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Esperant el Cometa #30 - Les novel·les curtes i el fantàstic (Juny 2025)Durada: 95 minuts.Tornem amb un nou episodi en directe! Aquest programa és particularment especial per a nosaltres, ja que la tertúlia es va gravar durant la Catcon 2025, dins la programació de la Societat Catalana de Ciència Ficció i Fantasia. Vam tenir el privilegi de comptar amb la presència de la Judit Terradellas, editora de Mai Més, i d'en Gonzalo Rodríguez, editor de Chronos, amb qui vam conversar sobre la tradició de la novel·la curta dins els gèneres fantàstics i sobre com la llargada de les obres influeix en la seva feina editorial.Com sempre, també repassem les novetats del mes i us oferim la nostra secció de ressenyes.No us perdeu l'episodi i animeu-vos a comentar!BSO: Technological Chill Trap, de Abydos MusicVeu de les entradetes: Tatiana Dunyó
Send us a textWatch the video conversation on YouTube here!In this soul-stirring episode of MAIM TIME, we dive into the transformative journey of voice, identity, and liberation with none other than Gavin Masumiya—vocal confidence coach, spoken word artist, and founder of FlowFam. Gavin is not just a coach—he's a movement. He works with professionals, leaders, and everyday introverts alike to unlock the voice that's been buried deep inside us, stifled by shame, expectations, and generations of silence.Together, we explore what it means to be Asian American in today's world—not just in appearance or heritage, but in voice, posture, and soul. What does it mean to be free? To speak freely? To own your identity unapologetically? For anyone who's ever felt like the quiet one in the room, this episode is for you.Connect with Gavin Masumiya
My fellow pro-growth/progress/abundance Up Wingers,As we seemingly grow closer to achieving artificial general intelligence — machines that are smarter than humans at basically everything — we might be incurring some serious geopolitical risks.In the paper Superintelligence Strategy, his joint project with former Google CEO Eric Schmidt and Alexandr Wang, Dan Hendrycks introduces the idea of Mutual Assured AI Malfunction: a system of deterrence where any state's attempt at total AI dominance is sabotaged by its peers. From the abstract: Just as nations once developed nuclear strategies to secure their survival, we now need a coherent superintelligence strategy to navigate a new period of transformative change. We introduce the concept of Mutual Assured AI Malfunction (MAIM): a deterrence regime resembling nuclear mutual assured destruction (MAD) where any state's aggressive bid for unilateral AI dominance is met with preventive sabotage by rivals. Given the relative ease of sabotaging a destabilizing AI project—through interventions ranging from covert cyberattacks to potential kinetic strikes on datacenters—MAIM already describes the strategic picture AI superpowers find themselves in. Alongside this, states can increase their competitiveness by bolstering their economies and militaries through AI, and they can engage in nonproliferation to rogue actors to keep weaponizable AI capabilities out of their hands. Taken together, the three-part framework of deterrence, nonproliferation, and competitiveness outlines a robust strategy to superintelligence in the years ahead.Today on Faster, Please! — The Podcast, I talk with Hendrycks about the potential threats posed by superintelligent AI in the hands of state and rogue adversaries, and what a strong deterrence strategy might look like.Hendrycks is the executive director of the Center for AI Safety. He is an advisor to Elon Musk's xAI and Scale AI, and is a prolific researcher and writer.In This Episode* Development of AI capabilities (1:34)* Strategically relevant capabilities (6:00)* Learning from the Cold War (16:12)* Race for strategic advantage (18:56)* Doomsday scenario (28:18)* Maximal progress, minimal risk (33:25)Below is a lightly edited transcript of our conversation. Development of AI capabilities (1:34). . . mostly the systems aren't that impressive currently. People use them to some extent, but I'd more emphasize the trajectory that we're on rather than the current capabilities.Pethokoukis: How would you compare your view of AI . . . as a powerful technology with economic, national security, and broader societal implications . . . today versus November of 2022 when OpenAI rolled out ChatGPT?Hendrycks: I think that the main difference now is that we have the reasoning paradigm. Back in 2022, GPT couldn't think for an extended period of time before answering and try out multiple different ways of dissolving a problem. The main new capability is its ability to handle more complicated reasoning and science, technology, engineering, mathematics sorts of tasks. It's a lot better at coding, it's a lot better at graduate school mathematics, and physics, and virology.An implication of that for national security is that AIs have some virology capabilities that they didn't before, and virology is dual-use that can be used for civilian applications and weaponization applications. That's a new concerning capability that they have, but I think, overall, the AI systems are still fairly similar in their capabilities profile. They're better in lots of different ways, but not substantially.I think the next large shift is when they can be agents, when they can operate more autonomously, when they can book you flights reliably, make PowerPoints, play through long-form games for extended periods of time, and that seems like it's potentially on the horizon this year. It didn't seem like that two years ago. That's something that a lot of people are keeping an eye on and think could be arriving fairly soon. Overall, I think the capabilities profile is mostly the same except now it has some dual-use capabilities that they didn't have earlier, in particular virology capabilities.To what extent are your national security concerns based on the capabilities of the technology as it is today versus where you think it will be in five years? This is also a way of me asking about the extent that you view AGI as a useful framing device — so this is also a question about your timeline.I think that mostly the systems aren't that impressive currently. People use them to some extent, but I'd more emphasize the trajectory that we're on rather than the current capabilities. They still can't do very interesting cyber offense, for instance. The virology capabilities is very recent. We just, I think maybe a week ago, put out a study with SecureBio from MIT where we had Harvard, MIT virology postdocs doing wet lab skills, trying to work on viruses. So, “Here's a picture of my petri dish, I heated it to 37 degrees, what went wrong? Help me troubleshoot, help me guide me through this step by step.” We were seeing that it was getting around 95th percentile compared to those Harvard-MIT virology postdocs in their area of expertise. This is not a capability that the models had two years ago.That is a national security concern, but I think most of the national security concerns where it's strategically relevant, where it can be used for more targeted weapons, where it affects the basis of a nation's power, I think that's something that happens in the next, say, two to five years. I think that's what we mostly need to be thinking about. I'm not particularly trying to raise the alarm saying that the AI systems right now are extremely scary in all these different ways because they're not even agential. They can't book flights yet.Strategically relevant capabilities (6:00). . . when thinking about the future of AI . . . it's useful to think in terms of specific capabilities, strategically-relevant capabilities, as opposed to when is it truly intelligent . . .So that two-to-five-year timeline — and you can debate whether this is a good way of thinking about it — is that a trajectory or timeline to something that could be called “human-level AI” — you can define that any way you want — and what are the capabilities that make AI potentially dangerous and a strategic player when thinking about national security?I think having a monolithic term for AGI or for advanced AI systems is a little difficult, largely because there's been a consistently-moving goalpost. So right now people say, “AIs are dumb because they can't do this and that.” They can't play video games at the level of a teenager, they can't code for a day-long project, and things like that. Neither can my grandmother. That doesn't mean that she's not human-level intelligence, it's just a lot of people don't have some of these capabilities.I think when thinking about the future of AI, especially when thinking about national security, it's useful to think in terms of specific capabilities, strategically-relevant capabilities, as opposed to when is it truly intelligent or something like that. This is because the capabilities of AI systems are very jagged: they're good at some things and terrible at others. They can't fold clothes that reliably — most of the AI can't —and they're okay at driving in some cities but not others, but they can solve really difficult mathematics problems, they can write really long essays and provide pretty good legal analysis very rapidly, and they can also forecast geopolitical events better than most forecasters. It's a really weird capabilities profile.When I'm thinking about national security from a malicious-use standpoint, I'm thinking about weapon capabilities, I'm thinking about cyber-offensive capabilities, which they don't yet have, but that's an important one to track, and, outside of malicious use, I'm thinking about what's their ability to do AI research and how much of that can they automate? Because if they can automate AI research, then you could just run 100,000 of these artificial AGI researchers to build the next generations of AGI, and that could get very explosive extremely quickly. You're moving from human-speed research to machine-speed research. They're typing 100 times faster than people, they're running tons of experiments simultaneously. That could be quite explosive, and that's something that the founders of AI pointed at as a really relevant capability, like Alan Turing and others, where that's you could have a potential loss-of-control type of event is with this sort of runaway process of AI's building future generations of AIs quite rapidly.So that's another capability. What fraction of AI research can they automate? For weaponization, I think if it gets extremely smart, able to do research in lots of other sorts of fields, then that would raise concerns of its ability to be used to disrupt the balance of power. For instance, if it can do research well, perhaps it could come up with a breakthrough that makes oceans more transparent so we can find where nuclear submarines are or find the mobile launches extremely reliably, or a breakthrough in driving down the cost by some orders of magnitude of anti-ballistic missile systems, which would disrupt having a secure second-strike, and these would be very geopolitically salient. To do those things, though, that seems like a bundle of capabilities as opposed to a specific thing like cyber-offensive capabilities, but those are the things that I'm thinking about that can really disrupt the geopolitical landscape.If we put them in a bucket called, to use your phrase, “strategically-relevant capabilities,” are we on a trajectory of a data- and computing-power-driven trajectory to those capabilities? Or do there need to be one or two key innovations before those relevant capabilities are possible?It doesn't seem like it currently that we need some new big insights, in large part because the rate of improvement is pretty good. So if we look at their coding capabilities — there's a benchmark called SWE-bench verified (SWE is software engineering). Given a set of coding tasks — and this benchmark was weighed in some years ago — the models are poised to get something like 90 percent on this this summer. Right now they're in this 60 percent range. If we just extrapolate the trend line out some more months, then they'll be doing nine out of 10 of those software engineering tasks that were set some years ago. That doesn't mean that that's the entirety of software engineering. Still need coders. It's not 100 percent, obviously, but that suggests that the capability is still improving fairly rapidly in some of these domains. And likewise, with their ability to play that take games that take 20-plus hours, a few months ago they couldn't — Pokémon, for