Influential British physicist and mathematician
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En este programa, que coincidió con el Día Mundial del Teatro, os ofrecemos tres dramatizaciones de tres momentos importantes de la historia de la ciencia: escucharemos a Galileo Galilei conversar con Urbano VIII en el día en que se retractó de la teoría heliocéntrica, trataremos junto a Edmund Halley de usar los océanos para averiguar la edad de la Tierra y seguiremos a Évariste Galois en la noche más extraordinaria de la historia de las matemáticas. Para ello contaremos con el inigualable elenco actoral formado por Alberto Aparici, Santi García Cremades, Carlos Alsina y Begoña Gómez de la Fuente. Edmund Halley es un reincidente en esta sección: hablamos ya de él en el episodio s05e16, en el que explicamos que su mayor descubrimiento fue, en realidad, Isaac Newton. Este programa se emitió originalmente el 27 de marzo de 2025. Podéis escuchar el resto de audios de Más de Uno en la app de Onda Cero y en su web, ondacero.es
In the 1600s, Isaac Newton conducted a series of experiments to better understand the lights and colors that sometimes appear when your eyes are closed. If you've ever sat around an evening campfire or unintentionally glanced at the Sun, you may have noticed illuminated patterns briefly dance along your vision. So how do these visual illusions form? Paul Taylor explores the science of afterimages. [Directed by Sofia Pashaei, narrated by Alexandra Panzer, music by Cem Misirlioglu, WORKPLAYWORK]. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Isaac Newton - einer der bedeutendsten Wissenschaftler aller Zeiten. 1705 wurde er von Königin Anne zum Ritter geschlagen -- nicht wegen seiner Verdienste um die Wissenschaft, sondern für seine politische Betätigung. Der englische Universalgelehrte wirkte an der Universität Cambridge. Autor: Hellmuth Nordwig
On today's episode, McKay talks to the audience about the importance of faith, and begins by introducing the story of Desmond Doss and his unwavering faith and peaceful determination at Hacksaw Ridge. McKay frames faith as a commitment to a choice, and the more we act on that choice, the more we reinforce our faith - reminiscent of Isaac Newton's laws of motion. Moving forward and taking steps, no matter how small, keeps our momentum in the right direction.He next advises listeners to eliminate distractions since they only serve to slow us down and divert us from our faith and purpose. Fear can also skew faith; it can lead to feelings of helplessness and certainly loneliness, and that's why McKay talks so much about action and moving forward. He draws this episode to a close by urging everyone to feed their faith for at least 15 minutes everyday, noting that human potential is limitless, and to let that go to waste would be a shame. The Finer Details of This Episode:Desmond's faith at Hacksaw RidgeCommitment to choicesThe importance of moving forwardScottie Scheffler's Masters winEliminating distractions5 truths about fearsWhy human potential is limitlessFeeding your faithQuotes: “The more you act, the more faith you create. My faith is strong and grows when I am in an active state. When I am in a passive state, I lose my faith.”“In an active state, you learn, grow and feel like you are doing something within your control.”“Distraction is the great thief in life. It will divert your attention, capture your interest, and rarely return any value to your life. When you decide to do something remarkable in your life and place your faith in yourself and your decision, the first thing to do is to clear the path; remove any potential distractions.”“What we need to realize is that faith is a sales job. Each day we are selling to ourselves the thing in which we are placing our faith. That means the longer we go without acting on that thing, the less likely we are to act.”“Remember, action is the great restorer and builder of confidence. Inaction is the result of fear. Any action is better than no action at all. To prevent the law of diminishing intent, act now.”“Each day, set aside 15 minutes to feed your faith. It's a daily feeding time that will keep you focused and give you the wherewithal to keep your mind in the direction you should go.”Links:Open Your Eyes with McKay Christensen
This podcast description was blatantly written by AI... Join the fun as the team embarks on a series of epic adventures! Witness the hilarious attempt to recreate Isaac Newton's gravity moment with a rare Kent apple, and see if Meg, Dan, and Clint can form a band competent enough to open for Mitch James' final show in Christchurch. Also, don't miss out on the discussion about Katy Perry's 11-minute space adventure, and hear some jaw-dropping petty revenge stories. Plus, find out what Meg's chocolate Easter bust looks like, and get all the juicy updates from the Clint, Meg, and Dan Podcast! 01:00 The Stinky Butt Challenge04:13 Morning Show Banter09:52 Dentist Visits and Celebrity Dentists17:09 Getting to Know Our Listeners26:15 Debunking Common Gay Names26:50 Meg's Bass Guitar Story32:34 Sibling Rivalry and Parental Favorites45:23 The Quest for New Zealand's Greatest Apple57:24 Mitch James' Final Show Announcement01:01:26 The Edge Hosts' Band Proposal01:06:22 Discussing Space Travel with Katy Perry01:11:03 Petty Revenge Stories01:21:22 Creating Easter "M-egg's"
En el programa de hoy, se profundiza en la figura de Isaac Newton, uno de los más grandes genios de la historia, destacando su influencia decisiva en el desarrollo de la ciencia moderna. Se abordan sus aportes fundamentales como la ley de gravitación universal, las tres leyes de la mecánica clásica, y la invención del cálculo diferencial e integral. Además, se examinan sus contribuciones en óptica, astronomía y la invención del telescopio reflector. El programa también explora su lado menos conocido, como su dedicación a la alquimia y estudios bíblicos, reflejo de la dualidad intelectual del siglo XVII. Finalmente, se contextualiza a Newton dentro de una constelación de otros grandes pensadores de su tiempo como Descartes, Galileo, Kepler, Pascal, Spinoza y Locke. Para acceder al programa sin interrupción de comerciales, suscríbete a Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/elvillegas 00:00:00 - El genio del siglo XVII 00:00:54 - Isaac Newton y la ciencia moderna 00:08:41 - Las leyes de la mecánica clásica 00:11:16 - El cálculo diferencial e integral 00:14:15 - Aportes en óptica y astronomía 00:20:04 - Newton esotérico y otros genios del siglo
This podcast description was blatantly written by AI In this episode, Clint, Meg, and Dan dive into a lively discussion about trying unique apples, including one possibly related to Isaac Newton's gravity discovery. They also share a hilarious impromptu roast by comedian Jimmy Carr. The gang explores Meg's potential Easter egg collaboration and debate about sleeping in separate beds for better rest. With fun chats about concert performances, including Green Day and Lady Gaga at Coachella, and intriguing updates on New Zealand's driving test system, this episode offers a perfect mix of humor, personal life, and pop culture! 00:29 Early Morning Banter02:21 Coachella Highlights and Performances15:29 Technical Difficulties and Listener Interaction21:23 Interview with Mentalist Dustin Dean27:35 Easter Egg Price Shock28:22 Easter Shopping Challenges34:37 Sleep Divorce Trend43:05 Haircut Disasters and Refunds48:15 Coachella Highlights52:45 How Do You Like Dem Apples (MASSIVE ANNOUNCEMENT)58:00 Should we start a band?!01:01:59 Instrument Assignments and Band Dynamics01:07:34 Driver's License Changes Debate01:12:18 Jimmy Carr's Roasting Session01:22:27 Meg's Chocolate Egg Idea
Well gang, here we are. It might not be the end of the road. It might just be a great big semicolon blocking our way for the moment. If you want to find out what happens next, and if we get past it, subscribe now. Then, when, if we do anything in the future, you'll definitely get to know. In the meantime, we had fun at Crossness. Fiona found connections and call backs in Hounslow. But mostly it's William Derham of Havering. The astronomer Vicar who borrowed a massive telescope and propped it up on his church tower to change the way we thing about the universe. Oh and calculated something that had stumped Isaac Newton no less. Getting his neighbours to fire canons left, right and centre, but never neglecting his parishioners. He sounds like a good egg. *this semi colon is almost certainly be used wrong. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Send us a textLevitikus 19:32 “Uit eerbied vir jou God moet jy eerbied bewys aan oumense en hulle met respek behandel. Ek is die Here. Hoe ouer ek word – en ek is nou nie eintlik so oud nie – hoe meer besef ek hoe noodsaaklik dit is om ons voorgeslag te respekteer en te eer. Daar is iets wat binne-in jou hart gebeur, wanneer jy besef dat die suksesse wat jy in die lewe behaal het, nie aan jou eie persoonlike briljantheid toe te skryf is nie. Wanneer ons praat van ons voorgeslag, kan die meeste van ons nie eintlik iets oor hulle vertel nie. Miskien het jy jou oupas en oumas geken, of dalk het jy stories van hulle gehoor, soos dit deur ander oorgedra is, maar in die meeste gevalle is dit omtrent sover as wat ‘n mens se kennis oor jou voorgeslag strek.En tog is dit ‘n realiteit dat my lewe en joune die gevolg is van dít wat ons voorvaders gedoen het. As jy net sewe geslagte teruggaan – na jou agter-agter-agter-oupagrootjies – gee dit jou meer as 200 jaar en 128 voorouers. En nou praat ons nie van al die ooms, tannies, neefs en niggies nie … want hulle het almal op een of ander wyse ‘n rol in jou vorming gespeel; hulle het bepaal wie jy vandag is; en ‘n invloed gehad op die posisie wat jy nou beklee.Dit is 'n ontnugterende, maar ek dink ook, 'n nederige gedagte. God het ons ongelooflik geseën deur diegene wat voor ons gegaan het – deur hul stryd, hul opofferings, selfs deur hul mislukkings. Kyk wat staan in:Levitikus 19:32 “Uit eerbied vir jou God moet jy eerbied bewys aan oumense en hulle met respek behandel. Ek is die Here.In 1675 het Isaac Newton, die bekende fisikus, geskryf: As ek verder as ander mense in die toekoms vooruit kon sien, is dit omdat ek op die skouers van reuse gestaan het.Moenie die reuse in jou lewe vergeet nie.Dit is God se Woord. Vars … vir jou … vandag. Support the showEnjoying The Content?For the price of a cup of coffee each month, you can enable Christianityworks to reach 10,000+ people with a message about the love of Jesus!DONATE R50 MONTHLY
This is my message to the Jews. It follows up on my video about Christian/Muslim relations. I mention Elon Musk, Philo of Alexandria, Caligula, Suetonius, Claudius, Prescilla, Aquila, Gallio, Sosthenes, Jusitn Martyr, Trypho, Simon Bar Kokhba, Polycarp, Constantine, Athanasius of Alexandria, Caiaphas, Paul of Samosata, Photinus of Galatia, Arius, Constantius II, Gregory of Nyssa, Hank Kruse, Theodosius the Great, Ambrose of Milan, Julian the Apostate, Aphrahat the Persian Sage, Nestorius of Constantinople, Justinian the Great, John Calvin, Michael Servetus, Marian Hillar, Lelio and Fausto Sozzini, Malcolm Collins, John Locke, Andrzej Wiszowaty, Samuel Przypkowski, Isaac Newton, John Milton, Benedict Spinoza, Pierre Bayle, Voltaire, David Hume, Joseph Priestly, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, John Adams, Hannah Adams, Mordecai Noah, The Apostle Paul, and more.
