir Philip Sidney’s works and correspondence, visual culture, limning and optics. The paper she will be presenting for this conference is adapted from a forthcoming chapter (“Shakespeare and Alhazen”) in a book edited by Sophie Chiari and Mickaël Popelard entitled Shakespeare and Science. The conference Frances Yates: The Art of Memory was held on April 30, 2016 at the Rose Theatre, Kingston. The session was chaired by Patricia Gillies. Recorded by Anna Rajala and Timo Uotinen. More at: https://kingstonshakespeareseminar.wordpress.com/
A brief scientific biography of the Islamic physicist, Ibn al-Haytham. We look at his work in optics, mathematics, astronomy and the development of a method of scientific inquiry.
In this episode we look at the astronomical work done during the Golden Age of Islamic Science. This includes the work sponsored by the Abbasid caliph al-Ma'mun, the work of al-Balkhi, al-Battani, al-Biruni and ibn al-Haytham. We conclude with material covering the Andalusian Revolt and the Maragha Revolution.
El episodio explora las teorías sobre la luz, cuyo estudio ha jugado un importante papel en el progreso científico. Veremos el descubrimiento de la cámara oscura en China, los estudios de la naturaleza de la luz por Ibn al-Haytham, el descubrimiento del telescopio, los trabajos de Isaac Newton con los prismas y el espectro, el descubrimiento de los rayos infrarrojos por William Herschel y el hallazgo de las líneas espectrales de Joseph von Fraunhofer que condujo a la ciencia de la espectroscopía. Gracias a ella conocemos la composición de las estrellas, planetas y la expansión del Universo.
El episodio explora las teorías sobre la luz, cuyo estudio ha jugado un importante papel en el progreso científico. Veremos el descubrimiento de la cámara oscura en China, los estudios de la naturaleza de la luz por Ibn al-Haytham, el descubrimiento del telescopio, los trabajos de Isaac Newton con los prismas y el espectro, el descubrimiento de los rayos infrarrojos por William Herschel y el hallazgo de las líneas espectrales de Joseph von Fraunhofer que condujo a la ciencia de la espectroscopía. Gracias a ella conocemos la composición de las estrellas, planetas y la expansión del Universo.
Der Weg von Archimedes zu Einstein führt über den Mathematiker Ibn al-Haytham, der von Aristoteles zu Kant über den Philosophen Ibn Sina. Es waren arabische Wissenschaftler, die im Mittelalter das Wissen der Antike vor dem Vergessen bewahrt und zugleich weiter entwickelt haben. Sie begründeten die Algebra und brachten die Astronomie voran. Von arabischen Forschern bezogen die gotischen Baumeister das Wissen, wie man Spitzbögen konstruiert und buntes Glas herstellt. (Produktion 2012)
A podcast between Roger Malina, Yvan Tina and Haytham Nawar, director and co-founder of Di-Egy Fest, the first festival dedicated to digital arts in Egypt (www.di-egyfest.com). Collection of visual materials and issues of translation between communication systems (iconic, pictographic…) are discussed along with the need to develop and strengthen curatorial networks in the Arabic and the Subsaharian Africa.
Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey Reviews and After Show - AfterBuzz TV
AFTERBUZZ TV — Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey edition, is a weekly "after show" for fans of Fox's Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey. In this episode host JC Rubio breaks down the episode in which the behavior of light and its relationship to vision are studied by Ibn al-Haytham in the Middle East during the 11th century. Also: astronomer William Herschel discovers infrared radiation in 1800. There to help JC are co-hosts Scott Moore and Dillon Chance. It's Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey "Hiding in the Light" podcast! Follow us on http://www.Twitter.com/AfterBuzzTV "Like" Us on http://www.Facebook.com/AfterBuzzTV For more of your post-game wrap up shows for your favorite TV shows, visit http://www.AfterBuzzTV.com
اهلا بكم في الحلقة السابعة عشر من راديو اسأل مطور, في هذه الحلقة نستضيف "هيثم الفضيل" المؤسس و المدير التنفيذي لشركة كنجن, نناقش مراحل تطور الفكرة من البحث الى المشروع الى الشركة. Welcome to the 17th episode of Ask Developer Podcast, in this episode we interview the founder and CEO of Kngine, we discuss the story of Kngine from the inception of the idea to the project to building the company. Join our facebook page http://facebook.com/askdeveloper Visit our website http://www.askdeveloper.com
Ibn al-Haytham draws on the tradition of geometrical optics to explain the mystery of human eyesight.
Wind, rain and sickness won’t keep us from you. Disney buys Lucasfilm, Marvel works on new Avengers stuff, and Microsoft looks at phone hardware. We review Wreck it Ralph and Walking Dead Ep 4, plus our early impressions of AC3 and indie-platforming darling, Pid. Finally, we find out who you’d recast for Luke, Leia, and Han in Star Wars Episode 7. Who is Haytham?! Rated NA 80