instance, is something that kids play and that takes 20 hours or so to beat. The models from a few months ago couldn't beat the game. Now, the current models can beat the game, but it takes them a few hundred hours. It would not surprise me if in a few months they'll get it down to around human-level on the order of tens of hours, and then from there they'll be able to play harder and harder sorts of games that take longer periods of time, and I think that this would be indicative of higher general capabilities.I think that there's a lot of steam in the current way that things are being done and I think that they've been trapped at the floor in their agent capabilities for a while, but I think we're starting to see the shift. I think that most people at the major AI companies would also think that agents are on the horizon and I don't think they were thinking that, myself included, a year ago. We were not seeing the signs that we're seeing now.So what we're talking about is AIs is having, to use your phrase, which I like, “strategically-relevant capabilities” on a timeline that is soon enough that we should be having the kinds of conversations and the kind of thinking that you put forward in Superintelligence [Strategy]. We should be thinking about that right now very seriously.Yeah, it's very difficult to wrap one's head around because, unlike other domains, AI is much more general and broad in its impacts. So if one's thinking about nuclear strategy, you obviously need to think about bombs going off, and survivability, and second strike. The failure modes are: one state strikes the other, and then there's also, in the civilian applications, fissile material leaking or there being a nuclear power plant meltdown. That's the scenario space, there's what states can do and then there's also some of these civilian application issues.Meanwhile, with AI, we've got much more than power plants melting down or bombs going off. We've got to think about how it transforms the economy, how it transforms people's private life, the sort of issues with them being sentient. We've got to think about it potentially disrupting mutual assured destruction. We've got to think about the AIs themselves being threats. We've got to think about regulations for autonomous AI agents and who's accountable. We've got to think about this open-weight, closed-weight issue. We've got, I think, a larger host of issues that touch on all the important spheres society. So it's not a very delimited problem and I think it's a very large pill to swallow, this possibility that it will be not just strategically relevant but strategically decisive this decade.Consequently, and thinking a little bit beforehand about it is, useful. Otherwise, if we just ignore it, I think we reality will slap us across the face and AI will hit us like a truck, and then we're going, “Wow, I wish we did something, had some more break-glass measures at a time right now, but the cupboard is bare in terms of strategic options because we didn't do some prudent things a while ago, or we didn't even bother thinking about what those are.”I keep thinking of the Situation Room in two years and they get news that China's doing some new big AI project, and it's fairly secretive, and then in the Situation Room they're thinking, “Okay, what do we know?” And the answer is nothing. We don't have really anybody on this. We're not collecting any information about this. We didn't have many concerted programs in the IC really tracking this, so we're flying blind. I really don't want to be in that situationLearning from the Cold War (16:12). . . mutual assured destruction is an ugly reality that took decision-makers a long time to internalize, but that's just what the game theory showed would make the most sense. As I'm sure you know, throughout the course of the Cold War, there was a considerable amount of time and money spent on thinking about these kinds of problems. I went to college just before the end of the Cold War and I took an undergraduate class on nuclear war theory. There was a lot of thinking. To what extent does that volume of research and analysis over the course of a half-century, to what extent is that helpful for what you're trying to accomplish here?I think it's very fortunate that, because of the Cold War, a lot of people started getting more of a sense of game theory and when it's rational to conflict versus negotiate, and offense can provide a good defense, some of these counterintuitive things. I think mutual assured destruction is an ugly reality that took decision-makers a long time to internalize, but that's just what the game theory showed would make the most sense. Hopefully we'll do a lot better with AI because strategic thinking can be a lot more precise and some of these things that are initially counterintuitive, if you reason through them, you go, actually no, this makes a lot of sense. We're trying to shape each other's intentions in this kind of complicated way. I think that makes us much better poised to address these geopolitical issues than last time.I think of the Soviets, for instance, when talking about anti-ballistic missile systems. At one point, I forget who said that offense is immoral, defense is moral. So pointing these nuclear weapons at each other, this is the immoral thing. We need missile-defense systems. That's the moral option. It's just like, no, this is just going to eat up all of our budget. We're going to keep building these defense systems and it's not going to make us safer, we're just going to be spending more and more.That was not intuitive. Offense does feel viscerally more mean, hostile, but that's what you want. That's what you want, to preserve for strategic stability. I think that a lot of the thinking is helpful with that, and I think the education for appreciating the strategic dynamics is more in the water, it's more diffused across the decision-makers now, and I think that that's great.Race for strategic advantage (18:56)There is also a risk that China builds [AGI] first, so I think what we want to do in the US is build up the capabilities to surgically prevent them . . .I was recently reviewing a scenario slash world-building exercise among technologists, economists, forecasting people, and they were looking at various scenarios assuming that we're able to, on a rather short timeline, develop what they termed AGI. And one of the scenarios was that the US gets there first . . . probably not by very long, but the US got there first. I don't know how far China was behind, but that gave us the capability to sort of dictate terms to China about what their foreign policy would be: You're going to leave Taiwan alone . . . So it gave us an amazing strategic advantage.I'm sure there are a lot of American policymakers who would read that scenario and say, “That's the dream,” that we are able to accelerate progress, that we are able to get there first, we can dictate foreign policy terms to China, game over, we win. If I've read Superintelligence correctly, that scenario would play out in a far more complicated way than what I've just described.I think so. I think any bid for being a, not just unipolar force, but having a near-strategic-monopoly on power and able to cause all other superpowers to capitulate in arbitrary ways, concerns the other superpower. There is also a risk that China builds it first, so I think what we want to do in the US is build up the capabilities to surgically prevent them, if they are near or eminently going to gain a decisive advantage that would become durable and sustained over us, we want the ability to prevent that.There's a variety of ways one can do things. There's the classic grayer ways like arson, and cutting wires in data centers, and things like that, or for power plants . . . There's cyber offense, and there's other sorts of kinetic sabotage, but we want it nice and surgical and having a good, credible threat so that we can deter that from happening and shaping their intentions.I think it will be difficult to limit their capabilities, their ability to build these powerful systems, but I think being able to shape their intentions is something that is more tractable. They will be building powerful AI systems, but if they are making an attempt at leapfrogging us in a way that we never catch up and lose our standing and they get AIs that could also potentially disrupt MAD, for instance, we want to be able to prevent that. That is an important strategic priority, is developing a credible deterrent and saying there are some AI scenarios that are totally unacceptable to us and we want to block them off through credible threats.They'll do the same to us, as well, and they can do it more easily to us. They know what's going on at all of our AI companies, and this will not change because we have a double digit percentage of the employees who are Chinese nationals, easily extortable, they have family back home, and the companies do not have good information security — that will probably not change because that will slow them down if they really try and lock them up and move everybody to North Dakota or wherever to work in the middle of nowhere and have everything air-gapped. We are an open book to them and I think they can make very credible threats for sabotage and preventing that type of outcome.If we are making a bid for dictating their foreign policy and all of this, if we're making a bid for a strategic monopoly on power, they will not sit idly by, they will not take kindly to that when they recognize the stakes. If the US were to do a $500 billion program to achieve this faster than them, that would not go unnoticed. There's not a way of hiding that.But we are trying to achieve it faster than them.I would distinguish between trying to develop just generally more capable AI technologies than some of these strategically relevant capabilities or some of these strategically relevant programs. Like if we get AI systems that are generally useful for healthcare and for . . . whatever your pet cause area, we can have that. That is different from applying the AI systems to rapidly build the next generation of AIs, and the next generation of that. Just imagine if you have, right now, OpenAI's got a few hundred AI researchers, imagine if you've got ones that are at that level that are artificial, AGI-type of researchers or are artificial researchers. You run 10,000, 100,000 thousand of them, they're operating around the clock at a hundred X speed, I think expecting a decade's worth of development compressed or telescoped into a year, that seems very plausible — not certain, but certainly double-digit percent chance.China or Russia for instance, would perceive that as, “This is really risky. They could get a huge leap from this because these rate of development will be so high that we could never catch up,” and they could use their new gains to clobber us. Or, if they don't control it, then we're also dead, or lose our power. So if the US controls it, China would reason that, “Our survival is threatened and how we do things is threatened,” and if they lose control of it, “Our survival is also threatened.” Either way, provided that this automated AI research and development loop produces some extremely powerful AI systems, China would be fearing for their survival.It's not just China: India, the global south, all the other countries, if they're more attuned to this situation, would be very concerned. Russia as well. Russia doesn't have the hope about competing, they don't have a $100 billion data centers, they're busy with Ukraine, and when they're finished with that, they may reassess it, but they're too many years behind. I think the best they can do is actually try and shape other states' intents rather than try to make a bid for outcompeting them.If we're thinking about deterrence and what you call Mutually Assured AI Malfunction [MAIM], there's a capability aspect that we want to make sure that we would have the capability to check that kind of dash for dominance. But there's also a communication aspect where both sides have to understand and trust what the other side is trying to do, which was a key part of classic Cold War deterrence. Is that happening?Information problems, yeah, if there's worse information then that can lead to conflict. I think China doesn't really need to worry about their access to information of what's going on. I think the US will need to develop more of its capabilities to have more reliable signals abroad. But I think there's different ways of getting information and producing