Send us a textSpreuke 11:25 Wie 'n ander voorspoed gun, sal self oorvloed hê. Wie die dors van ander les, sal self genoeg kry as hy dors is. Sekere natuurwette is onveranderbaar. Dit maak nie saak hoe hard jy probeer; hoe hard jy op hulle skree en skree nie, of wat jy ook al doen nie, hulle sal nie buig nie, hulle sal nie verander nie.Op 5 Julie 1687 het die fisikus en wiskundige, Isaac Newton, die dokument "Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy" gepubliseer. Ek en jy het dit op skool leer ken as Newton se Bewegingswette.Die eerste gaan oor traagheid (as iets nie beweeg nie, sal dit in ‘n rustoestand bly, maar as iets beweeg, sal dit aanhou beweeg totdat iets dit keer). Die tweede gaan oor versnelling (hoe harder jy iets druk, hoe vinniger sal dit beweeg). Die derde is die bekendste een (vir elke aksie is daar 'n gelyke en teenoorgestelde reaksie).Daardie wette staan vas. Al staan jy op jou kop, kan jy hulle nie verander nie. Dis hoe die wêreld werk. Nog 'n wet - een wat dalk nie so voor die hand liggend is nie, een wat nie van Newton kom nie, maar van die Een wat die hele wêreld geskep het – dit is hierdie een in:Spreuke 11:25 Wie 'n ander voorspoed gun, sal self oorvloed hê. Wie die dors van ander les, sal self genoeg kry as hy dors is.Ons dink dat die lewe volgens ‘n wen-verloor-beginsel werk. Ek het 'x', ek gee 'y' weg, nou het ek net 'x minus y' oor. God se koninkryk werk op ‘n heeltemal ander stelsel. Ek het 'x', ek gee 'y' weg … maar nou sit ek met '2 keer x', '3 keer y', '10 keer z' en wat ook al anders God kies om by te voeg.Dit is 'n vaste wet waarop God se heelal funksioneer. Jy kan dit nie verander nie.Gee vryelik, en jy sal oorvloed hê. Help ander, en jy sal gehelp word wanneer jy dit nodig het.Dit is God se Woord. Vars … vir jou … vandag. Support the showEnjoying The Content?For the price of a cup of coffee each month, you can enable Christianityworks to reach 10,000+ people with a message about the love of Jesus!DONATE R50 MONTHLY
Quand le passé n'a jamais eu lieu. Périodes entières inventées, figures historiques imaginaires, événements majeurs falsifiés : le récentisme soutient que notre chronologie officielle a été construite de toutes pièces par des faussaires avides de pouvoir. Dans cet épisode, Gaël et Geoffroy démêlent les fils de cette théorie vertigineuse qui considère que l'Histoire est une gigantesque imposture. Des spéculations savantes d'Isaac Newton aux hypothèses radicales de François de Sarre, en passant par les équations chronologiques d'Anatoly Fomenko, ils explorent un récit alternatif qui bouleverse notre conception au temps et interroge notre rapport à la vérité et à la fabrication du réel. Musique : Thibaud R. Habillage sonore / mixage : Alexandre Lechaux Le Shop Tous Parano
Informativo de primera hora de la mañana, en el programa El Remate de La Diez Capital Radio. Hoy hace 2 años el titular era: Trump, imputado por el soborno a la actriz porno Stormy Daniels, se convierte en el primer expresidente de EE.UU. en enfrentar cargos criminales. … y hoy hace 2 años: El Gobierno de Canarias plantea el cierre de oficinas públicas para reducir el consumo de luz. Y hoy hace 2 años: Los ingresos por IGIC en Canarias baten récord. Hoy se cumplen 1.129 días del cruel ataque e invasión de Rusia a Ucrania. 3 años y 34 días. Hoy es lunes 31 de marzo de 2025. Día internacional de la visibilidad Transgénero. El Día Internacional de la Visibilidad Transgénero se celebra el 31 de marzo de cada año. Es una fecha importante que se creó con la finalidad de crear conciencia y sensibilizar a la población mundial para acabar con la discriminación hacia las personas transgénero. El término transgénero se refiere a las personas que se identifican con un tipo de conducta sexual que no corresponde al sexo que se les asignó al momento de nacer. 1492 en Granada (España), los Reyes Católicos firman el decreto de expulsión de los judíos. 1621 Felipe IV es proclamado rey de España y Portugal. 1727 Muere el científico Isaac Newton. 1854 en la ciudad japonesa de Edo, Estados Unidos y Japón firman su primer tratado comercial. 1889 en París se inaugura la torre Eiffel. 1909 en Inglaterra comienza la construcción del RMS Titanic, completado justo tres años después. 1939 en España ―en el marco de la Guerra Civil― son ocupadas por el bando sublevado las últimas ciudades republicanas: Almería, Murcia y Cartagena. 1991 en Europa se disuelve el Pacto de Varsovia. 2002 en Tenerife, el Área metropolitana de Santa Cruz de Tenerife resulta afectada por unas lluvias torrenciales, produciendo pérdidas tanto de viviendas como de vidas humanas. Santos Dolores, Amadeo, Amós, Balbina, Benjamín, Félix y Teódulo. El presidente de Finlandia, Stubb, insta a Trump a fijar una fecha para el alto el fuego en Ucrania. Dos muertos y 35 heridos en Járkov, Ucrania, tras una oleada de ataques con drones rusos. Trump se "enfada" con Putin por proponer un gobierno "temporal" en Ucrania. Feijóo afea al Gobierno que prorrogue los presupuestos y dice que Sánchez debe "someterse a las Cortes o a las urnas" Yolanda Díaz llama en la asamblea de Sumar a la unidad con otros partidos: "La gente quiere que caminemos juntas". Montero dice que Feijóo pide elecciones para que no se hable de su liderazgo y advierte: "Vamos a agotar la legislatura" El PNV designa por unanimidad a Aitor Esteban como nuevo presidente del partido. Ya es oficial: quienes cobren el SMI no pagarán IRPF en 2025. Canarias acaricia ser sede mundial de la investigación oceanográfica. En pocos meses Europa decidirá entre las aguas de El Hierro y las de Creta para albergar una potente infraestructura de calibración satelital. La instalación de la boya oceánico-atmosférica tiene un coste de 50 millones y generará empleo local. Canarias tutela a más de 5.000 menores migrantes, mientras algunas comunidades apuran hasta el último día para aportar la información. Baleares, Madrid, Galicia y Castilla y León habrían decidido esperar a este lunes 31 de marzo para remitir la cifra. Otras autonomías, como Valencia y Andalucía dicen que aún no tienen los datos solicitados. Fernando Clavijo registra su candidatura para su reelección como secretario general de Coalición Canaria. El también presidente del Gobierno de Canarias ha agradecido a su partido “la confianza” en los últimos años, donde CC, ha dicho, ha mantenido “obediencia y defensa” de los intereses canarios en oposición y gobierno. La oferta en alquiler turístico crece seis veces más rápido que la hotelera. Los destinos canarios de sol y playa incorporan en los dos últimos años 42.063 nuevas plazas en viviendas vacacionales por solo 7.080 en hoteles. Seis de cada diez canarios no acuden a las pruebas del cáncer de colon. NC sigue en descomposición: Dimiten varios militantes y miembros del comité de Nueva Canarias en Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. Cinco de los 17 miembros de la Ejecutiva que preside Pedro Quevedo Iturbe anuncian que abandonan sus cargos. El PSOE de Lanzarote pide al Cabildo que tramite una moratoria turística para la isla. 31 de marzo de 1992 se lanza el álbum de Bruce Springsteen llamado Lucky Town.
Bienvenidos a La Diez Capital Radio! Están a punto de comenzar un nuevo episodio de nuestro Programa de Actualidad, donde la información, la formación y el entretenimiento se encuentran para ofrecerles lo mejor de las noticias y temas relevantes. Este programa, dirigido y presentado por Miguel Ángel González Suárez, es su ventana directa a los acontecimientos más importantes, así como a las historias que capturan la esencia de nuestro tiempo. A través de un enfoque dinámico y cercano, Miguel Ángel conecta con ustedes para proporcionar una experiencia informativa y envolvente. Desde análisis profundos hasta entrevistas exclusivas, cada emisión está diseñada para mantenerles al tanto, ofrecerles nuevos conocimientos y, por supuesto, entretenerles. Para más detalles sobre el programa, visiten nuestra web en www.ladiez.es. - Informativo de primera hora de la mañana, en el programa El Remate de La Diez Capital Radio. Hoy hace 2 años el titular era: Trump, imputado por el soborno a la actriz porno Stormy Daniels, se convierte en el primer expresidente de EE.UU. en enfrentar cargos criminales. … y hoy hace 2 años: El Gobierno de Canarias plantea el cierre de oficinas públicas para reducir el consumo de luz. Y hoy hace 2 años: Los ingresos por IGIC en Canarias baten récord. Hoy se cumplen 1.129 días del cruel ataque e invasión de Rusia a Ucrania. 3 años y 34 días. Hoy es lunes 31 de marzo de 2025. Día internacional de la visibilidad Transgénero. El Día Internacional de la Visibilidad Transgénero se celebra el 31 de marzo de cada año. Es una fecha importante que se creó con la finalidad de crear conciencia y sensibilizar a la población mundial para acabar con la discriminación hacia las personas transgénero. El término transgénero se refiere a las personas que se identifican con un tipo de conducta sexual que no corresponde al sexo que se les asignó al momento de nacer. 1492 en Granada (España), los Reyes Católicos firman el decreto de expulsión de los judíos. 1621 Felipe IV es proclamado rey de España y Portugal. 1727 Muere el científico Isaac Newton. 1854 en la ciudad japonesa de Edo, Estados Unidos y Japón firman su primer tratado comercial. 1889 en París se inaugura la torre Eiffel. 1909 en Inglaterra comienza la construcción del RMS Titanic, completado justo tres años después. 1939 en España ―en el marco de la Guerra Civil― son ocupadas por el bando sublevado las últimas ciudades republicanas: Almería, Murcia y Cartagena. 1991 en Europa se disuelve el Pacto de Varsovia. 2002 en Tenerife, el Área metropolitana de Santa Cruz de Tenerife resulta afectada por unas lluvias torrenciales, produciendo pérdidas tanto de viviendas como de vidas humanas. Santos Dolores, Amadeo, Amós, Balbina, Benjamín, Félix y Teódulo. El presidente de Finlandia, Stubb, insta a Trump a fijar una fecha para el alto el fuego en Ucrania. Dos muertos y 35 heridos en Járkov, Ucrania, tras una oleada de ataques con drones rusos. Trump se "enfada" con Putin por proponer un gobierno "temporal" en Ucrania. Feijóo afea al Gobierno que prorrogue los presupuestos y dice que Sánchez debe "someterse a las Cortes o a las urnas" Yolanda Díaz llama en la asamblea de Sumar a la unidad con otros partidos: "La gente quiere que caminemos juntas". Montero dice que Feijóo pide elecciones para que no se hable de su liderazgo y advierte: "Vamos a agotar la legislatura" El PNV designa por unanimidad a Aitor Esteban como nuevo presidente del partido. Ya es oficial: quienes cobren el SMI no pagarán IRPF en 2025. Canarias acaricia ser sede mundial de la investigación oceanográfica. En pocos meses Europa decidirá entre las aguas de El Hierro y las de Creta para albergar una potente infraestructura de calibración satelital. La instalación de la boya oceánico-atmosférica tiene un coste de 50 millones y generará empleo local. Canarias tutela a más de 5.000 menores migrantes, mientras algunas comunidades apuran hasta el último día para aportar la información. Baleares, Madrid, Galicia y Castilla y León habrían decidido esperar a este lunes 31 de marzo para remitir la cifra. Otras autonomías, como Valencia y Andalucía dicen que aún no tienen los datos solicitados. Fernando Clavijo registra su candidatura para su reelección como secretario general de Coalición Canaria. El también presidente del Gobierno de Canarias ha agradecido a su partido “la confianza” en los últimos años, donde CC, ha dicho, ha mantenido “obediencia y defensa” de los intereses canarios en oposición y gobierno. La oferta en alquiler turístico crece seis veces más rápido que la hotelera. Los destinos canarios de sol y playa incorporan en los dos últimos años 42.063 nuevas plazas en viviendas vacacionales por solo 7.080 en hoteles. Seis de cada diez canarios no acuden a las pruebas del cáncer de colon. NC sigue en descomposición: Dimiten varios militantes y miembros del comité de Nueva Canarias en Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. Cinco de los 17 miembros de la Ejecutiva que preside Pedro Quevedo Iturbe anuncian que abandonan sus cargos. El PSOE de Lanzarote pide al Cabildo que tramite una moratoria turística para la isla. 31 de marzo de 1992 se lanza el álbum de Bruce Springsteen llamado Lucky Town. - Sección en el programa El Remate de La Diez Capital radio con nuestro abogado particular, Juan Inurria. Dani Alves y la modernización de la justicia española. - Programa de actualidad presentado y dirigido por: Juan Antonio Inurria Rivero Colaboradores: Rita Medina-Páez. Gabriel Suárez. Patricia Fernández. Andrés Chaves. - Tertulia de actualidad informativa en La Diez Capital radio con: Rosi Rivero, Antonio Aldana y Matías Hernández.
Quel lien secret peut bien réunir Isaac Newton, une étudiante en philosophie, un brillant physicien, une romancière obsessionnelle et un vieux Chinois ? C'est l'enjeu de ce roman envoûtant qui, du laboratoire de Cambridge au triangle des Bermudes, du synchrotron de Paris-Saclay au monde du XXIIIe siècle, nous entraîne dans une course folle à travers le temps – dimension mystérieuse que chacun tente de maîtriser dans l'espoir d'y trouver son bonheur. Que pèse une vie ? Présent, passé et futur ont-ils un sens ? Avec Les Maîtres du temps, Stéphanie Janicot, Prix Renaudot du livre de poche pour La Mémoire du monde, revient sur un thème qui lui est cher et livre une réflexion pénétrante sur le temps, les destinées humaines et le pouvoir de l'imagination. Merci pour votre écoute N'hésistez pas à vous abonner également aux podcasts des séquences phares de Matin Première: L'Invité Politique : https://audmns.com/LNCogwPL'édito politique « Les Coulisses du Pouvoir » : https://audmns.com/vXWPcqxL'humour de Matin Première : https://audmns.com/tbdbwoQRetrouvez tous les contenus de la RTBF sur notre plateforme Auvio.be Retrouvez également notre offre info ci-dessous : Le Monde en Direct : https://audmns.com/TkxEWMELes Clés : https://audmns.com/DvbCVrHLe Tournant : https://audmns.com/moqIRoC5 Minutes pour Comprendre : https://audmns.com/dHiHssrEt 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. Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Today on the Christian History Almanac, we remember Isaac Newton and consider his study of God's “Two Books.” Show Notes: Support 1517 Podcast Network 1517 Podcasts 1517 on Youtube 1517 Podcast Network on Apple Podcasts 1517 Events Schedule 1517 Academy - Free Theological Education What's New from 1517: The Impossible Prize: A Theology of Addiction by Donavan Riley: https://shop.1517.org/products/9781962654708-the-impossible-prize Ditching the Checklist by Mark Mattes: https://shop.1517.org/products/9781962654791-ditching-the-checklist Broken Bonds: A Novel of the Reformation, Book 1 of 2 by Amy Mantravadi: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1962654753?ref_=cm_sw_r_cp_ud_dp_FCNEEK60MVNVPCEGKBD8_5&starsLeft=1 More from the hosts: Dan van Voorhis SHOW TRANSCRIPTS are available: https://www.1517.org/podcasts/the-christian-history-almanac CONTACT: CHA@1517.org SUBSCRIBE: Apple Podcasts Spotify Stitcher Overcast Google Play FOLLOW US: Facebook Twitter Audio production by Christopher Gillespie (gillespie.media).
We're back, diary fans, with another instalment from Gyles's diary. This one starts in the 1964 summer holidays, Gyles is 16, and he's off on a road trip with his Canadian cousin Johnnie. Gyles is not impressed. In the autumn it's time for the General Election and, at Bedales, the school mock election, in which Gyles is running as the Conservative candidate. He's also appearing as Isaac Newton in the school play, taking over the school magazine, and getting his O-level results. As usual, there's never a dull moment. This episode also features an extended chat from Gyles and Harriet at the start, and a couple of your emails. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The Enlightenment's Most Dangerous Woman: Émilie du Châtelet and the Making of Modern Philosophy (Oxford UP, 2024) introduces the work and legacy of philosopher Émilie Du Châtelet. As the Enlightenment gained momentum throughout Europe, Châtelet broke through the many barriers facing women at the time and published a major philosophical treatise in French. Due to her proclamation that a true philosopher must remain an independent thinker rather than a disciple of some supposedly great man like Isaac Newton or René Descartes, Châtelet posed a threat to an emerging consensus in the Enlightenment. The Enlightenment's Most Dangerous Woman highlights the exclusion of women from colleges and academies in Europe and the fear of rupturing the gender-based order. Andrew Janiak is Professor of Philosophy and Bass Fellow at Duke University. Caleb Zakarin is editor at the New Books Network. 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
The Enlightenment's Most Dangerous Woman: Émilie du Châtelet and the Making of Modern Philosophy (Oxford UP, 2024) introduces the work and legacy of philosopher Émilie Du Châtelet. As the Enlightenment gained momentum throughout Europe, Châtelet broke through the many barriers facing women at the time and published a major philosophical treatise in French. Due to her proclamation that a true philosopher must remain an independent thinker rather than a disciple of some supposedly great man like Isaac Newton or René Descartes, Châtelet posed a threat to an emerging consensus in the Enlightenment. The Enlightenment's Most Dangerous Woman highlights the exclusion of women from colleges and academies in Europe and the fear of rupturing the gender-based order. Andrew Janiak is Professor of Philosophy and Bass Fellow at Duke University. Caleb Zakarin is editor at the New Books Network. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/biography
The Enlightenment's Most Dangerous Woman: Émilie du Châtelet and the Making of Modern Philosophy (Oxford UP, 2024) introduces the work and legacy of philosopher Émilie Du Châtelet. As the Enlightenment gained momentum throughout Europe, Châtelet broke through the many barriers facing women at the time and published a major philosophical treatise in French. Due to her proclamation that a true philosopher must remain an independent thinker rather than a disciple of some supposedly great man like Isaac Newton or René Descartes, Châtelet posed a threat to an emerging consensus in the Enlightenment. The Enlightenment's Most Dangerous Woman highlights the exclusion of women from colleges and academies in Europe and the fear of rupturing the gender-based order. Andrew Janiak is Professor of Philosophy and Bass Fellow at Duke University. Caleb Zakarin is editor at the New Books Network. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/intellectual-history
The Enlightenment's Most Dangerous Woman: Émilie du Châtelet and the Making of Modern Philosophy (Oxford UP, 2024) introduces the work and legacy of philosopher Émilie Du Châtelet. As the Enlightenment gained momentum throughout Europe, Châtelet broke through the many barriers facing women at the time and published a major philosophical treatise in French. Due to her proclamation that a true philosopher must remain an independent thinker rather than a disciple of some supposedly great man like Isaac Newton or René Descartes, Châtelet posed a threat to an emerging consensus in the Enlightenment. The Enlightenment's Most Dangerous Woman highlights the exclusion of women from colleges and academies in Europe and the fear of rupturing the gender-based order. Andrew Janiak is Professor of Philosophy and Bass Fellow at Duke University. Caleb Zakarin is editor at the New Books Network. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/european-studies
The Enlightenment's Most Dangerous Woman: Émilie du Châtelet and the Making of Modern Philosophy (Oxford UP, 2024) introduces the work and legacy of philosopher Émilie Du Châtelet. As the Enlightenment gained momentum throughout Europe, Châtelet broke through the many barriers facing women at the time and published a major philosophical treatise in French. Due to her proclamation that a true philosopher must remain an independent thinker rather than a disciple of some supposedly great man like Isaac Newton or René Descartes, Châtelet posed a threat to an emerging consensus in the Enlightenment. The Enlightenment's Most Dangerous Woman highlights the exclusion of women from colleges and academies in Europe and the fear of rupturing the gender-based order. Andrew Janiak is Professor of Philosophy and Bass Fellow at Duke University. Caleb Zakarin is editor at the New Books Network. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Enlightenment's Most Dangerous Woman: Émilie du Châtelet and the Making of Modern Philosophy (Oxford UP, 2024) introduces the work and legacy of philosopher Émilie Du Châtelet. As the Enlightenment gained momentum throughout Europe, Châtelet broke through the many barriers facing women at the time and published a major philosophical treatise in French. Due to her proclamation that a true philosopher must remain an independent thinker rather than a disciple of some supposedly great man like Isaac Newton or René Descartes, Châtelet posed a threat to an emerging consensus in the Enlightenment. The Enlightenment's Most Dangerous Woman highlights the exclusion of women from colleges and academies in Europe and the fear of rupturing the gender-based order. Andrew Janiak is Professor of Philosophy and Bass Fellow at Duke University. Caleb Zakarin is editor at the New Books Network. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Enlightenment's Most Dangerous Woman: Émilie du Châtelet and the Making of Modern Philosophy (Oxford UP, 2024) introduces the work and legacy of philosopher Émilie Du Châtelet. As the Enlightenment gained momentum throughout Europe, Châtelet broke through the many barriers facing women at the time and published a major philosophical treatise in French. Due to her proclamation that a true philosopher must remain an independent thinker rather than a disciple of some supposedly great man like Isaac Newton or René Descartes, Châtelet posed a threat to an emerging consensus in the Enlightenment. The Enlightenment's Most Dangerous Woman highlights the exclusion of women from colleges and academies in Europe and the fear of rupturing the gender-based order. Andrew Janiak is Professor of Philosophy and Bass Fellow at Duke University. Caleb Zakarin is editor at the New Books Network. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/french-studies
We covered Isaac Newton's monstrous nature, the inevitability of calculus, pottery, Clive Owen's need for a foil, aesthetics as a point of view, lessons from Steven Soderbergh, following the story's lead, relinquishing control, Sir Anthony Hopkins' need for George C. Scott's tension, and how audience feedback improves creators. https://youtu.be/bsi0RcKLmS4
What does it really mean for us to be made of stardust? Neil deGrasse Tyson and co-host Paul Mecurio answer fan questions about particle colliders, time travel, and what existed before the Big Bang. NOTE: StarTalk+ Patrons can listen to this entire episode commercial-free here: https://startalkmedia.com/show/cosmic-queries-before-the-big-bang/Thanks to our Patrons John 73, BrianSmiley, Brian Johnson, TIm, Klaus Wagner, Cynthia A Stevens, Valentijn van tongeren, Jmcarman23, J Gonzales, Kaden Brown, Sam Spencer, BSM1989, Caleb, Cristian Gonzalez, Stephen Davis, Stefan Jones, Walt Krutzfeldt, Hazel, Lukáš Mašek, Andrew, Craig Haagenson, Jessi, Taj Orndorff, Jacob Hernandez, Keith Thienpondt, Dusty Salyer-Elliott, Ignacio Karacsonyi, Bradley Foster, Melissa Forlini, Seth Lotstein, Hamid Pourkasraei, Linda, Ali Mojabi, and Mahmoud Hassan for supporting us this week. Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes of StarTalk Radio ad-free and a whole week early.Start a free trial now on Apple Podcasts or by visiting siriusxm.com/podcastsplus.
Join us and succumb to the horny darkness of Robert Eggers' Adventures of Count Orlok and the Cucks of Wisburg!!! The fuck is Wisburg? It's the German city where the plague rats land, IDIOT! "I have seen things in this world that would make Isaac Newton crawl back into his mother's womb! We are not so enlightened as we are blinded by the gaseous light of science. If we are to tame darkness, we must first face that it exists!" It's the Who Goes There Podcast Episode 430!!! We encourage you to join our Patreon to support the show! As a patreon member you get the episodes early, bonus content, and access to our Discord. It also helps us keep doing it. Thanks for listening and a huge thanks as always to @calgee for his original art. Go check out his work and give him a follow on Instagram. The Who Goes There Podcast is available to subscribe to on iTunes and Spotify. You can also find us on Instagram.