misunderstandings, like the confidence-building measures, all these sorts of things. I think that the unilateral one is just espionage, and then the multilateral one is verification mechanisms and building some of that institutional or international infrastructure.I think the first step in all of this is the states need to at least take matters into their own hands by building up these unilateral options, the unilateral option to prevent adversaries from doing a dash for domination and also know what's going on with each other's projects. I think that's what the US should focus on right now. Later on, as the salience of AI increases, I think then just international discussions to increase more strategic stability around this would be more plausible to emerge. But if they're not trying to take basic things to defend themselves and protect their own security, then I don't think international stuff that makes that much sense. That's kind of out of order.Doomsday scenario (28:18)If our institutions wake up to this more and do some of the basic stuff . . . to prevent another state dominating the other, I think that will make this go quite a bit better. . .I have in my notes here that you think there's an 80 percent chance that an AI arms race would result in a catastrophe that would kill most of humanity. Do I have that right?I think it's not necessarily just the race. Let's think of people's probabilities for this. There's a wide spectrum of probability. Elon, who I work with at xAI, a company I advise, xAI is his company, Elon thinks it's generally on the order of 20 to 30 percent. Dario Amodei, the CEO of philanthropic, I think thinks it's around 20 percent, as well. Sam Altman around 10 percent. I think it's more likely than not that this doesn't go that well for people, but there's a lot of tractability and a lot of volatility here.If our institutions wake up to this more and do some of the basic stuff of knowing what's going on and sharpen your ability to have credible threats, credible, targeted threats to prevent another state dominating the other, I think that will make this go quite a bit better. . . I think if we went back in time in the 1940s and were saying, “Do we think that this whole nuclear thing is going to turn out well in 50 years?” I think we actually got a little lucky. I mean the Cuban Missile Crisis itself was . . .There were a lot of bad moments in the '60s. There were quite a few . . .I think it's more likely than not, but there's substantial tractability and it's important not to be fatalistic about it or just deny it's an issue, itself. I think it's like, do we think AI will go well? I don't know, it depends on what our policy is. Right now, we're in the very early days and I'm still not noticing many of our institutions that are rising to the occasion that I think is warranted, but this could easily change in a few months with some larger event.Not to be science fictional or anything, but you talk about a catastrophe, are you talking about: AI creates some sort of biological weapon? Back and forth cyber attacks destroy all the electrical infrastructure for China and the United States, so all of a sudden we're back into the 1800s? Are you talking about some sort of more “Terminator”-like scenario, rogue AI? When you think about the kind of catastrophe that could be that dangerous humanity, what do you think about?We have three risk sources: one are states, the other are rogue actors like terrorists and pariah states, and then there's the AI themselves. The AI themselves are not relevant right now, but I think could be quite capable of causing damage on their own in even a year or two. That's the space of threat actors; so yes, AI could in the future . . . I don't see anything that makes them logically not controllable. They're mostly controllable right now. Maybe it's one out of 100, one out of 1000 of the times you run these AI systems and deploy them in some sort of environments [that] they do try breaking free. That's a bit of a problem later on when they actually gain the capability to break free and when they are able to operate autonomously.There's been lots of studies on this and you can see this in OpenAI's reports whenever they release new models. It's like, “Oh, it's only a 0.1 percent chance of it trying to break free,” but if you run a million of these AI agents, that's a lot of them that are going to be trying to break free. They're just not very capable currently. So I think that the AIs themselves are risky, and if you're having humanity going up against AIs that aren't controlled by anybody, or AIs that broke free, that could get quite dangerous if you also have, as we're seeing now, China and others building more of these humanoid robots in the next few years. This could make them be concerning in that they could just by themselves create some sort of bioweapon. You don't need even human hands to do it, you can just instruct a robot to do it and disperse it. I think that's a pretty easy way to take out biological opposition, so to speak, in kind of an eccentric way.That's a concern. Rogue actors themselves doing this, them reasoning that, “Oh, this bioweapon gives us a secure second strike,” things like that would be a concern from rogue actors. Then, of course, states using this to make an attempt to crush the other state or develop a technology that disables an adversary's secure second strike. I think these are real problems.Maximal progress, minimal risk (33:25)I think what we want to shoot for is [a world] where people have enough resources and the ability to just live their lives in ways as they self-determine . . .Let me finish with this: I want continuing AI progress such that we can cure all the major chronic diseases, that we can get commercial nuclear fusion, that we can get faster rockets, all the kinds of optimistic stuff, accelerate economic growth to a pace that we've never seen. I want all of that.Can I get all of that and also avoid the kinds of scenarios you're worried about without turning the optimistic AI project into something that arrives at the end of the century, rather than arrives midcentury? I'm just worried about slowing down all that progress.I think we can. In the Superintelligence Strategy, we have three parts to that: We have the deterrence part, which I'm speaking about here, and we have making sure that the capabilities aren't falling into the hands of rogue actors — and I think this isn't that difficult, good export controls and add some just basic safeguards of we need to know who you are if we're going to be helping you manipulate viruses, things like that. That's easy to handle.Then on the competition aspect, there are many ways the US can make itself more competitive, like having more guaranteed supply chains for AI chips, so more manufacturing here or in allied states instead of all of it being in Taiwan. Currently, all the cutting-edge AI chips are made in Taiwan, so if there's a Taiwan invasion, the US loses in this AI race. They lose. This is double-digit probability. This is very foreseeable. So trying to robustify our manufacturing capabilities, quite essential; likewise for making robotics and drones.I think there's still many axes to compete in. I don't think it makes sense to try and compete in building a sort of superintelligence versus one of these potentially mutual assured destruction-disrupting AIs. I don't think you want to be building those, but I think you can have your AIs for healthcare, you can have your AIs doing all the complicated math you want, and whatever, all this coding, and driving your vehicles, and folding your laundry. You can have all of that. I think it's definitely feasible.What we did in the Cold War with the prospect of nuclear weapons, we obviously got through it, and we had deterrence through mutual assured destruction. We had non-proliferation of fissile materials to lesser states and rogue actors, and we had containment of the Soviet Union. I think the Superintelligence Strategy is somewhat similar: If you deter some of the most stabilizing AI projects, you make sure that some of these capabilities are not proliferating to random rogue actors, and you increase your competitiveness relative to China through things like incorporating AI into your military by, for instance, improving your ability to manufacture drones and improving your ability to reliably get your hands on AI chips even if there's a Taiwan conflict.I think that's the strategy and this doesn't make us uncompetitive. We are still focusing on competitiveness, but this does put barriers around some of the threats that different states could pose to us and that rogue actors using AI could pose to us while still shoring up economic security and positioning ourselves if AI becomes really relevant.I lied, I had one more short question: If we avoid the dire scenarios, what does the world look like in 2045?I would guess that it would be utterly transformed. I wouldn't expect people would be working then as much, hopefully. If you've controlled it well, there could be many ways of living, as there is now, and people would have resources to do so. It's not like there's one way of living — that seems bad because there's many different values to pursue. So letting people pursue their own values, so long as it doesn't destroy the system, and things like that, as we have today. It seems like an abstract version of the picture.People keep thinking, “Are we in zoos? Are AIs keeping us in zoos?” or something like that. It's like, no. Or like, “Are we just all in the Zuckerberg sort of virtual reality, AI friend thing?” It's like no, you can choose to do otherwise, as well. I think we want to preserve that ability.Good news: we won't have to fold laundry. Bad news: in zoos. There's many scenarios.I think what we want to shoot for is one where people have enough resources and the ability to just live their lives in ways as they self-determine, subject to not harming others in severe ways. But people tend to think there's same sort of forced dichotomy of it's going to be aWALL-EWALL-E world where everybody has to live the same way, or everybody's in zoos, or everybody's just pleasured-out and drugged-up or something. It's forced choices. Some people do that, some people choose to have drugs, and we don't hear much from them, and others choose to flourish, and pursue projects, and raise children and so on.On sale everywhere The Conservative Futurist: How To Create the Sci-Fi World We Were PromisedMicro Reads▶ Economics* Is College Still Worth It? - Liberty Street Economics* Scalable versus Productive Technologies - Fed in Print▶ Business* AI's Threat to Google Just Got Real - WSJ* AI Has Upended the Search Game. Marketers Are Scrambling to Catch Up. - WSJ▶ Policy/Politics* U.S. pushes nations facing tariffs to approve Musk's Starlink, cables show - Wapo* US scraps Biden-era rule that aimed to limit exports of AI chips - FT* Singapore's Vision for AI Safety Bridges the US-China Divide - Wired* A ‘Trump Card Visa' Is Already Showing Up in Immigration Forms - Wired▶ AI/Digital* AI agents: from co-pilot to autopilot - FT* China's AI Strategy: Adoption Over AGI - AEI* How to build a better AI benchmark - MIT* Introducing OpenAI for Countries - OpenAI* Why humans are still much better than AI at forecasting the future - Vox* Outperformed by AI: Time to Replace Your Analyst? Find Out Which GenAI Model Does It Best - SSRN▶ Biotech/Health* Scientists Hail This Medical Breakthrough. A Political Storm Could Cripple It. - NYT* DARPA-Funded Research Develops Novel Technology to Combat Treatment-Resistant PTSD - The Debrief▶ Clean Energy/Climate* What's the carbon footprint of using ChatGPT? - Sustainability by Numbers* OpenAI and the FDA Are Holding Talks About Using AI In Drug Evaluation - Wired▶ Robotics/AVs* Jesse Levinson of Amazon Zoox: ‘The public has less patience for robotaxi mistakes' - FT▶ Space/Transportation* NASA scrambles to cut ISS activity due to budget issues - Ars* Statistically Speaking, We Should Have Heard from Aliens by Now - Universe Today▶ Substacks/Newsletters* Globalization did not hollow out the American middle class - Noahpinion* The Banality of Blind Men - Risk & Progress* Toys, Pencils, and Poverty at the Margins - The Dispatch* Don't Bet the Future on Winning an AI Arms Race - AI Prospects* Why Is the US Economy Surging Ahead of the UK? - Conversable EconomistFaster, Please! is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit fasterplease.substack.com/subscribe
Diese Fritti chöimer mitemne Sieg gäge FC Aarau direkt id Nati A!