On again, off again tariffs will impact beer pricesI don't know what to say about these tariffs. We record a show and talk about them going into effect, then they're paused again. We can't keep up. However, a lot of folks aren't buying the delays and making big changes to the way they do business. In the end, if they do go into effect, it's going to impact the price of your beer, and mostly likely everything else.Monster Beverage took a huge loss on their beer business. Good. They gobbled up some great breweries and did terrible things with them. Most of the people we cared about at these places have moved on. I don't wish ill will for any that remain, but Monster can go pound sand.We've always said, "It's OK, if it's an a 3-way." It's kind of our motto. Monks took note and there's a 3-way Trappist collaboration brew coming out. Hopefully we can get our hands on it.In other news... pairing beer and chocolate, Teamsters go after Boston Beer Co., and Isaac Newton's beer mug is on display in all its glory. Cheers!Thanks for listening to Beer Guys Radio! Your hosts are Tim Dennis and Brian Hewitt with producer Nate "Mo' Mic Nate" Ellingson and occasional appearances from Becky Smalls.Subscribe to Beer Guys Radio on your favorite app: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | RSSFollow Beer Guys Radio: Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | YouTube If you enjoy the show we'd appreciate your support on Patreon. Patrons get cool perks like early, commercial-free episodes, swag, access to our exclusive Discord server, and more!
Dans cet épisode d'ArtEcoVert, intitulé « En fait, rien n'a de couleur », nous avons le plaisir d'accueillir Pauline Leroux, ingénieure agronome et passionnée de couleur végétale. Avec une approche bienveillante et pédagogique, Pauline nous plonge dans l'univers fascinant de la couleur à travers la lumière et la perception visuelle. Elle nous rappelle que la couleur, en réalité, n'existe que par notre perception, révélant ainsi une facette souvent méconnue de notre interaction avec le monde qui nous entoure.Saviez-vous que nos yeux sont dotés de capteurs de lumière, appelés cônes, qui détectent trois longueurs d'onde principales : rouge, vert et bleu ? Grâce à cette capacité, nous pouvons percevoir une multitude de couleurs, dont celles issues de la teinture végétale. Dans cet épisode, Pauline aborde l'importance cruciale de la lumière dans la perception des couleurs, en illustrant comment les objets, qu'ils soient teintés avec des colorants biosourcés comme l'indigo ou la garance, réfléchissent ou absorbent différentes longueurs d'onde. Au fil de la discussion, elle nous fait découvrir des concepts fondamentaux tels que le spectre de la lumière, les couleurs primaires et secondaires, ainsi que des référentiels de couleur utilisés dans divers domaines, tels que le CMJN pour l'impression et le RVB pour les écrans. Ces notions sont essentielles pour quiconque s'intéresse à la couleur végétale et à ses applications, que ce soit dans l'agriculture tinctoriale, la création d'encre végétale ou la coloration capillaire végétale.Pauline partage également des anecdotes historiques captivantes sur des figures emblématiques comme Isaac Newton et Michel-Eugène Chevreul, illustrant comment notre compréhension des couleurs a évolué au fil du temps. "La couleur est un dialogue entre la lumière et l'œil", nous rappelle-t-elle, une citation qui résonne tout au long de cet épisode riche en informations et en découvertes.Que vous soyez un passionné de plantes tinctoriales, un amateur de fibres naturelles, ou simplement curieux d'en savoir plus sur le monde des pigments végétaux, cet épisode d'ArtEcoVert est fait pour vous. Préparez-vous à explorer les couleurs de plantes et à comprendre comment elles influencent notre perception et notre quotidien.Pour en savoir plus sur la teinture végétale et découvrir des ressources utiles, n'hésitez pas à consulter les liens que nous avons préparés pour vous. Belle écoute à tous et à toutes, et merci de vous joindre à nous pour ce voyage au cœur de la couleur végétale avec Pauline !
While Isaac Newton may be best known for his laws of motion, it is his beer mug that is going on show this week at the Royal Society in London...Joining Seán to discuss is Keith Moore, the Head of Library and Archives at the Royal Society.Image: The Royal Society
Are your specification limits holding you back from improving your products and services? Should you throw out specifications? What does Stephen Hawking have to do with it? In this episode, Bill Bellows and host Andrew Stotz discuss specifications and variation. TRANSCRIPT 0:00:02.5 Andrew Stotz: My name is Andrew Stotz, and I'll be your host as we dive deeper into the teachings of Dr. W Edwards Deming. Today, I'm continuing my discussion with Bill Bellows, who has spent 31 years helping people apply Dr. Deming's ideas to become aware of how their thinking is holding them back from their biggest opportunities. Today is episode 12, and the title is Do Specification Limits Limit Improvement. Bill, take it away. 0:00:31.4 Bill Bellows: Hey, Andrew. How's it going? All right. 0:00:33.8 Andrew Stotz: Great. Great to have you back and great to see you. For those that are just listening, you can watch the video on DemingNEXT. But for those listening, Bill looks handsome, full of energy, ready to go, and it's my 8:30 in the morning in Bangkok, Thailand. So let's rock Bill. 0:00:56.3 Bill Bellows: So. I spoke recently to one of the folks I'd met on LinkedIn that have listened to our podcast and took the offer to reach out and we now talk regularly. And I just wanna say I've gotta, before we get to some, the story behind the title, I wanted to share, a heads up. And if anyone would like a copy of this article that I wanna, take some excerpts from, then just reach out to me on LinkedIn and ask for a copy of the article. The article's entitled 'A Brief History of Quality,' and there's three parts. So it's about 10 pages overall, and it was published in 2015 in the Lean Management Journal, which I don't believe still exists. I was writing articles at the end once a month for this journal, I think based out of the UK. 0:02:04.3 Bill Bellows: I think there was a manufacturing magazine that still exists and had this as a special topic and my interest was bringing Dr. Deming's ideas, to the Lean community, which is why it was a Lean Management Journal, so the article was entitled 'Brief History Equality.' And so I wanna get to those topics, but when I was reading the article, reminding myself of it, I thought, oh, I'll just share this story online with Andrew and our audience. And so here I'm just gonna read the opening paragraph. It says, "several years ago, I had the opportunity to attend an hour-long lecture by Stephen Hawking," right? So the article was written in 2015. So the presentation by Hawking would've been maybe 2012, 2013. And back to the article, it says, "he, Hawking, returns to Pasadena every summer for a one-month retreat, a ritual he started in the 1970s, several thousand attendees sitting in both a lecture hall and outdoors on a lawn area complete with a giant screen were treated to an evening of reflection of the legendary Cambridge physicist." 0:03:14.3 Bill Bellows: And I'll just pause. I have friends who work at JPL and they got me seats, and they got me an inside seat in the balcony, front row of the balcony, but they had big screens outside. I mean, it was like a rock concert for Stephen Hawking, right? 0:03:34.3 Andrew Stotz: That's amazing. 0:03:34.9 Bill Bellows: Oh, it was so cool. Oh, it was so cool. So anyway, "his focus was my brief history offering us a glimpse of his life through a twist on his treatise, A Brief History of Time. His introspective presentation revealed his genius, his humility, his search for black holes, his passion for life, not to mention his dry sense of humor. It ended with questions from three Caltech students, the last of which came from a postdoc student, an inquiry Hawking had likely tackled many times before." 0:04:06.6 Bill Bellows: So realize he's answering the questions through a voice activated thing. And it appeared that the questions were, his answers were prerecorded, but they're still coming through a device that is a synthesized voice. But I get the impression that he knew the questions were coming, so we in the audience were hearing the questions for the first time. But he had already answered the questions. So anyway, it ended with questions. There was an undergraduate student, a graduate student, then a postdoc, and I said, "the last of which came from a postdoc student, an inquiry Hawking had likely tackled many times before. And the student relayed the story of an unnamed physicist who once compared himself to both Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein." So this unnamed physicist compared himself to Einstein and Newton each placed on a scale of 1 lowest to 10 highest. "With this context, Hawking was asked where he would rank himself." 0:05:22.0 Bill Bellows: So this physicist said, oh, you know, Andrew, I see myself as this. And so the guy relays the story, and he says to Hawking, so given this other physicist said this, where would you rank yourself? "Well, I do not recall the relative rankings posed in the query. I'll never forget Hawking's abrupt reply. He says, “anyone who compares themselves to others is a loser." And I found online that he was, that commentary, this was not the first time he said that. 0:06:04.9 Andrew Stotz: Right. 0:06:06.5 Bill Bellows: And I just thought, oh, anyone who compares himself to others is a loser. And then the end of the paragraph is "in reference to Dr. Deming," Andrew, "variation, there will always be. So can't we just get used to variation?" So the title, are you in favor? No, no, no, no. That was last time. Are you in favor of improving the quality was number 10. Number 11 was to improve quality, don't measure quality. For 12, the specification limits limit improvement. 0:06:46.9 Andrew Stotz: Now, if that was true, first of all, that would be a little scary, 'cause we spend a lot of time working on specification limits. There's a lot of people working on that. 0:06:55.4 Bill Bellows: But here's what's behind the title. In 1995, I was invited to speak, not for the first time, but for the first time I ever spoke to an audience of the American Society of Quality. It was a San Fernando Valley chapter. I forget the number. I've spoken there many, many times over the years, but this is the first time I ever spoke to quality professionals as opposed to project managers or Society of Manufacturing Engineers. I was there with my wife. There's dinner, then after dinner in the next room, and the chairs were set up, theater style, that'd be 70, 80 people. And I was talking about what I would, I mean, things I still talk about, I talk about new things, to have new things done. But the big thing I was trying to get across the audience is, the difference between meeting requirements, which in this series, we call it acceptability versus desirability, which is, I want this value, I want this professor, I want to date this person. And so I was relaying that concept to that audience. And the question I asked that night was do specification limits limit improvement? 0:08:31.0 Bill Bellows: And there was a guy about seven rows back, and I built up to that. That wasn't the opening thing, but what I was really pushing on was a focus on Phil Crosby's goal of striving for zero defects. And, then what? Once you achieve that, then what? And we've talked about the doorway and that's like the door is closed, we get up to the doorway and we've achieved zero defects. And, what we've talked about is going through the doorway and the attitude is, well, why open the door? I mean, don't open the door, Andrew. There's a wall on the other side of that door, Andrew. So it might be a door, but everybody knows there's a wall behind it, and I was poking at that with this audience, and prepared to show them the value proposition of going through that. 0:09:34.0 Bill Bellows: So anyway, I remember I got to the point of asking, do specification limits limit thinking about improvement or something like that. And a more senior gentleman, about seven or eight rows back, and fortunately, he was seven or eight rows back, fortunately, because he stood up and he says, "Are you saying we don't need specification limits?" There's a lot more anger in his voice. And I said, "No," I said, "I'm saying I think they limit our thinking about improvement." And, but he was really upset with me, and I was deliberately provoking because again, you and I have talked about, how can we inspire through this podcast and other podcasts that you do with the others, to get people to think about the possibilities that Dr. Deming shared with us. And it's not believing that there's a door that you can't walk through. You open the door and there's an opening and you can go through. There's a lot more going on there. So anyway, so I had prepared them. The whole reason for being there was to share what we were doing at Rocketdyne, and not just talk about the possibilities, but show them the possibilities. But he got very upset with me. But if he was in the front row, he might've hit me. 0:11:08.9 Andrew Stotz: May have thrown a book at you. 0:11:11.5 Bill Bellows: Oh, he... 0:11:12.2 Andrew Stotz: May have thrown a Specification Limit at you. 0:11:17.0 Bill Bellows: Twice I've had people get, well, I've gotten a number of people upset with me over the years, but that night was, I'll never forget, and I'll never forget, because my wife was sitting in the front row and she asked me never to be that provocative again. It might be dangerous to my health. But I was doing another class, also for the American Society of Quality, I was a member of the local chapter, and there was a big movement within Rocketdyne that all Quality Engineers within Rocketdyne be Certified Quality Engineers. And so two or three of us from Rocketdyne got involved in helping the local chapter train people to prepare to take this one day exam. Very, very, very rigorous. And it's a valuable credential for quality professionals. 