Support our sponsor this week by using the link below for the exclusive Solomonster offer!GREEN CHEF - Get started with FREE salads for two months, plus 50 PERCENT OFF your first box at http://www.greenchef.com/solomonsterfree and start eating well!It was a newsworthy week with John Cena's first HEEL PROMO in more than two decades, so how did he do? Plus, CM Punk and Seth Rollins confront Roman Reigns on Smackdown and... I was expecting more. Tiffany Stratton also had a BAD NIGHT opposite Charlotte Flair, and I'll discuss what the WrestleMania 41 card is looking like right now. Lex Luger wants STING to induct him into the Hall of Fame and WWE is said to be trying to make it happen, but are they really just publicly putting pressure on Tony Khan? Also, TWO MORE names rumored for the Hall of Fame... running through this year's Slammy Awards categories... Jon Moxley tries to MAIM himself on AEW Dynamite... Jeff Jarrett says he LOVES tribalism among wrestling fans, why I respect him coming out and saying it and why I also think it's a terrible thing... triumph and tragedy on the independent scene... one female casual fan's perspective on WWE... names that never lived up to their potential in WWE... the plans for RVD's title run in 2006 had he not gotten busted... would Bret Hart have fit in the Attitude Era... and can Finn Balor be saved or is he DAMAGED GOODS?***Follow Solomonster on X (formerly Twitter) for news and opinion:http://x.com/solomonsterSubscribe to the Solomonster Sounds Off on YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/user/TheSolomonster?sub_confirmation=1Become a Solomonster Sounds Off Channel Member:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9jcg7mk93fGNqWPMfl_Aig/join
AI: MUTUAL ASSURED AI MISCALCULATION.(MAIM) BRANDON WEICKERT, NATIONAL INTEREST. https://techcrunch.com/2025/03/05/eric-schmidt-argues-against-a-manhattan-project-for-agi/?guccounter=1 1962
Send us a textEnjoy this cheeky episode description by ChatGPT. (Also, I recorded this on a late night walk so if I sound stifled, it's cause I'm trying not to wake up my neighbors.)Yo, what's good my people? MAIM TIME is BACK. After a long hiatus, I'm back on the mic to celebrate a major milestone—five years since I first started this podcast. February 2020, right before the world flipped upside down, I published my first episodes. Now, five years later, I'm back in America, starting over, and it's time to catch y'all up on everything.Where have I been?For the past 11 years, I built a life in Korea. It was the best decision I ever made, and it shaped me into the person I am today. But at some point, what was once an adventure started to feel like a cage. I needed a change. So in March 2024, I left Korea and moved to San Diego, California—America's Finest City, and arguably, America's Most Expensive City. Now, I'm navigating reverse culture shock, adapting to a new life, and figuring out what's next.Starting Over in My 30sWho does this? Who spends their 20s in a foreign country, only to return to their homeland and start over again in their 30s? A bum like me, apparently. In the past year, I've had to:✔ Get a driver's license✔ Starting a job working in the family business✔ Adjusting to American life after a decade abroad✔ Cut out distractions & focus on personal growthEverything is different. In Seoul, I could hop on a bus or train anytime, anywhere. In San Diego, you need a car. In Korea, people keep to themselves in public. In America, strangers smile and say hi on the street. It's weird, but in a lot of ways, I missed this.What's Next for MAIM TIME?I don't always know where to take this podcast, but I always find myself coming back to it. This is for me. This is for you. If you're an Asian diaspora person trying to figure out who you are, how to self-actualize, how to navigate the in-between of two worlds, this podcast is for us.This episode is raw, unfiltered, and straight from the heart. It's a stream of consciousness update on my life, my struggles, and what it means to take responsibility for your future—even when you don't have all the answers.Lessons from Rock BottomYou haven't really lived until you've hit rock bottom. Until you've tried to cry but no tears come out. Until you've wanted to scream but just stare at the ceiling instead. And even then? You get up. You move forward.I could be homeless. I could be struggling just to survive. But I'm lucky. I have my family, my health, and the opportunity to build something. And if I have to survive, why not thrive?The Bigger PictureWhat would my Asian Ancestors do? What would the Founding Fathers do? What would you do if you had to start over from nothing?People risk everything to get here. Some walk through deserts. Some smuggle themselves across oceans. Me? I had the privilege of choice. That humbles me. That makes me grateful. And that makes me want to do more.So here I am. Back in America. A new chapter begins.Hit play, let's talk about it.
Những bát súp rắn ấm áp có trong thực đơn tại một số cửa hàng bán rắn ở Hong Kong khi Tết Nguyên đán đang đến gần. Tết được cử hành ở khắp Đông Á và trong các cộng đồng trên khắp thế giới. Với nhiều người, rắn có vẻ đáng sợ, nhưng với bà Chau Ka-ling, chúng là những người bạn...
A római módszer – emberi vérből épülhetnek az első otthonok a Marson Rakéta 2024-12-20 07:48:02 Tudomány Olaszország Róma Mars Olyan ütős építőanyag állítható elő az emberi vérben található fehérjék felhasználásával, hogy az döbbenet. A módszer további előnye, hogy ahol van űrhajós, ott vér is van. Vérürgék populációjára bukkantak 24.hu 2024-12-20 05:40:40 Tudomány A mókusfélékre alapvetően békés rágcsálókként gondol az ember, de az állatoktól nem áll távol a húsevés sem. Minden 127 emberből egyet érint az autizmus spektrumzavar Telex 2024-12-20 08:42:10 Tudomány Japán Autizmus Egy friss kutatás szerint a férfiaknál valóban gyakoribb az előfordulás, és Japánban van arányaiban a legtöbb spektrumon élő. Több mint 2 milliárd dollárnyi kriptónak kelt lába idén Bitport 2024-12-20 10:00:00 Infotech Kriptovaluta Árfolyam Virtuális pénz Bitcoin 2024-ben nemcsak a bitcoin árfolyama emelkedett, de a kriptopénzeket célzó bűncselekmények száma és értéke is. A lopott vagyon több mint fele Észak-Koreában landolt. Jelszavakat a végrendeletbe? ICT Global 2024-12-20 06:03:46 Infotech Japán A digitális kor új kihívások elé állítja a társadalmat, hiszen online jelenlétünk életünk végével sem szűnik meg automatikusan. A japán kormány nemrégiben meglepő, de logikus javaslattal állt elő: arra kérik az állampolgáraikat, hogy a felhasználóneveiket és jelszavaikat vegyék bele a végrendeletükbe. A K&H monitorozza az IT-fejlesztéseit és azok hatékonyságát Mínuszos 2024-12-20 04:33:18 Infotech Monitorozza fejlesztéseit és méri az IT-fejlesztések hatékonyságát a K&H. Ezt a tevékenységét saját maga, házon belül látja el. Az úgynevezett Fast Function Point módszertan segítségével a K&H folyamatosan feltárja a fejlesztési folyamatok és rendszerek optimális működésére épülő fejlesztési pontokat, a költséghatékonyságot és a projektek komplexit Geológiai rejtély megoldását segítheti az új Hold-térkép Helló Sajtó! 2024-12-20 12:47:53 Tudomány Csehország Térkép Az Eötvös Loránd Tudományegyetem és a Cseh Tudományos Akadémia tudósai elkészítették a Hold eddigi legrészletesebb térképét, amely segíthet megérteni a szabálytalan mare-foltok eredetét és a Hold fejlődését. Összekötött a technológia ITBusiness 2024-12-20 09:33:34 Infotech A magyar és régiós üzleti, kormányzati és tudományos élet kiemelkedő szereplőit hozták össze a szervezők, a Ringier Hungary és az Itbusiness a Millenárison, az első Techxpo konferencián. A rendezvény elérte célját, miután a technológia eszköztárával felülemelkedett szakmai ágazatokon, a társadalmi egyenlőtlenségeken és a kulturális különbözőségeken Viszlát kvantumpontok! Az LG új technológiával robbant jövőre az LCD tévék piacán TechWorld 2024-12-20 07:22:28 Infotech A misztikus Dynamic QNED Color Solution eljárás még nagyobb színhűséget és színpontosságot ígér, de már kvantumpontok nélkül. Az LG megint húzott valami durvát. A Flatpanels HD nevű internetes oldal információi szerint az LG arra készül, hogy átírja a játékszabályokat az LCD alapú tévék piacán (is). Ha minden igaz, akkor jönnek a QNED evo panellel Az AI-lufi sem tudta felemelni a Micront HWSW 2024-12-20 09:10:19 Mobiltech USA Telefon Okostelefon A PC- és az okostelefon-piac miatt szenved az amerikai memóriagyártó, mely június óta látványos mélyrepülésben van. Sok munkáltató tervez létszámbővítést, egyre többen a mesterséges intelligenciát is segítségül hívják KKV Magazin 2024-12-20 06:09:02 Cégvilág Oktatás Mesterséges intelligencia Közösségi média Felvételi Egyre több cég akaor új munkaerőt felvenni, sok helyen a szükséges költségkeretet és a toborzást végző munkatársak létszámát is bővíteni fogják jelenlegi terveik szerint. A megfelelő jelöltek megtalálásában az állásportálokra támaszkodnak elsősorban a szakemberek, míg a közösségi médiát többen mellőznék inkább. Harmaduk tart a felvételi folyamat el Emberszabású robotok dolgozhatnak ebben a gyárban Vezess 2024-12-20 12:49:13 Autó-motor Kína Elektromos autó Robot Audi Ultramodern villanyautó-gyárat adott át Kínában az Audi. A termelés minden fázisa digitalizált, és a jövőben egészen merész elképzelések is megvalósulhatnak. A Waymo önvezetős flottáját jó üzlet biztosítani Bitport 2024-12-20 14:00:00 Mobiltech Robot A robotaxis szolgáltatását egyre több városra kiterjesztő cég saját tanulmánya szerint önvezető flottája egy nagyságrenddel kevesebb kárrendezési ügyet generál, mint az emberi sofőrök. A további adásainkat keresd a podcast.hirstart.hu oldalunkon.