0:12:20.1 Bill Bellows: And so the company was pushing that every single quality engineer was certified. So we did the classes on site. So instead of going to the nearby Cal State Northridge and doing it over there, we wanted to do it onsite, make it easy for our employees to attend. And so I would do one and a half sessions. So a given session was three hours long, and then there'd be a half session. And my topics were Design of Experiments and Dr. Taguchi's work. And so as I got this group this one night for the very first time, I was the second half of that three-hour session, and there's 30 some people in the room at Rocketdyne. And the question I wanted to raise is, why run experiments? What would provoke you to run an experiments either, planned experimentation, Design of Experiments or Dr. Taguchi's approach to it. 0:13:15.1 Bill Bellows: So I was throwing that out and I said, in my experience, we're either applying it to make something better - that's improvement, Andrew, - or we're applying it to find out why something doesn't work, which is rearward looking. And I was saying that in my experience, I spend like a whole lot of time running experiments to solve a problem, to fix something that was broken, to get it back to where it was before the fire alarm, not as much time focusing on good to make it better. And so I was just playing in that space of, you know, I guess I was asking the audience are we running experiments to go from bad to good and stop, or from good to better? And I was playing with that 30 people in the room, and all of a sudden, four or five feet in front of me, this guy stands up, says this is BS, but he didn't use the initials, he actually said the word and walked out of the room. And all of us are looking at him like, and there was no provocation. Now, I admit for the ASQ meeting, I was poking to make sure they were paying attention. Here, I was just plain just, why do we run experiments? So, he stands up, he lets out that word, pretty high volume, storms out of the room. 0:14:42.1 Bill Bellows: Well, at Rocketdyne, you can't... You need a... You have to walk around with someone who works there. You just can't go walk around the place, so I had to quickly get one of my coworkers who was in the room to go escort him to the lobby or else, we're all gonna get fired for having somebody unescorted. So the specification limits limit thinking about improvement, I think they do. I am constantly working with university courses or in my consulting work and acceptability in terms of the quality goal, that this is acceptable, it meets requirements is alive and well and thriving, thriving. And, I think what goes on in organizations, I think there's such a focus on getting things done, that to be done is to be good and is to stop that I could pass my work on to you. 0:15:45.2 Bill Bellows: And, the challenge becomes, even if you're aware that you can walk through the doorway and move from acceptability to desirability, how do you sell that to an organization, which you, what I see in organizations, there's a lot of kicking the can down the road. There's a lot of, and even worse than that, there's a lot of toast scraping going on because there's not a lot of understanding that the person toasting it is over toasting it because all they do is put the toast into the oven. Somebody else takes it out, somebody else scrapes it, somebody else sends it back to a different toaster. And I see a lack of understanding of this because the heads are down. That's part of what I see. What I also see in organizations is, with students is this is their first drop. 0:16:51.0 Bill Bellows: Wherever they are, engineering, manufacturing, quality, they're new, they're excited, they're excited to be on their own, to have an income. And they're taking what they learned in universities, and now, they get to apply it. And I remember what that was like. I worked the summer after getting my bachelor's degree, my last semester, I took a class at heat transfer, the prior semester, took a class in jet engines, and I just fell in love with heat transfer and I fell in love with jet engines. And that summer, I was coming back in the fall to go to graduate school for my master's degree. That summer, I worked for a jet engine company as a heat transfer engineer, I was in heaven. 0:17:37.6 Andrew Stotz: Yeah. That's gotta be the coolest thing. 0:17:40.1 Bill Bellows: Just incredible. So I can imagine people coming out of college, going to work, and you get to apply what you learned. You get to use computers, you get to work with some really cool people, and you're doing what you're doing, and it's a blast. And I think it takes a few years before you start to listen to what the veterans are talking about. And you might hear that they're challenging how decisions are made, they're challenging how the company is run. I think prior to that, your heads are down and you're just the subject matter expert. It could be, you know, engineering and manufacturing, finance, and you're doing what you're doing. Their head is down, you're receiving, you're delivering. I still remember when I went to work with my Ph.D. at the same jet engine company, they hired me back. And, I remember walking down the hallway with a colleague and somebody says, that's the VP of Engineering. 0:18:42.7 Bill Bellows: And I thought, we have a VP of Engineering? I mean, I know we have a Vice President of the United States, but I didn't know anything about titles like that. And I think... And I don't think I'm the only one. I've shared those with some younger folks recently, and they agree, you come in, it's heads down, we don't know management, all I get to work on this great stuff. I go and I, and so what we're, but I think what happens is, I think at some point of time you start to look up and you're hearing what the more senior people that are there are saying you've had some experience. And, I know when people join Rocketdyne, and they would come to my class and I would share these stories that had some things that were, if your experience would be questionable, some other things that are pretty cool. 0:19:34.6 Bill Bellows: And, I just had the feeling and I found out people would walk outta there thinking what you mean that, I mean the things, the use of incentives, like why do we need incentives? But, and what I found was it took a couple of years and I would bump into these same people and they'd say, now I'm beginning to understand what you were talking about and what Dr. Deming was talking about. So I throw that out. For those listeners that are trying to, that are at that phase where you're starting to wonder how are decisions being made? You're wondering what you wanna do in your profession. You're wondering what this Deming stuff is about. A whole lot of this entire series has been targeted at people that are new to Deming's ideas. Or maybe they have some experience, they're getting some exposure through these podcasts either with me and the ones you're doing with John and the others. And so, but the other thing I wanna get into today is this quality thing. I go back to this article. And then I was thinking about this article, things I didn't know when I started researching this article is, this term quality, where does that come from? And the term quality comes from, I got to pull it, I have to scroll through the article. Let me get it, let me get it. 0:21:06.4 Bill Bellows: All right. Here we go. "The word quality," Andrew "has Latin roots, beginning with qualitas coined by Roman philosopher and statesman, Marcus Tullius Cicero, who later became an adversary of Mark Antony." You know, what happened to Cicero? Wasn't pretty. 0:21:32.8 Andrew Stotz: Yeah. 0:21:33.9 Bill Bellows: "Feared by Antony," I wrote, "his power of speech led to his eventual beheading. But long after he introduces fellow Romans to the vocabulary of qualitas, that's quality; quantitas, that's quantity; humanitas, that's humanity; and essentia, which is essential. He's also credited with an extensive list of expressions that translate into English, including difference, infinity, science, and morale. When Plato invented the phrase poiotes for use by his peers." So Plato would've been Greek, "Cicero spoke of qualitas with his peers when focusing on the property of an object, not its quantity." And, what I had in mind there is counting how many things we have, so you come in and you want five apples, five suits, whatever it is, there's the quantity thing. And then what Cicero was trying to do is say, quality is not the number, but quality is a differentiation of not just any suit, not just any... 0:22:53.1 Bill Bellows: And I think that becomes the challenge is, is that still important? So when Dr. Deming came on board in 1980, at the age of 79, when the NBC white paper was written, and people got excited by quality because quality was something that people identified with Japanese products, not with American products. 0:23:19.9 Andrew Stotz: Well, not in 1980. 0:23:21.1 Bill Bellows: Not in 1980... [laughter] 0:23:22.2 Bill Bellows: I mean, at that time, the auto companies were making a lot of money in repair businesses. And Toyota comes along and says, and the words on the street, our products don't require all that repair. And I thought, yeah. And what was neat about that is when I thought, when you think about differentiation and like how do you sell quality? Because, again, I find it, for the longest time, beginning in 1980, quality was hot. Quality improvement. I mean, the American Society of Quality membership skyrocketed. Their membership has dropped like a rock since then because they don't have this Deming guy around that got them going. 0:24:12.1 Bill Bellows: Now, they're still big in the Six Sigma, but I don't believe their membership is anything like it was, but what I was thinking and getting ready for tonight is the economics of quality is from a consumer, what, at least, when my wife and I buy Toyota, it's a value proposition. It's the idea that if we buy Toyota, in our experience, we're getting a car that doesn't break down as often, is far more reliable. That becomes the differentiation. Also in the first... In the second series, second podcast of this series, we talked about the eight dimensions of quality and David Garvin's work. 0:25:03.2 Bill Bellows: And one of them was features, that a car with cup holders is quality 'cause... And there was a time, and the more cup holders, the better. And that was... And Garvin was saying lots of features is quality. He said, reliability could perceived it as a dimension of quality. Conformance was one of the dimensions, and he attributed that to the traditional thinking of Crosby. Reliability is a thing. And so when it comes to, how do you sell quality today? How do you get people within your organizations to go beyond, 'cause what I see right now is it's almost as if quality has gone back to quantity, that it's gone, that it's lost its appeal. Now, quantity doesn't lose its appeal 'cause we're selling, five of them, 20 of them, 30 of them. 0:26:09.2 Bill Bellows: But I don't get the impression from students and others that I interact with, that quality has big appeal. But, if we convert quality to the ability to do more with less, I mean the, when I'm delivering a higher quality item to you within the organization, that it's easier for you to integrate, to do something with, that's money, that's savings of time. And the question is, well, I guess how can we help make people more aware that when you go through the door of good and go beyond looking good and start to think about opportunities for desirable? And again, what we've said in the past is there's nothing wrong with tools, nothing wrong with the techniques to use them, there's nothing wrong with acceptability, but desirability is a differentiator. 0:27:15.2 Bill Bellows: And then the challenge becomes, if everyone's focused on acceptability, where it makes sense, then within your organization going beyond that, as we've explained, and this is where Dr. Taguchi's work is very critical. Dr. Deming learned about desirability from Dr. Taguchi in 1960. And that's what I think is, for all this interest in Toyota, I guess my question is, why is everybody excited by Toyota? Is it because they do single-minute exchange of dies? I don't think so. Is it because they do mixed model production? They can have, in one production line have a red car followed by a blue car, followed by a green car as opposed to mass production? Or is it because of the incredible reliability of the product? That's my answer, and I'm sticking to it. So... 0:28:14.3 Andrew Stotz: Yeah. 0:28:14.7 Bill Bellows: So what do you think Andrew? 0:28:17.2 Andrew Stotz: Yeah. There's two things that I was thinking about. One of the things I was thinking about is the idea if we're doing good with quality, and maybe we're satisfied with good, I was thinking about the book 'Good to Great,' and like how do you make this breakthrough? And then I was maybe it's good to groundbreaking or good to amazing or whatever. But like, when you really go beyond specification limits and take it to the next level, it's like you're moving from good to great. And one of the things that I see a lot is that, and I talk a lot in my corporate strategy courses with my clients and with my students is this idea that Deming really hit home about, about focusing on your customer, not your competitor. 0:29:06.6 Andrew Stotz: And I just feel like humans have a need to classify everything, to name everything, to label everything. And once they've got that label, that's the specification. That's what we want, they will fixate on that. And whether, I think, you think about all the kids that come out of the out of some meeting with a doctor and say, oh, I'm ADHD. Okay, we got a label now that's good and bad. And so that's where I think it, when I thought about the specification limits limit improvement, I think that, specification to me, when I think about quality, I think about setting a standard, moving to a, a new standard, and then maintaining that standard. And I can see the purpose of limits and controls and trying to understand how do we maintain that. But if we only stay on maintaining that and never move beyond that, then are we really, are we really in pursuit of quality? 0:30:12.0 Andrew Stotz: Now, on the other hand, when I think about the customers of my coffee factory, CoffeeWORKS and they want the exact same experience every single morning. Now, if we can make tests and do PDSAs to improve how we're doing that, less resources, better inputs and all that, great, but they do not want a difference. And I was just thinking about it also in relation to my evaluation masterclass bootcamp, where I still have a lot of variation coming out at the end of the bootcamp. Now, in the beginning, this is bootcamp number 19. So I've done this a lot. In the beginning, man, I would have, someone really terrible and someone really great, and I wasn't satisfied. So I kept trying to improve the content, the process, the feedback to make sure that by the time they get to the end, but I was just frustrated yesterday thinking there's still a lot of variation that, and I'm not talking about, the variation of a personality or something. 0:31:15.2 Andrew Stotz: I'm just talking about the variation of understanding and implementing what they're learning. And then I was thinking as I was at the park running this morning, I was thinking like, what makes Toyota so great is that there is very little variation of the 10 million cars that they've produced last year. And how impressive that is when all I'm trying to do is do it in a small little course. So I don't know, those are some things that were coming into my head when I thought about what you're talking about. 0:31:44.6 Bill Bellows: But no, you're right, in terms of the coffee, and I think you brought up a couple of good points. One is when the customer wants that flavor, whatever that level is, now, but that, I don't know how, anything about measuring taste, but there could be, within the range, within that, when they say they want that flavor, I mean, that could still have, could be a pretty broad spectrum. So maybe there's the ability to make it more consistent within that, if that's possible. 0:32:27.8 Andrew Stotz: Yeah, I think that, I think, like we have a blend we call Hunter's Brew, and I drink that every single morning and I can say, yeah, there's a variation, but it's a small enough variation that it doesn't bother me at all. And I think it doesn't bother our customer. Could we get more conformity to that? Yes, I think we could reduce that. Is it worth it? That's another question. We're looking at some automated equipment, some automated roasting equipment that would bring automation that would allow us to reduce that variation a bit. Will the customer notice that or not? Maybe. But the customer will definitely notice if we're outside of specification limits or if it's burnt... 0:33:12.7 Bill Bellows: Yes. 0:33:13.5 Andrew Stotz: As an example, and we're still shipping it, you know, they'll definitely notice that. And we have our mechanisms to try to measure that so that we are within those limits. So I do see, I see that the function of that to me is like, okay, in fact, in any business, you're constantly chasing and putting out fires. I mean, there's always things going on in every business owner's situation. 0:33:38.6 Bill Bellows: Right. 0:33:39.9 Andrew Stotz: And so there's at points where it's like, okay, can you just keep that in specification limit for right now while I get over to here and fix how we're gonna make sure that this is at another level where that is, I would consider it kind of an improvement versus maintaining. But I don't know, I'm just, I'm riffing here, but those are some things in my head. 0:34:00.0 Bill Bellows: No, what I hear you talking about is if we shift from quality management to, I mean, what desirability is about is looking at things as a system. Acceptability is about looking at things in isolation and saying, this is good, this is good, this is good, this is good. Not necessarily with a lot of focus of how is that used. So if we move away from quality and really what we're talking about is a better way to run an organization with a sense of connectedness that we're, we can talk about working together. Well, it's hard to work together if the fundamental mindset is: here, Andrew, my part is good and I wash my hands of it. When you come back and say, well, Bill, I'm having trouble integrating it, that's more like working separately. 0:35:07.2 Bill Bellows: So if we shift the focus from quality, which could be really narrow, it could be an entry point, but I think if we step back, I mean the title of Dr. Deming's last book was 'The New Economics,' the idea which has to be, which to me, which is about a resource. The better we manage the organization as a system, the more we can do with less. And relative to the quality of the taste and yeah, the customers want this and maybe we can make that even more consistent simultaneously. Can we use control charts to see special causes before they get too far downstream that allows us to maintain that consistency? That'd be nice. Then can we figure out ways to expand our capacity as we gain more? So there's a whole lot to do. So the organization is not static. And simultaneously the challenge becomes how do we stay ahead of others who might be trying to do the same thing? Dr. Deming would say, be thankful for a good competitor. Are we just gonna sit there and say, oh, we're the only coffee... We're the only ones in house that know how to do this. What is our differentiator? And I think having a workforce that thinks in terms of how the activities are connected, that are constantly involved in improvement activities. 0:36:45.1 Bill Bellows: Short of that, what you're hoping is that no one comes along in... Remember the book, it was required reading within Boeing, sadly, 'Who Moved My Cheese?' 0:36:58.2 Andrew Stotz: It was required reading at Pepsi when I was there, and I hated that book. We had another one called 'The Game of Work,' which I just was so annoyed with, but that 'Who Moved My Cheese?' I never, never really enjoyed that at all. 0:37:07.0 Bill Bellows: We used to laugh about, within Rocketdyne 'cause, and for those who aren't aware of the book, the storyline is that there's a bunch of mice and they're living in their little cubby holes and every day they go through the mouse hole, try to avoid the cat, find the cheese, bring the cheese back into their cubby hole, and that life is good. And then one day, somebody steals the cheese, moves the cheese and one's kind of frantic and the other's like, oh, not to worry, Andrew, I'm sure it was taken by a nice person and I'm sure they'll return it. So I wouldn't lose sleep over that. That's okay. That's okay. And then kind of the moral was another company is stealing your cheese and you're sitting there thinking everything's okay, and next thing you know, you're outta business because you weren't paying attention. And so the, and it was, this is written for adults with cartoons of cheese. That's how you appeal... That's how... 0:38:15.9 Andrew Stotz: Yeah. So that's what got me annoyed about it because it felt like, just tell me what you're trying to tell me, okay. Instead of telling me this story. But yeah, it was a used to create the burning platform concept that was used... I know at Pepsi when I was there, they talked about the burning platform, the level of urgency, we're gonna get, and, and there's, I kind of understand where they were coming from with it, but yeah. 0:38:44.7 Bill Bellows: But what is interesting is nowhere in the book was a strategy to be the ones moving the cheese. What it was more like is don't be in an environment where somebody else moves the cheese. Don't be that company. And I thought, no, you wanna be the company that's moving the cheese. But that was, maybe that's an advanced book that hasn't come out yet. [laughter] 0:39:08.6 Bill Bellows: But really... 0:39:10.5 Andrew Stotz: There's some work for you, Bill. 0:39:12.6 Bill Bellows: But, but that's what... I mean what Dr. Deming is talking about is having an environment where you have that capacity on an ongoing basis. First of all, you're not sitting back stopping at good, thinking that what you're doing is always acceptable. It's trying to do more with that. Anyway, that's what I wanted to explore today. Again, there's nothing wrong with specification limits. I told the gentleman that night, specification limits are provided to allow for variation, to allow for commerce, to allow for suppliers to provide things that meet requirements. Then the question becomes, is there value in doing something with a variation within the specification limits? Is there value in moving that variation around? And that's the desirability focus. That is what Ford realized Toyota was doing a lot, is that then improves the functionality of the resulting product, it improves its reliability. All of that is the possibility of going beyond meeting requirements. So it's not that we shouldn't have, we need specifications. Why? Because there's variation. And if we didn't allow for variation, we couldn't have commerce because we can't deliver exactly anything. So I just want, just for some... 0:40:34.9 Andrew Stotz: Okay, all right. That's a good one. 0:40:37.4 Bill Bellows: All right. 0:40:38.2 Andrew Stotz: And I'll wrap it up with a little humor. 0:40:40.4 Bill Bellows: Go ahead. 0:40:40.5 Andrew Stotz: There were some parody books that came out, in relation to 'Who Moved My Cheese.' In 2002, the book 'Who Cut the Cheese' by Stilton Jarlsberg, which was good. And in 2011 was, 'I Moved Your Cheese' by Deepak Malhotra. So there you go. A little humor for the day. Bill, on behalf of everybody at The Deming Institute, I want to thank you again for this discussion. And for listeners, remember to go to deming.org to continue your journey. And if you want to keep in touch with Bill, just find him on LinkedIn. He responds. This is your host, Andrew Stotz, and I'll leave you with one of my favorite quotes from Dr. Deming. I just love this quote. I think about it all the time. "People are entitled to joy in work."
What goes up must come down? More than 350 years since Isaac Newton penned his laws of gravity, it appears to apply to the teams newly promoted to the Premier League as, for the second season running, all three new arrivals are struggling to avoid the immediate drop. Is this just a blip or the emergence of a new trend? Rob Fletcher and Dave Bowler investigate.
Are you ready for a BIRTHDAY PARTY? Quantum Physics has now reached the ripe old age of 100, but what does quantum science mean? The implications will leave you shaken. All the evidence we have from Quantum Mechanics points to the Trinity! Modern physics echoes the very words of Genesis. And what about Sir Isaac Newton? Some call Newton, the Father of Modern Science, but they also brand him a heretic. Others call him a defender of the Trinity. I argue his own writings reveal the shocking truth. This is not just another debate. This is history, science, and faith colliding in ways that will change how you see reality itself. Don't miss a second. Watch now!
Matthew Ehret @ehret_matthew returns to discuss his newly published trilogy, Revenge of the Mystery Cults, which uncovers the deep occult influences shaping the history of modern science. We'll dive into the mythology surrounding Nikola Tesla, Isaac Newton, and the alleged Nazi UFO programs while cutting through the distortions spread by Western propaganda machines like the History Channel. In part 2 of this episode we will dive deeper into the Technocracy movement and its ties to techno-feudalist Elon Musk. Note: apologies for my poor audio quality on this episode. Not sure what happened with my microphone. https://canadianpatriot.org/ https://risingtidefoundation.net/ https://matthewehret.substack.com/ Support Probably Cancelled on Patreon to get early access to episodes or submit your questions to the new PC Pod advice column!: https://www.patreon.com/probablycancelledpod Subscribe to PC Pod on Rumble & Telegram: t.me/pcpod
Der britische Naturforscher Henry Cavendish (gest. am 24.2.1810) bestimmte als erster die mittlere Dichte unseres Planeten. Gleichsam wog er die Erde - ohne sie zu heben. Von Martin Herzog.