Merry Christmas from Mims and Maim (again!)Support us on Patreon at www.patreon.com/mimsandmaimThank you to our Patreons:Morgan WCody HSharon JDeana FElizabeth JAdam PCrystalJessie PSheri SEmail Us: mimsandmaim@gmail.comCall Us: 7043800618ASupport us on PayPal: https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=N8H4HPVU8CTNSSpecial thanks to Miss B for her sponsorship of our podcast. You can find her on TikTok @GeektombFind the queens on Twitter:Auntie Maim: @aunitemaimsThe Divine Miss Mims: @divinemissmimsTheme Music Arranged by JDR#auntiemaim #thedivinemissmims #lgbtq #dragqueens #murdershewrote #jessicafletcher #shedidit #1980s #classic #television #podcast #newepisode #peacocktv #rewatch #tvshows #bingewatching #bingeworthy #joannfabric
- Trong khuôn khổ Ngày hội văn hóa các dân tộc thiểu số và miền núi, chiều nay (13/12), tại TP Phan Thiết, Sở Văn hoá Thể thao và Du lịch tỉnh Bình Thuậnn tổ chức toạ đàm “Thực trạng và giải pháp bảo tồn, phát huy trang phục truyền thống các dân tộc thiểu số và miền núi trên địa bàn tỉnh Bình Thuận”. Chủ đề : Trang phục truyền thống, các dân tộc thiểu số, Bình Thuận, nguy cơ mai một --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/vov1tintuc/support
Merry Christmas from Mims and Maim (again!)Support us on Patreon at www.patreon.com/mimsandmaimThank you to our Patreons:Morgan WCody HSharon JDeana FElizabeth JAdam PCrystalJessie PSheri SEmail Us: mimsandmaim@gmail.comCall Us: 7043800618ASupport us on PayPal: https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=N8H4HPVU8CTNSSpecial thanks to Miss B for her sponsorship of our podcast. You can find her on TikTok @GeektombFind the queens on Twitter:Auntie Maim: @aunitemaimsThe Divine Miss Mims: @divinemissmimsTheme Music Arranged by JDR#auntiemaim #thedivinemissmims #lgbtq #dragqueens #murdershewrote #jessicafletcher #shedidit #1980s #classic #television #podcast #newepisode #peacocktv #rewatch #tvshows #bingewatching #bingeworthy #joannfabric
Merry Christmas from Mims and Maim.Thank you to our Patrons:Sharon JDeana FElizabeth JAdam PCrystal AMorgan WCody HJessie PSheri SEmail Us: mimsandmaim@gmail.comCall Us: 7043800618Support us Via PayPal: https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=VNMM8UTK485XQSpecial thanks to Miss B for her sponsorship of our podcast. You can find her on TikTok @GeektombFind the queens on Twitter:Auntie Maim: @auntiemaimsThe Divine Miss Mims: @divinemissmimsThank you to MrMahaffey for our lovely artwork.Follow him on Instagram: www.instagram.com/MrMahaffeyEtsy Store: www.etsy.com/shop/MrMahaffeyOur Theme Song is Composed by JDR #1980s #1990s #auntiemaim #Charlene #comedyqueens #designingwomen #dragqueens #Julia #lgbt #Maryjo #podcast #sitcom #Suzanne #thedivinemissmims #Anthony #Bernice #rewatch #classic #lgbtq #hulutv #tv #newepisode
Zalka Csenge Virág régész és mesemondó első kifejezetten felnőtteknek szóló gyűjteményében a görög–római mitológia ismeretlen ösvényeire invitálja az olvasót. Ebben a kötetben olyan történetek szerepelnek, amelyek ritkán kapnak helyet népszerű, olvasmányos könyvekben – az évszázadok során elkallódott izgalmas mítosztöredékek, illetve ismert mítoszok meglepő, háttérbe szorult változatai. Találkozhatunk például egy alternatív magyarázattal arra, hogyan vált Akhilleusz sarka sebezhetővé egy csontátültetésnek köszönhetően, vagy egy istennővel, aki sikeresen visszaverte Zeusz erőszakos udvarlását. Fény derül a trójai háború titkos eredetére, Parisz első felesége és Szép Helenének vetélkedésére és egy hősre, akit Odüsszeusz kiíratott az Iliászból. Az eredeti ókori forrásokból újramesélt történetek szórakoztatnak, elgondolkodtatnak, és színesítik a mitológiáról alkotott képünket. A Trend Kiadó programja. A Program a Liszt Ünnep Nemzetközi Kulturális Fesztivál keretében a Müpa szervezésében valósul meg. A programok a Bookline és a Volvo támogatásával valósulnak meg. Az esemény médiapartnere a Könyves Magazin és a We Love Budapest. A beszélgetés a 2024-es Őszi Margó Irodalmi Fesztiválon hangzott el.
1078 Maim Achronim. Ciclo Leis e Filosofia
Merry Christmas from Mims and Maim...again.Thank you to our Patrons:Sharon JDeana FElizabeth JAdam PCrystal AMorgan WCody HJessie PSheri SEmail Us: mimsandmaim@gmail.comCall Us: 7043800618Support us Via PayPal: https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=VNMM8UTK485XQSpecial thanks to Miss B for her sponsorship of our podcast. You can find her on TikTok @GeektombFind the queens on Twitter:Auntie Maim: @auntiemaimsThe Divine Miss Mims: @divinemissmimsThank you to MrMahaffey for our lovely artwork.Follow him on Instagram: www.instagram.com/MrMahaffeyEtsy Store: www.etsy.com/shop/MrMahaffeyOur Theme Song is Composed by JDR #1980s #1990s #auntiemaim #Charlene #comedyqueens #designingwomen #dragqueens #Julia #lgbt #Maryjo #podcast #sitcom #Suzanne #thedivinemissmims #Anthony #Bernice #rewatch #classic #lgbtq #hulutv #tv #newepisode
Merry Christmas from Mims and Maim (again!)Support us on Patreon at www.patreon.com/mimsandmaimThank you to our Patreons:Morgan WCody HSharon JDeana FElizabeth JAdam PCrystalJessie PSheri SEmail Us: mimsandmaim@gmail.comCall Us: 7043800618ASupport us on PayPal: https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=N8H4HPVU8CTNSSpecial thanks to Miss B for her sponsorship of our podcast. You can find her on TikTok @GeektombFind the queens on Twitter:Auntie Maim: @aunitemaimsThe Divine Miss Mims: @divinemissmimsTheme Music Arranged by JDR#auntiemaim #thedivinemissmims #lgbtq #dragqueens #murdershewrote #jessicafletcher #shedidit #1980s #classic #television #podcast #newepisode #peacocktv #rewatch #tvshows #bingewatching #bingeworthy #joannfabric
¿Es posible reconciliar las aparentes contradicciones entre la Mishné Torá y el Guía de los Perplejos de Maimónides? ¿Cómo entender la profecía a través de sus escritos y cuál es, en última instancia, el corazón del judaísmo según el filósofo cordobés? En este podcast, exploramos los aspectos más profundos de la filosofía de Maimónides: sus alegorías, el sentido del lenguaje y el lugar del conocimiento en la tradición judía. ¿Es el elitismo de Maimónides una herramienta para elevar el intelecto, o una barrera que excluye a muchos? Acompáñanos en este viaje filosófico, donde analizamos los dilemas y enseñanzas de uno de los pensadores más complejos de la historia, con un enfoque accesible y reflexivo.
Muốn kiếm tiền trả nợ và nuôi 4 con, Thảo My nhắm mắt cưới với người đàn ông Trung Quốc chưa từng thấy hình được một bà mối quen qua mạng kết nối.
Imagine if such an attack had been launched on Israel. Imagine the response.Help us take on the pro-war media here: https://www.patreon.com/owenjones84Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/the-owen-jones-podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Supporta BLMP genom att bli en patron! Spana in de olika alternativen på http://www.patreon.com/blmetalpodcast Evighetsmaskinen B.L. Metal Podcast puttrar på, samhället vet ej vad som pågåååår. Mycket missnöje! Playlist: Satan - Turn the Tide Aakhagen - Temple of Lost Hope Absurdeity - Hack, Slash, Maim, Kill Dødskvad - Dødens sverd Avmakt - Towing Oblivion Fleshgod Apocalypse - Pendulum To The Worms - Flesh Feast Angelcorpse - Eat Me Alive I samarbete med Medborgarskolan.
Welcome to Episode 37 of “The 2 View,” the podcast for EM and urgent care nurse practitioners and physician assistants! Show Notes for Episode 37 of “The 2 View” – Pitfalls in Managing Pain in the ED with Sergey M. Motov, MD, FAAEM. Segment 1 Bachhuber MA, Hennessy S, Cunningham CO, Starrels JL. Increasing Benzodiazepine Prescriptions and Overdose Mortality in the United States, 1996-2013. Am J Public Health. 2016;106(4):686-688. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2016.303061. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26890165/ Bijur PE, Kenny MK, Gallagher EJ. Intravenous morphine at 0.1 mg/kg is not effective for controlling severe acute pain in the majority of patients. Ann Emerg Med. 2005;46(4):362-367. doi:10.1016/j.annemergmed.2005.03.010. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16187470/ Evoy KE, Covvey JR, Peckham AM, Ochs L, Hultgren KE. Reports of gabapentin and pregabalin abuse, misuse, dependence, or overdose: An analysis of the Food And Drug Administration Adverse Events Reporting System (FAERS). Res Social Adm Pharm. 2019;15(8):953-958. doi:10.1016/j.sapharm.2018.06.018. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31303196/ Kim HS, McCarthy DM, Hoppe JA, Mark Courtney D, Lambert BL. Emergency Department Provider Perspectives on Benzodiazepine-Opioid Coprescribing: A Qualitative Study. Acad Emerg Med. 2018;25(1):15-24. doi:10.1111/acem.13273. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28791786/ Li Y, Delcher C, Wei YJ, et al. Risk of Opioid Overdose Associated With Concomitant Use of Opioids and Skeletal Muscle Relaxants: A Population-Based Cohort Study. Clin Pharmacol Ther. 2020;108(1):81-89. doi:10.1002/cpt.1807. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32022906/ Peckham AM, Evoy KE, Covvey JR, Ochs L, Fairman KA, Sclar DA. Predictors of Gabapentin Overuse With or Without Concomitant Opioids in a Commercially Insured U.S. Population. Pharmacotherapy. 2018;38(4):436-443. doi:10.1002/phar.2096. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29484686/ Smith RV, Havens JR, Walsh SL. Gabapentin misuse, abuse and diversion: a systematic review. Addiction. 2016;111(7):1160-1174. doi:10.1111/add.13324. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27265421/ Suvada K, Zimmer A, Soodalter J, Malik JS, Kavalieratos D, Ali MK. Coprescribing of opioids and high-risk medications in the USA: a cross-sectional study with data from national ambulatory and emergency department settings. BMJ Open. 2022;12(6):e057588. Published 2022 Jun 16. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2021-057588. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35710252/ Segment 2 Caplan M, Friedman BW, Siebert J, et al. Use of clinical phenotypes to characterize emergency department patients administered intravenous opioids for acute pain. Clin Exp Emerg Med. 2023;10(3):327-332. doi:10.15441/ceem.23.018. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37092185/ Connors NJ, Mazer-Amirshahi M, Motov S, Kim HK. Relative addictive potential of opioid analgesic agents. Pain Manag. 2021;11(2):201-215. doi:10.2217/pmt-2020-0048. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33300384/ Fassassi C, Dove D, Davis A, et al. Analgesic efficacy of morphine sulfate immediate release vs. oxycodone/acetaminophen for acute pain in the emergency department. Am J Emerg Med. 2021;46:579-584. doi:10.1016/j.ajem.2020.11.034. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33341323/ Irizarry E, Cho R, Williams A, et al. Frequency of Persistent Opioid Use 6 Months After Exposure to IV Opioids in the Emergency Department: A Prospective Cohort Study. J Emerg Med. Published online March 14, 2024. doi:10.1016/j.jemermed.2024.03.018. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38821847/ Sapkota A, Takematsu M, Adewunmi V, Gupta C, Williams AR, Friedman BW. Oxycodone induced euphoria in ED patients with acute musculoskeletal pain. A secondary analysis of data from a randomized trial. Am J Emerg Med. 2022;53:240-244. doi:10.1016/j.ajem.2022.01.016. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35085877/ Wightman R, Perrone J, Portelli I, Nelson L. Likeability and abuse liability of commonly prescribed opioids. J Med Toxicol. 2012;8(4):335-340. doi:10.1007/s13181-012-0263-x. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22992943/ Segment 3 Anshus AJ, Oswald J. Erector spinae plane block: a new option for managing acute axial low back pain in the emergency department. Pain Manag. 2021;11(6):631-637. doi:10.2217/pmt-2021-0004. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34102865/ Chauhan G, Burke H, Srinivasan SK, Upadhyay A. Ultrasound-Guided Erector Spinae Block for Refractory Abdominal Pain Due to Acute on Chronic Pancreatitis. Cureus. 2022;14(11):e31817. Published 2022 Nov 23. doi:10.7759/cureus.31817. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36579238/ Dove D, Fassassi C, Davis A, et al. Comparison of Nebulized Ketamine at Three Different Dosing Regimens for Treating Painful Conditions in the Emergency Department: A Prospective, Randomized, Double-Blind Clinical Trial. Ann Emerg Med. 2021;78(6):779-787. doi:10.1016/j.annemergmed.2021.04.031. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34226073/ Elkoundi A, Eloukkal Z, Bensghir M, Belyamani L, Lalaoui SJ. Erector Spinae Plane Block for Hyperalgesic Acute Pancreatitis. Pain Med. 2019;20(5):1055-1056. doi:10.1093/pm/pny232. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30476275/ Finneran Iv JJ, Gabriel RA, Swisher MW, Berndtson AE, Godat LN, Costantini TW, Ilfeld BM. Ultrasound-guided percutaneous intercostal nerve cryoneurolysis for analgesia following traumatic rib fracture -a case series. Korean J Anesthesiol. 2020 Oct;73(5):455-459. doi: 10.4097/kja.19395. Epub 2019 Nov 5. PMID: 31684715; PMCID: PMC7533180. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7533180/ Finneran JJ, Swisher MW, Gabriel RA, et al. Ultrasound-Guided Lateral Femoral Cutaneous Nerve Cryoneurolysis for Analgesia in Patients With Burns. J Burn Care Res. 2020;41(1):224-227. doi:10.1093/jbcr/irz192. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31714578/ Gabriel RA, Finneran JJ, Asokan D, Trescot AM, Sandhu NS, Ilfeld BM. Ultrasound-Guided Percutaneous Cryoneurolysis for Acute Pain Management: A Case Report. A A Case Rep. 2017;9(5):129-132. doi:10.1213/XAA.0000000000000546. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28509777/ Herring AA, Stone MB, Nagdev AD. Ultrasound-guided abdominal wall nerve blocks in the ED. Am J Emerg Med. 2012;30(5):759-764. doi:10.1016/j.ajem.2011.03.008. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21570238/ Kampan S, Thong-On K, Sri-On J. A non-inferiority randomized controlled trial comparing nebulized ketamine to intravenous morphine for older adults in the emergency department with acute musculoskeletal pain. Age Ageing. 2024;53(1):afad255. doi:10.1093/ageing/afad255. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38251742/ Mahmoud S, Miraflor E, Martin D, Mantuani D, Luftig J, Nagdev AD. Ultrasound-guided transverse abdominis plane block for ED appendicitis pain control. Am J Emerg Med. 2019;37(4):740-743. doi:10.1016/j.ajem.2019.01.024. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30718116/ McCahill RJ, Nagle C, Clarke P. Use of Virtual Reality for minor procedures in the Emergency Department: A scoping review. Australas Emerg Care. 2021;24(3):174-178. doi:10.1016/j.auec.2020.06.006. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32718907/ Nguyen T, Mai M, Choudhary A, et al. Comparison of Nebulized Ketamine to Intravenous Subdissociative Dose Ketamine for Treating Acute Painful Conditions in the Emergency Department: A Prospective, Randomized, Double-Blind, Double-Dummy Controlled Trial. Ann Emerg Med. Published online May 2, 2024. doi:10.1016/j.annemergmed.2024.03.024. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38703175/ Sikka N, Shu L, Ritchie B, Amdur RL, Pourmand A. Virtual Reality-Assisted Pain, Anxiety, and Anger Management in the Emergency Department. Telemed J E Health. 2019;25(12):1207-1215. doi:10.1089/tmj.2018.0273. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30785860/ Recurring Sources Center for Medical Education. Ccme.org. http://ccme.org The Proceduralist. Theproceduralist.org. http://www.theproceduralist.org The Procedural Pause. Emergency Medicine News. Lww.com. https://journals.lww.com/em-news/blog/theproceduralpause/pages/default.aspx The Skeptics Guide to Emergency Medicine. Thesgem.com. http://www.thesgem.com Trivia Question: Send answers to 2viewcast@gmail.com Be sure to keep tuning in for more great prizes and fun trivia questions! Once you hear the question, please email us your guesses at 2viewcast@gmail.com and tell us who you want to give a shout-out to. Be sure to listen in and see what we have to share!
Esperant el Cometa #20 - Els universos de la space opera i Stella signata (agost 2024) Durada: 108 minuts. Benvinguts al nou episodi d'Esperant el Cometa, el podcast sobre literatura fantàstica en català. Avui hem convidat en Ricard Efa per parlar de Space Opera i de la seva recent incursió a aquest gènere amb els llibres de Stella Signata que està publicant Mai Més. També hem dedicat uns minuts a parlar del Festival Celsius. També tenim la nostra secció de ressenyes, i hi hem convidat en Ricard! Els llibres dels que hem parlat són: Tercer origen, d'Albert Villaró (Ricard Efa) Riu de Safirs, de Marc Pastor (Miquel Codony) Què mou els morts, de T. Kingfisher (Pablo Mallorquí) Aquest mes, la secció final del programa està dedicada al còmic en català, i en Miquel Codony ens parlarà de “El Rei dels Cargols” i de “Friday. Llibre 1”. Esperem que gaudiu de l'episodi!
- Theo Trung tâm Dự báo khí tượng thủy văn Quốc gia, từ đêm mai (10/8) vùng núi phía Bắc sẽ có mưa vừa, mưa to chấm dứt nắng nóng ở Bắc bộ. Từ chiều tối và đêm 11 đến ngày 15/8, Bắc Bộ có khả năng xuất hiện đợt mưa vừa, mưa to và dông cục bộ, với tổng lượng mưa phổ biến từ 100mm đến 250mm, có nơi trên 400mm, cảnh báo nguy cơ xảy ra lũ quét, sạt lở đất tại vùng núi và ngập úng tại các khu vực trũng, thấp. Phóng viên Minh Long phỏng vấn ông Vũ Anh Tuấn, Phó trưởng phòng Dự báo thời tiết, Trung tâm Dự báo Khí tượng thủy văn Quốc gia về diễn biến của đợt mưa này. Chủ đề : mưa lớn, chấm dứt nắng nóng, Trung du Bắc bộ --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/vov1tintuc/support
Equipo necesario para fotografía nocturna, anécdotas y mucho más, sobre esta disciplina fotográfica con David Maimó. INSTAGRAM DAVID MAIMÓ: https://www.instagram.com/davidmaimo/ **COMPRA EN FOTOK desde este enlace y pon el cupón GABELLIFTK en tu carrito de la compra para llevarte un regalo. WEB FOTOK: https://fotok.es/?aff=y206 ___________________ WEBS: https://www.rubengabelli.com https://fotografodecomida.es YOUTUBE: https://cutt.ly/ft3QEHF PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/RubenGabelli INSTAGRAM: @rubengabelli
- Loại hình nghệ thuật đờn ca tài tử của Việt Nam được UNESCO công nhận là di sản văn hóa phi vật thể đại diện của nhân loại, đang được các địa phương gìn giữ và bảo tồn. Ở Bà Rịa-Vũng Tàu, nhiều nghệ nhân các câu lạc bộ đờn ca tài tử trên địa bàn đang lo lắng bộ môn này sẽ mai một do thiếu vắng đội ngũ kế thừa. Những người đam mê đờn ca tài tử mong muốn chính quyền, cơ quan văn hoá có kế hoạch bảo tồn, truyền lại cho thế hệ trẻ niềm đam mê với bộ môn nghệ thuật đặc trưng của vùng đất Nam bộ. Chủ đề : đờn ca, tài tử, vũng tàu --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/vov1sukien/support
Nhận "sớ" tiêu chí từ những người sẵn sàng chi trăm triệu tìm bạn đời, những "ông tơ bà nguyệt" nhiều lần chật vật vì loạt yêu cầu lạ lùng.