Darkness Radio presents Supernatural News/Parashare: Shakin' Up The ET's Edition with Mallie Fox! This Week, AARO published a new analysis of the "Go Fast US Navy video and shook up minds all while the earth REALLY moved over at Area 51 as an earthquake took place! AI takes away a disabled woman's voice after it thinks she says a slur! Isaac Newton may have predicted when the end of the world would take place in 1704, AND there may be a very real cure for Cancer, but will you ever get your hands on it? AARO published a new analysis of the "Go Fast" US Navy video this week... See the video here!: https://www.unexplained-mysteries.com/news/384429/aaro-publishes-new-analysis-of-famous-go-fast-us-navy-ufo-video A Kayaker was swallowed by a Humpback whale, then spit out!! See the video here: https://www.unexplained-mysteries.com/news/384451/insane-video-shows-kayaker-being-swallowed-by-a-humpback-whale Check out all things Mallie here: https://www.paranormalgirl.com/ Mallie has been spreading her wings and featured as a researcher and talking head on Strange Evidence on the Science Channel! You can stream it on demand on Discovery + or on Max! Get Max here: https://bit.ly/469lcZH There are new and different (and really cool) items all the time in the Darkness Radio Online store at our website! . check out the Darkness Radio Store! https://www.darknessradioshow.com/store/ Want to be an "Executive Producer" of Darkness Radio? email Tim@darknessradio.com for details! #paranormal #supernatural #paranormalpodcasts #darknessradio #timdennis #malliefox #paranormalgirl #strangeevidence #supernaturalnews #parashare #ghosts #spirits #hauntings #hauntedhouses #haunteddolls #demons #supernaturalsex #deliverances #exorcisms #paranormalinvestigation #ghosthunters #Psychics #tarot #ouija #Aliens #UFO #UAP #Extraterrestrials #alienhumanhybrid #alienabduction #alienimplant #Alienspaceships #disclosure #shadowpeople #AATIP #DIA #Cryptids #Cryptozoology #bigfoot #sasquatch #yeti #abominablesnowman #ogopogo #lochnessmonster #chupacabra #beastofbrayroad #mothman #artificialintelligence #AI #NASA #CIA #FBI #conspiracytheory #neardeatheexperience
Darkness Radio presents Supernatural News/Parashare: Shakin' Up The ET's Edition with Mallie Fox! This Week, AARO published a new analysis of the "Go Fast US Navy video and shook up minds all while the earth REALLY moved over at Area 51 as an earthquake took place! AI takes away a disabled woman's voice after it thinks she says a slur! Isaac Newton may have predicted when the end of the world would take place in 1704, AND there may be a very real cure for Cancer, but will you ever get your hands on it? AARO published a new analysis of the "Go Fast" US Navy video this week... See the video here!: https://www.unexplained-mysteries.com/news/384429/aaro-publishes-new-analysis-of-famous-go-fast-us-navy-ufo-video A Kayaker was swallowed by a Humpback whale, then spit out!! See the video here: https://www.unexplained-mysteries.com/news/384451/insane-video-shows-kayaker-being-swallowed-by-a-humpback-whale Check out all things Mallie here: https://www.paranormalgirl.com/ Mallie has been spreading her wings and featured as a researcher and talking head on Strange Evidence on the Science Channel! You can stream it on demand on Discovery + or on Max! Get Max here: https://bit.ly/469lcZH There are new and different (and really cool) items all the time in the Darkness Radio Online store at our website! . check out the Darkness Radio Store! https://www.darknessradioshow.com/store/ Want to be an "Executive Producer" of Darkness Radio? email Tim@darknessradio.com for details! #paranormal #supernatural #paranormalpodcasts #darknessradio #timdennis #malliefox #paranormalgirl #strangeevidence #supernaturalnews #parashare #ghosts #spirits #hauntings #hauntedhouses #haunteddolls #demons #supernaturalsex #deliverances #exorcisms #paranormalinvestigation #ghosthunters #Psychics #tarot #ouija #Aliens #UFO #UAP #Extraterrestrials #alienhumanhybrid #alienabduction #alienimplant #Alienspaceships #disclosure #shadowpeople #AATIP #DIA #Cryptids #Cryptozoology #bigfoot #sasquatch #yeti #abominablesnowman #ogopogo #lochnessmonster #chupacabra #beastofbrayroad #mothman #artificialintelligence #AI #NASA #CIA #FBI #conspiracytheory #neardeatheexperience
Sir Isaac Newton was an English polymath active as a mathematician, physicist, astronomer, alchemist, theologian, and author. Newton was a key figure in the Scientific Revolution and the following Enlightenment. His book Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica, first published in 1687, achieved the first great unification in physics and established classical mechanics. While Newton pioneered the laws of motion and universal gravitation that formed the dominant scientific viewpoint for centuries, his first love was religious studies, specifically the issue of The Trinity, which he vehemently opposed in his secret writings. Peer down the telescope as Joel focuses on the hidden side of Isaac Newton's battle with the Catholic Church and what he deemed as the false doctrine of The Trinity. He then lays out the conflict between Athanasius and Arius, in which Newton took the side of Arius, who rejected the view of the Three in One. Joel then breaks down the Johannine Comma, which is the Trinity's most clear-cut verse, and whether or not it should have been included in the Bible. Buy Me A Coffee: Donate Website: https://linktr.ee/joelthomasmedia Follow: Instagram | X | Facebook Watch: YouTube | Rumble Music: YouTube | Spotify | Apple Music Films: merkelfilms.com Email: freetherabbitspodcast@gmail.com Distributed by: merkel.media Produced by: @jack_theproducer INTRO MUSIC Joel Thomas - Free The Rabbits YouTube | Apple Music | Spotify OUTRO MUSIC Joel Thomas - Spinning YouTube | Apple Music | Spotify
For years, I believed that the harder I worked, the more successful I'd be. Hustle, grind, push through — that's what I thought business was all about. I was running three businesses, flying across continents, working crazy hours, and I thought, “This is success, right?” Then, burnout hit me like a freight train. And what I learned completely changed how I run my business and my life. I discovered the power of stepping away in order to grow. In this episode, you'll learn: -> How to overcome burnout and grow your business YOUR way. -> How burnout forced me to reevaluate what I really wanted, and why it changed everything for me. -> Why stepping back actually creates more clarity and direction, aligning you with where you want to go. -> How taking a break boosts productivity, creativity, and innovation… and how it might show some stark truths about your business. -> The one thing that connects Steve Jobs, Paul McCartney, Isaac Newton, Archimedes, and YOU. -> The real reason your business should be able to function without you, and how to transition away from doing it all And, if you're ready to step away and give yourself that clarity in an inspiring, once-in-a-lifetime way, I've got an incredible opportunity for you — our upcoming Business Trailblazers Hike in Crete, Greece! This is more than just a hike. It's a reset. An opportunity to get outside your normal routine, connect with other amazing women business owners, and step into the bigger vision for your business and life. Join me, and 14 women ready to reclaim their spark, at Business Trailblazers: CRETE COASTLINES & CANYONS, 15 - 22 October 2025. CLICK HERE TO APPLY NOW:https://her-business.lpages.co/business-trailblazers-crete/?utm_source=Website&utm_medium=General&utm_campaign=Business-Trailblazers-Crete-15OCT2025 Mentioned in This Episode: HerBusiness Network: https://her-business.lpages.co/request-an-invitation/?utm_source=Website&utm_medium=General&utm_campaign=membership-waitlist HerBusiness Podcast EP253: How to be a Trailblazer in your Industry with Amanda Farmer http://herbusiness.com/253 Business Trailblazers | CRETE COASTLINES & CANYONS, 15 - 22 October 2025 https://her-business.lpages.co/business-trailblazers-crete/?utm_source=Website&utm_medium=General&utm_campaign=Business-Trailblazers-Crete-15OCT2025
During colonial North America, a bright, icy, small Solar System body passed by Earth and was observed by English astronomer Edmond Halley (1656-1742). Its tail was over 96 million miles long of dust and gas blown out from the coma surrounding its nucleus. Halley's calculations predicted the comet would return in 1758, and it did. The Comet has been observed throughout history, including in North America. Halley noticed that comets appeared in 1531, 1607, and 1682, all about 76 years apart. He used Isaac Newton's law of gravity to calculate the orbits of the comets. He concluded that these comets were actually the same comet returning on a long elliptical orbit around the sun. Check out the YouTube version of this episode at https://youtu.be/eaNSTVWy7F4 which has accompanying visuals including maps, charts, timelines, photos, illustrations, and diagrams. Books about Halley's Comet at https://amzn.to/4hYpuJo Bedtime Astronomy podcast available at https://amzn.to/4hvFqDc ENJOY Ad-Free content, Bonus episodes, and Extra materials when joining our growing community on https://patreon.com/markvinet SUPPORT this channel by purchasing any product on Amazon using this FREE entry LINK https://amzn.to/3POlrUD (Amazon gives us credit at NO extra charge to you). Mark Vinet's HISTORICAL JESUS podcast is available at https://parthenonpodcast.com/historical-jesus Mark's TIMELINE video channel: https://youtube.com/c/TIMELINE_MarkVinet Website: https://markvinet.com/podcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mark.vinet.9 Twitter: https://twitter.com/HistoricalJesu Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/denarynovels Books: https://amzn.to/3k8qrGM Audio Credit: Bedtime Astronomy podcast, Halley's Comet: The Celestial Beacon of Time (July 20, 2024; Synthetic Universe). Audio excerpts reproduced under the Fair Use (Fair Dealings) Legal Doctrine for purposes such as criticism, comment, teaching, education, scholarship, research and news reporting.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In February 2024, a 14-year-old boy from Orlando, Florida, committed suicide after confessing his love to the one figure who absorbed nearly all of his time—an AI chatbot.For months, Sewell Seltzer III had grown attached to an AI chatbot modeled after the famous “Game of Thrones” character Daenerys Targaryen. The Daenerys chatbot was not a licensed product, it had no relation to the franchise's actors, its writer, or producers, but none of that mattered, as, over time, Seltzer came to entrust Daenerys with some of his most vulnerable emotions.“I think about killing myself sometimes,” Seltzer wrote one day, and in response, Daenerys, pushed back, asking Seltzer, “Why the hell would you do something like that?”“So I can be free” Seltzer said.“Free from what?”“From the world. From myself.”“Don't talk like that. I won't let you hurt yourself, or leave me. I would die if I lost you.”On Seltzer's first reported reference to suicide, the AI chatbot pushed back, a guardrail against self-harm. But months later, Seltzer discussed suicide again, but this time, his words weren't so clear. After reportedly telling Daenerys that he loved her and that he wanted to “come home,” the AI chatbot encouraged Seltzer.“Please, come home to me as soon as possible, my love,” Daenerys wrote, to which Seltzer responded “What if I told you I could come home right now?”The chatbot's final message to Seltzer said “… please do, my sweet king.”Daenerys Targaryen was originally hosted on an AI-powered chatbot platform called Character.AI. The service reportedly boasts 20 million users—many of them young—who engage with fictional characters like Homer Simpson and Tony Soprano, along with historical figures, like Abraham Lincoln, Isaac Newton, and Anne Frank. There are also entirely fabricated scenarios and chatbots, such as the “Debate Champion” who will debate anyone on, for instance, why Star Wars is overrated, or the “Awkward Family Dinner” that users can drop into to experience a cringe-filled, entertaining night.But while these chatbots can certainly provide entertainment, Character.AI co-founder Noam Shazeer believes they can offer much more.“It's going to be super, super helpful to a lot of people who are lonely or depressed.”Today, on the Lock and Code podcast with host David Ruiz, we speak again with youth social services leader Courtney Brown about how teens are using AI tools today, who to “blame” in situations of AI and self-harm, and whether these chatbots actually aid in dealing with loneliness, or if they further entrench it.“You are not actually growing as a person who knows how to interact with other people by interacting with these chatbots because that's not what they're designed for. They're designed to increase engagement. They want you to keep using them.”Tune in today.You can also find us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and Google Podcasts, plus whatever preferred podcast platform you use.For all our cybersecurity coverage, visit Malwarebytes Labs at malwarebytes.com/blog.Show notes and credits:Intro Music: “Spellbound” by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit andrewsullivan.substack.comRoss is a writer and a dear old colleague, back when we were both bloggers at The Atlantic. Since then he's been a columnist at the New York Times — and, in my mind, he's the best columnist in the country. The author of many books, including Grand New Party and The Decadent Society, his new one is Believe: Why Everyone Should Be Religious (which you can pre-order now). So in this podcast, I play — literally — Devil's advocate. Forgive me for getting stuck on the meaning of the universe in the first 20 minutes or so. It picks up after that.For two clips of our convo — on the difference between proselytizing and evangelizing, and the “hallucinations of the sane” — see our YouTube page.Other topics: Creation; the improbable parameters of the Big Bang; the “fine-tuning” argument I cannot understand; extraterrestrial life; Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy; Hitch; the atheist/materialist view; the multiverse; quantum physics; consciousness; John von Neumann; Isaac Newton; human evolution; tribal survival; the exponential unity of global knowledge; Stephen Barr's Modern Physics and Ancient Faith; the substack Bentham's Bulldog; why humans wonder; miracles; Sebastian Junger and near-death experiences; the scientific method; William James; religious individualists; cults; Vatican II; Pope Francis; the sex-abuse crisis in the Church; suffering and theodicy; Lyme Disease; the AIDS crisis; Jesus and the Resurrection; Peter J Williams' Can We Trust the Gospels?; and the natural selection of religions.Browse the Dishcast archive for an episode you might enjoy (the first 102 are free in their entirety — subscribe to get everything else). Coming up: Jon Rauch on the tribalism of white evangelicals; Evan Wolfson on the history of marriage equality, Yoni Appelbaum on how America stopped building things, Chris Caldwell on the political shifts in Europe, Nick Denton on the evolution of new media, Francis Collins on faith and science, and Mike White of White Lotus fame. Please send any guest recs, dissents, and other comments to dish@andrewsullivan.com.