The party heads back down to face the chuuls again, ready this time and with the formidable crocodile, Scar, in tow.Check out our Patreon https://patreon.com/TheShatterblightChroniclesFollow us on Instagram @shatterblightchroniclesCheck us out on Twitter @shatterblight
Esperant el Cometa #18 - Cinc anys de Mai Més i traducció del fantàstic (juny 2024) Durada: 127 minuts. Benvinguts al divuité episodi d'Esperant el Cometa, el podcast d'El Bibiblionauta. Si heu estat pendents de les novetats del fantàstic en català segur que heu vist la Mai Més Conference que va tenir lloc el 18 de juny a la llibreria Gigamesh. Aquesta conferència marca els cinc anys de vida de l'editorial Mai Més, un dels referents inescapables del gènere a casa nostra. A l'episodi d'avui, hem parlat amb la Judit Terradellas i en Sergio Pérez, caps pensants de l'editorial, sobre com han viscut aquests cinc anys i com veuen el futur. Però el programa té més teca: hem parlat amb Lluís Delgado, un dels millors traductors que té el gènere a casa nostra, sobre les particularitats que té la traducció en el món de la ciència ficció, la fantasia i el terror. Per acabar, en Pablo ens porta la seva secció de Manga. Esperem que gaudiu de l'episodi!
The party desperately tries to fend off the dangerous chuul and save Stretch and Bernice.Check out our Patreon https://patreon.com/TheShatterblightChroniclesFollow us on Instagram @shatterblightchroniclesCheck us out on Twitter @shatterblight
Snapper Boy furiously fights as The New Crit Crew tries to find a way to stop him.
"No m'esperava que els adoradors de Proust formessin una secta!", diu l'artista Chlo
"No m'esperava que els adoradors de Proust formessin una secta!", diu l'artista Chlo
All Eyes on Rafah | Nikki Haley écrit «Achevez-les tous» sur un obus | Les contrôleurs routiers veulent être armés | C'est quoi un «nudge» et pourquoi est-ce que ça ne marche pas? | Des lits ferment dans des hôpitaux de la Rive-Sud Dans cet épisode intégral du 29 mai, en entrevue : Jean-Claude Daignault président de la Fraternité des constables du contrôle routier du Québec FCCRQ. André Fortin, porte-parole de l'opposition officielle en matière de santé. Une production QUB Mai 2024Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr
Description: Let's say you were looking for a safe and effective BLS option for analgesia. Something other than oral acetaminophen or ibuprofen. You want the Green Whistle (methoxyflourane) but you can't get the Green Whistle (thanks FDA!). How about sub-dissociative ketamine by nebulizer? Sounds great, but you're worried about your colleagues getting stoned, aren't you? Admit it, you are. Fortunately, there are breath actuated nebulizers. Maybe those things will work? Dr Jarvis reviews a recent paper that compares the effectiveness of nebulized ketamine compared with IV ketamine. And he gives a quick review of some other papers that paved the way for this one. Citations:1. Nguyen T, Mai M, Choudhary A, Gitelman S, Drapkin J, Likourezos A, Kabariti S, Hossain R, Kun K, Gohel A, et al.: Comparison of Nebulized Ketamine to Intravenous Subdissociative Dose Ketamine for Treating Acute Painful Conditions in the Emergency Department: A Prospective, Randomized, Double-Blind, Double-Dummy Controlled Trial. Annals of Emergency Medicine. (2024) May 2.2. Motov S, Mai M, Pushkar I, Likourezos A, Drapkin J, Yasavolian M, Brady J, Homel P, Fromm C: A prospective randomized, double-dummy trial comparing IV push low dose ketamine to short infusion of low dose ketamine for treatment of pain in the ED. Am J Emerg Med. 2017;August;35(8):1095–100.3. Motov S, Rockoff B, Cohen V, Pushkar I, Likourezos A, McKay C, Soleyman-Zomalan E, Homel P, Terentiev V, Fromm C: Intravenous Subdissociative-Dose Ketamine Versus Morphine for Analgesia in the Emergency Department: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Ann Emerg Med. 2015;September;66(3):222-229.e1.4. Motov S, Yasavolian M, Likourezos A, Pushkar I, Hossain R, Drapkin J, Cohen V, Filk N, Smith A, Huang F, et al.: Comparison of Intravenous Ketorolac at Three Single-Dose Regimens for Treating Acute Pain in the Emergency Department: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Ann Emerg Med. 2017;August;70(2):177–84.5.Dove D, Fassassi C, Davis A, Drapkin J, Butt M, Hossain R, Kabariti S, Likourezos A, Gohel A, Favale P, et al.: Comparison of Nebulized Ketamine at Three Different Dosing Regimens for Treating Painful Conditions in the Emergency Department: A Prospective, Randomized, Double-Blind Clinical Trial. Annals of Emergency Medicine. 2021;December;78(6):779–87.6.Patrick C, Smith M, Rafique Z, Rogers Keene K, De La Rosa X: Nebulized Ketamine for Analgesia in the Prehospital Setting: A Case Series. Prehospital Emergency Care. 2023;February 17;27(2):269–74. FAST24 | June 10 - 12, 2024 | Wilmington, North CarolinaFAST24 is our annual conference for pre-hospital and critical care transport professionals, including nurses, paramedics, and other disciplines. It features engaging workshops, talks by industry leaders, and focused sessions on air and surface critical care transport medicine. The event also offers a unique vendor experience, special guest appearances from notable talent in the industry, catered lunches, as well as relaxing and entertaining networking and social opportunities. Tickets are limited so don't wait! Visit fbefast.com for more information.
Welcome back to another STACKED week of riffs and laughs with ya boys! On the show this week we break our own rules to discuss bouncy techy goodness from Weston Super Maim, Noisy punky Alt-rock from Gouge Away, Bimbo-Violence from BRAT and industrial tinged hardcore from Prisoner STAY HEAVY
Designing Women, Season 5, Episode 15: How Long Has This Been Going OnJulia has a secret.Watch along with us on Hulu (Not Sponsored)Buy our Merch: www.mimsandmaim.comSupport us on Patreon at www.patreon.com/mimsandmaimThank you to our Patrons:Sharon JDeana FElizabeth JAdam PCrystal AMorgan WCody HJessie PSheri SEmail Us: mimsandmaim@gmail.comCall Us: 7043800618Support us Via PayPal: https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=VNMM8UTK485XQSpecial thanks to Miss B for her sponsorship of our podcast. You can find her on TikTok @GeektombFind the queens on Twitter:Auntie Maim: @auntiemaimsThe Divine Miss Mims: @divinemissmimsThank you to MrMahaffey for our lovely artwork.Follow him on Instagram: www.instagram.com/MrMahaffeyEtsy Store: www.etsy.com/shop/MrMahaffeyOur Theme Song is Composed by JDR #1980s #1990s #auntiemaim #Charlene #comedyqueens #designingwomen #dragqueens #Julia #lgbt #Maryjo #podcast #sitcom #Suzanne #thedivinemissmims #Anthony #Bernice #rewatch #classic #lgbtq #hulutv #tv #newepisode
Để tìm người vừa mắt từ ngoại hình, học vấn, thu nhập...anh Hoàng Thái, kỹ sư xây dựng tại Hà Nội, chi hơn 55 triệu để hẹn hò ít nhất 6 lần.
NBA maiņu darījumu logs šai sezonai ir ciet, tāpēc aprunājam ļoti neizteiksmīgo spēlētāju migrācijas laiku un apspriežam jaunas biznesa idejas.