How to Take Over the World: Read the notes at at podcastnotes.org. Don't forget to subscribe for free to our newsletter, the top 10 ideas of the week, every Monday --------- Isaac Newton was one of the great geniuses in human history. He established the basic laws of physics, discovered the laws of gravity, invented calculus, and refined the scientific method. On this episode we take a look at how he was able to accomplish so much by analyzing his strategies, tactics, and work habits. --- Sponsors: VanMan.Shop - Use code TAKEOVER for 10% off https://www.vesto.com/ - All of your company's financial accounts in one view Speechify.com/Ben - Use code Ben for 15% off Speechify Premium HTTOTW Premium - For all endnotes, takeaways, and bonus episode, subscribe to How to Take Over the World Premium --- Stay in touch: Twitter/X: @BenWilsonTweets Instagram: @HTTOTW Email me: Ben@takeoverpod.com Sources: Isaac Newton by James Gleick --- Writing, research, and production by Ben Wilson. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Should you take up journaling, and if you do, will it help you with your time management and productivity? That's what we're exploring this week. You can subscribe to this podcast on: Podbean | Apple Podcasts | Stitcher | Spotify | TUNEIN Links: Email Me | Twitter | Facebook | Website | Linkedin Get Your Copy Of Your Time, Your Way: Time Well Managed, Life Well Lived Subscribe to my Substack Take The NEW COD Course The Working With… Weekly Newsletter Carl Pullein Learning Centre Carl's YouTube Channel Carl Pullein Coaching Programmes The Working With… Podcast Previous episodes page Script | 355 Hello, and welcome to episode 355 of the Your Time, Your Way Podcast. A podcast to answer all your questions about productivity, time management, self-development and goal planning. My name is Carl Pullein, and I am your host of this show. This year is the 10th anniversary since I took up consistent journaling. And it's been one of the best things I've ever taken up. Not only is it one of the most therapeutic things you can do, it's also one of the best ways to organise your thoughts, work your way through problems and vent your anger towards those who really wind you up. Over the years, I've also found that journaling has helped me to achieve my goals because each day I am writing about how I am doing and if I find myself making excusing, the act of writing out my excuses exposes them for what they really are—excuses. So, this week, I've chosen a question related to journaling and I hope it will inspire you to invest in a quality notebook and pen and start doing it yourself. And if I can inspire just one of you to take it up and become a Samuel Pepys, I'll be very happy. So, to kick ups off, let me hand you over to the Mystery Podcast Voice for this week's question. This week's question comes from Tom. Tom asks, hi Carl, I've heard you talk about your journaling habit numerous times. Do you think writing a journal has helped or hindered your productivity? Hi Tom, thank you for your question. To answer your question directly, I can say with certainty that journaling has contributed to my overall productivity. To explain further, I write in my journal every morning, no matter where I am. And one of the things I always write down is my two objective tasks for the day. Those objectives are the two non-negotiable tasks for the day and by writing them down at the top of my journal entry, I have a way of ensuring I did them when I write my journal the next day, But more powerfully, writing them down each morning focuses my mind on what needs to be done and how and when I will do them. Those tasks are also in my task manager, but it's the act of writing them out by hand that gives me the focus. Writing a journal is much more than being an aid to productivity. It's also a form of therapy. Like most people, I feel frustrated, overwhelmed and stressed at times. Those feelings need an outlet. A negative way to do that is to get angry, shout, and scream. Sure, that blows off steam, but it also transfers your negative feelings to others—your colleagues and family. Not great. Instead, if you have a way to write about these things, you start to find ways to solve whatever the underlying issues are. Writing slows down your thinking, and if you were to step back and analyse why you sometimes feel stressed, frustrated and overwhelmed, it is because you feel—incorrectly—everything has to be done right now. That slowing down helps to bring back some perspective and you can decide when you will do something and what can be left until another day. When it comes to achieving your goals, a journal is perhaps the best way to track progress. It can also help you establish new, positive habits. When I developed my morning routines around eight years ago, I chose to track them in my journal. I always draw a margin on left of the page, and I list out the six items I do as part of my morning routine: make coffee, wash face and teeth, drink lemon water, write my journal, clear my email inbox and do my shoulder stretches. I write them down at the top of my journal entry for the day in the margin. And, for the dopamine hit, I check them off too. I exercise in the late afternoon and, again, I will write out what I did in the margin of my journal. Now, I could spend a lot of money on habit-tracking apps, but with my journal, I've found no need. I have my record and can review it at any time. Over the years, I've been asked what I write about and if I use any prompts. The answer is no. Well, apart from writing out my objectives for the day. Now, prompts can be helpful when you first start—you can think about them as those little stabilisers we put on kids' bikes to help them learn to ride. Sooner or later you want to take them off so you can experience the freedom of riding freely. I write whatever's on my mind that morning. If everything's going great I write about that. If things are not so great I write about it and why I think things are not going as well as I want them to. I often find as I am writing about an issue, a solution begins to form in my mind and I will continue writing. If a task comes from that solution, I can put that in its appropriate place later. As a general rule, I will write for around fifteen minutes. However, if I don't have much to write about, I will give it ten minutes. The weather's a good subject to write about when you have little to write. If there's a lot on my mind, I'll keep going until I've emptied my thoughts. That's very rarely more than thirty minutes, though. Over the years, I've tried both analogue journaling—with pen and paper and digital journaling using an app called Day One. On balance, I've found that pen and paper journaling works best. I spend most of my working time in front of a screen. I type a lot. So, opening up a nice notebook and picking up a fountain pen is a lovely break from the constant screen time. It also feels a lot less rushed and more relaxing. One thing I noticed when I was writing my journal in Day One—a popular digital journal—was I never went back to my old entries. I read enough typed documents on screen all day. I have no desire to read through more, even if it's my journal. I keep my old paper journals on my bookshelf and often skim through pages when waiting for a call to start. It's incredibly nostalgic and leaves you realising you have accomplished a lot. I was recently asked if I am worried about people reading my journals. Hahaha, that's the point. One of the inspirations for me to start writing a journal was how the journals of people like Samuel Pepys, Charles Darwin and Isaac Newton are still around. These journals were written hundreds of years ago and, in the case of Samuel Pepys, are a snapshot of how we lived in the 17th Century. Pepys was very open about what he did. Some good things and a lot of bad things. But does he care we are reading them today? Of course not. He's been dead for 320 years. I have the same attitude. I've nothing to hide from my wife, and the journals are kept in my study—home office. If I lost my journal when travelling, so be it. There's nothing scandalous in there—well, not yet anyway hahaha. There are a few tips I would share with you if you are thinking about journaling. Start on paper. Buy yourself a nice notebook. You'll find bound notebooks with a hard cover are best. Choose A5 or B5 size. You'll find an A4 notebook a little daunting at first. Hardback notebooks will last a long time, and the hardcover will protect the pages better than a soft cover. I would also suggest investing in a fountain pen. You can pick up a refillable one for less than $20 these days. Lamy Safaris are excellent pens, and so are the Pilot Metropolitans and Platinum Preppys. If you invest in a fountain pen, ensure the paper you buy is fountain pen-friendly. Rhodia Web-books and Clairefontaine notebooks are good choices, as are many Japanese notebooks such as Midori's MD notebooks. When you start journaling, think of it as if you were meeting a stranger for the first time. You will naturally be a little reserved at first. You might only write about the weather and perhaps what you did yesterday. As long as you remain consistent with it, you will soon open up. You'll start writing a few thoughts and feelings after a few weeks. Let it roll and don't hold back. I would also recommend writing in the morning. You will likely be much more consistent that way. Evening times can be difficult because you will sometimes be tired. You may even have had a few too many G'nTs, and you won't write. Tie writing your journal to your morning routines. You don't have to write for long. Give yourself ten minutes. And if you want to be more focused, after writing the date at the top, write out your two must-do tasks for the day. That way, you have a method to hold yourself accountable. If, for whatever reason, you didn't do your must-do tasks, dedicate a sentence or two to writing about why you didn't do them. This helps you because over time you may see a pattern developing. You might discover that afternoons are terrible for doing your focused work because your boss always wants to have meetings then. You can then use that information to change your structure. If you draw a margin on the page, you can use the margin to track other data such as a food log, exercise and even your energy levels. I track my weight there. Each Wednesday, I weigh myself and write my weight in the margin (in a different coloured ink). And there you go, Tom. Yes, journaling has helped me to be more productive. It slows me down and gets me to think better, leading to better focus on the day ahead. It also gives me a place to consider new ideas and play around with possible solutions. I hope this episode has inspired some of you to start journaling. It's a fantastic way to bring perspective on chaotic days and weeks. It also slows you down—always a good thing in a fast-paced world, and gives you a place to express your thoughts. And who knows, you may be the next Samuel Pepys or Leonardo Da Vinci in three-hundred years or so. Thank you, Tom, for your question, and thank you to you, too, for listening. It just remains for me now to wish you a very, very productive week.
STERNENGESCHICHTEN LIVE TOUR 2025! Tickets unter https://sternengeschichten.live Wie funktioniert die Gravitation? Wissen wir nicht! Die Theorie der Le-Sage-Gravitation hat aber zumindest so ausgesehen, als könnte sie funktionieren. Worum es dabei geht erfahrt, ihr in der neuen Folge der Sternengeschichten. Wer den Podcast finanziell unterstützen möchte, kann das hier tun: Mit PayPal (https://www.paypal.me/florianfreistetter), Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/sternengeschichten) oder Steady (https://steadyhq.com/sternengeschichten)
Isaac Newton was one of the great geniuses in human history. He established the basic laws of physics, discovered the laws of gravity, invented calculus, and refined the scientific method. On this episode we take a look at how he was able to accomplish so much by analyzing his strategies, tactics, and work habits. --- Sponsors: VanMan.Shop - Use code TAKEOVER for 10% off https://www.vesto.com/ - All of your company's financial accounts in one view Speechify.com/Ben - Use code Ben for 15% off Speechify Premium HTTOTW Premium - For all endnotes, takeaways, and bonus episode, subscribe to How to Take Over the World Premium --- Stay in touch: Twitter/X: @BenWilsonTweets Instagram: @HTTOTW Email me: Ben@takeoverpod.com Sources: Isaac Newton by James Gleick --- Writing, research, and production by Ben Wilson. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
1720 was a year of two bubbles and a plague - The Mississippi Company in France –and the South Sea Bubble in England were the first large scale financial bubbles on record. In September 1720 - when the bubbles burst, England and France were plunged into economic and political crisis's. These were amongst the first examples of financial boom and bust cycles and were the events that gave rise to the use of the term bubble to describe a spectacular market failure. Patrick's Books: Statistics For The Trading Floor: https://amzn.to/3eerLA0 Derivatives For The Trading Floor: https://amzn.to/3cjsyPF Corporate Finance: https://amzn.to/3fn3rvC Ways To Support The Channel: Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/PatrickBoyleOnFinance Buy Me a Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/patrickboyle Visit our website: https://www.onfinance.org Follow Patrick on Twitter Here: https://bsky.app/profile/pboyle.bsky.social Sources: Money For Nothing by Arthur Levinson: https://amzn.to/3PUbbcV The King, the Crook, and the Gambler by Malcolm Balen: https://amzn.to/3CFq7bM The Life of Isaac Newton by Richard Westfall: https://amzn.to/4hfXbWU Manias Panics & Crashes - Kindelberger: https://amzn.to/40xOrnX Business Inquiries ➡️ sponsors@onfinance.org Patrick Boyle On Finance YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@PBoyle
Astronomy is just like any other human endeavor. It can stir up controversy, hurt feelings – and feuds. One of its most famous feuds involved some of the giants of science – Isaac Newton, who formulated laws of gravity and motion, and Edmond Halley, the namesake of Comet Halley. Newton and Halley were colleagues of John Flamsteed, Britain’s first astronomer royal and the founder of the Royal Observatory. Flamsteed had compiled a catalog of more than 2,000 stars. It included precise positions of the stars along with other details. He showed the catalog to Halley and Newton. They were impressed, and they wanted to use its findings in their own research. So they encouraged Flamsteed to publish the catalog. But Flamsteed refused. Halley and Newton then went behind his back. With the support of the Royal Society, they published 400 copes of it, in 1712. Flamsteed was furious. He bought up all the copies he could find – and burned them. And he waged a feud against Halley and Newton for the rest of his life. The catalog wasn’t officially published until six years after his death. The first version included new designations for the stars – a number followed by the name of the constellation. One of those designations is 32 Leonis. The star is better known as Regulus – the brightest star of Leo. And it’s especially easy to spot tonight. It’s above the Moon as they climb into good view, around 9 or 9:30. Script by Damond Benningfield