Moonlighting, Season 1, Episode 1, Part 1: Moonlighting (Pilot)Maddie loses all of her money.Watch along with us on Hulu (Not Sponsored)Buy our Merch: www.mimsandmaim.comSupport us on Patreon at www.patreon.com/mimsandmaimThank you to our Patrons:Sharon JDeana FElizabeth JAdam PCrystal AMorgan WCody HJessie PSheri SEmail Us: mimsandmaim@gmail.comCall Us: 7043800618Support us Via PayPal: https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=VNMM8UTK485XQSpecial thanks to Miss B for her sponsorship of our podcast. You can find her on TikTok @Geektomb#auntiemaim #thedivinemissmims #lgbtq #dragqueens #moonlighting #comedy #comedyqueens #1980s #classic #television #podcast #newepisode #hulu #hulutv #rewatch #tvshows #bingewatching #bingeworthy #joannfabric
This episode was originally released for Death Panel patrons on November 21st 2022. We are re-releasing it today, alongside a new transcript of the conversation, because in the past few weeks we have found Jasbir's work tremendously useful in understanding the enormity of what's happening in Gaza. Episode description: Beatrice and Jules speak with Jasbir Puar about the violent global effects of settler colonialism and how they shape our understanding of what we mean by “disability” and “debility.” We discuss how colonial occupation itself can be understood through a theory of debility, colonial constructions of who is labeled a "terrorist," and some of the most important insights from Jasbir's 2017 book The Right to Maim. Transcript: https://www.deathpanel.net/transcripts/jasbir-puar-body-politics Find our book Health Communism here: www.versobooks.com/books/4081-health-communism Pre-order Jules' new book here: https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/733966/a-short-history-of-trans-misogyny-by-jules-gill-peterson/ Death Panel merch here (patrons get a discount code): www.deathpanel.net/merch As always, support Death Panel at www.patreon.com/deathpanelpod
Joel Maim joins us on the podcast to encourage us in the process of Connecting the Dots in life and ministry. Connecting the Dots- https://amzn.to/3rCJigDDick Foth returns for another session of Back Channel with Foth- send questions to aaron.santmyire@agwmafrica.org*As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
Shank & Maim is a blues duo based in Starkville, MS. Caleb and Mark comprise this blues modified duo, and tend to bring it. The conversation is about early beginnings, finding music, and finding each other.Subscribe, rate, and review the show!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/porch-talk/exclusive-contentAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Este Episodio se titula "El Buey de Dios". Empiezo con un agradecimiento a quienes han hecho una reseña de CS en la tienda iTunes, donde muchos se suscriben al podcast. Aunque iTunes es sólo una salida para el mundo de los podcasts, resulta ser EL PRINCIPAL lugar para calificar y promocionar podcasts.Mira, lo que hacemos aquí es totalmente un trabajo de aficionados. CS es una labor de amor y no pretende ser una revisión erudita de la historia. Comparto estos episodios con la esperanza de que otros puedan acompañarme y aprender conmigo. No pretendo que sea exhaustivo. Al contrario, es un relato superficial que pretende dar una breve visión general de la historia de la Iglesia; una especie de repaso verbal, con momentos ocasionales en los que nos detenemos en algo interesante. Pretendo dar a los oyentes una idea básica de cuándo ocurrieron los acontecimientos en relación con los demás; quiénes fueron algunos de los principales actores y actrices con el papel que desempeñaron. Y, como he dicho antes, los episodios son intencionadamente cortos para facilitar que se escuchen en los breves momentos en que la gente está haciendo ejercicio, haciendo tareas domésticas, dando un paseo, yendo en coche al trabajo. Lo que es una maravilla es oír todas las formas en que la gente se HA conectado a CS. Algunos han descargado un montón de episodios y los han escuchado mientras cruzaban el país en coche o volaban al extranjero.Hace un tiempo estaba en una conferencia, hablando tranquilamente con unos amigos, cuando un tipo sentado en la fila de delante se volvió y me dijo: "¿Eres Lance? ¿Tienes el podcast Communio Sanctorum?". Reconoció mi voz. Lo pasamos muy bien conociéndonos mejor. En otra ocasión, durante un viaje por Israel, conocí a un tipo en el comedor de uno de nuestros hoteles que es fan del podcast. Eso sí que fue un acontecimiento.Este Podcast en español empezó de igual manera cuando su servidor Roberto Aguayo conoció a Lance después de escuchar él podcast y le pidió si lo podía traducir y grabar en español. No sé si fui yo, pero igual me senté delante de Lance en una conferencia de pastores y reconocí su voz detrás de mí y me volteé a saludarlo. Así comenzó esta aventura.De todos modos, agradezco que la gente deje comentarios en la página de FB o envíe un correo electrónico. Pero lo mejor de todo es calificar el podcast y escribir una reseña rápida en iTunes, y luego decirles a tus amigos que nos escuchen.______________________________________________________________________________________________________________Ahora, volvamos a los Escolásticos.Aunque impulsado por la obra de Abelardo y Anselmo, el escolasticismo alcanzó su apogeo cuando el filósofo griego Aristóteles fue redescubierto por los eruditos europeos. Las Cruzadas entraron en contacto con eruditos musulmanes que debatieron la filosofía de Aristóteles. Sus pensamientos regresaron con los Cruzados y se transmitieron a las escuelas teológicas ubicadas en las órdenes mendicantes de los Dominicos y los Franciscanos. Éstos eran los grupos a los que la Iglesia había encomendado el estudio de la teología. A mediados del siglo XIII, se produjo una especie de renacimiento de Aristóteles en estas escuelas. Es curioso que a principios del siglo XIII se prohibiera la lectura de Aristóteles. Al fin y al cabo, era un griego pagano. ¿Qué podían aprender de él los cristianos? Pero, como sabe cualquier universitario, hay una forma de asegurarse de que algo se lea. Prohibirlo. Así que un par de décadas después, se permitió la lectura de partes de Aristóteles. A mediados de siglo, era lectura obligatoria y tanto él como su mentor Platón y su maestro Sócrates fueron bautizados extraoficialmente y convertidos en santos precristianos.Tiene sentido que la filosofía de Aristóteles resucitara cuando recordamos que el objetivo de los escolásticos era aplicar la razón a la fe; tratar de comprender con la mente racional lo que el espíritu ya creía. Fue Aristóteles quien había desarrollado las reglas de la lógica formal.Durante la Edad Media en Europa, todo el aprendizaje tenía lugar bajo la atenta mirada de la Iglesia. La teología reinaba entre las ciencias. Filósofos como Aristóteles, el musulmán Averroes [ah-ver-O -ee] y el judío Maimónides eran estudiados junto a la Biblia. Los eruditos estaban especialmente fascinados por Aristóteles. Parecía haber explicado todo el universo, no utilizando las Escrituras, sino sus poderes de observación y razón.Para algunos ultraconservadores, este énfasis en la razón amenazaba con debilitar las creencias tradicionales. Los cristianos habían llegado a pensar que el conocimiento sólo podía llegar a través de la revelación de Dios, que sólo aquellos a quienes Dios decidiera revelar la verdad podían comprender el universo. ¿Cómo podía cuadrar esto con el conocimiento que enseñaban estas filosofías recién redescubiertas?__________________________________________________________________________________________________________La cumbre de la teología escolástica llegó con Tomás de Aquino. Su obra marcó para siempre la dirección del Catolicismo. Su influencia fue tan profunda que se le dio el título de "Dr. Angelicus - el Doctor Angélico". Su obra magna fue la Suma Teológica, en la que afirmaba que el razonamiento filosófico y la fe eran complementos perfectos: La razón conduce a la fe.Nació en Italia, hijo del conde Lundulfo de Aquino y de su esposa Teodora. Desde muy joven quedó claro que Tomás sería un niño físicamente corpulento. A los 5 años fue enviado a una escuela en el cercano monasterio de Monte Cassino que Benito había iniciado 700 años antes. A los 14, Tomás fue a la Universidad de Nápoles, donde su maestro Dominico le impresionó tanto que Tomás decidió que él también se uniría a la nueva orden Dominicana, orientada al estudio.Su familia se opuso ferozmente, esperando que se convirtiera en un rico abad o arzobispo en lugar de hacer el voto de pobreza de los mendicantes. Los hermanos de Tomás lo secuestraron y confinaron durante más de un año. Su familia le tentó con una prostituta y una oferta para comprarle el arzobispado de Nápoles. Tomás no quiso. Se marchó a París, sede de los estudios teológicos de la Europa medieval. Allí cayó bajo el hechizo del erudito Alberto Magno.Cuando Tomás comenzó sus estudios, nadie sospecharía el futuro que le aguardaba. Era colosalmente obeso, gran parte de su tamaño se debía a que padecía edema, también conocido como hidropesía. Tenía un ojo enorme que empequeñecía al otro y daba a su rostro un aspecto distorsionado que muchos encontraban desconcertante. Socialmente, era cualquier cosa menos la figura dinámica y carismática que algunos podrían suponer; ya sabes, algo para compensar su torpe aspecto físico. Aquino era introspectivo y silencioso la mayor parte del tiempo. Cuando hablaba, lo que decía a menudo no tenía nada que ver con la conversación en curso. En la universidad, sus compañeros le llamaban "el buey tonto", un título que parecía apropiado tanto por su aspecto como por su comportamiento.De lo que la gente no se dio cuenta hasta más tarde fue de la mente increíblemente aguda que se escondía tras su aspecto discreto, y de la brillante forma en que era capaz de ordenar sus pensamientos en un lenguaje persuasivo que los demás pudieran entender. Recuerda que el objetivo de los escolásticos era proporcionar una comprensión racional a lo que creen los cristianos. Aquino dio un apoyo crítico a doctrinas como los atributos de Dios, la Resurrección y la creación ex-nihilo; la creación a partir de la nada. Aunque éstas son cosas que defienden la mayoría de los cristianos, Aquino también apoyó creencias claramente Romanas, como la veneración de María, el purgatorio, el papel del mérito humano en la salvación y los siete sacramentos por los que Dios transmite la gracia a través del clero Romano. También dio mucho apoyo a la Transubstanciación, la idea de que los elementos de la Comunión se convierten en el cuerpo y la sangre reales y literales de Cristo en la Misa.Sus pensamientos teológicos y filosóficos le consumían. Según un relato, estaba cenando con el rey Luis IX de Francia. Mientras los demás conversaban, Tomás miraba al vacío, ensimismado. Olvidando o sin importarle dónde estaba, golpeó la mesa con el puño y gritó: "¡Ah! He aquí un argumento que destruirá a los Maniqueos". -- un grupo herético de épocas pasadas.Al principio de su Suma Teológica, Tomás distinguió entre filosofía y teología, entre razón y revelación. Contrariamente a lo que algunos habían afirmado, la verdadera teología y la filosofía no se contradicen. Cada una de ellas es una vía de conocimiento ordenada por Dios.Siguiendo a Aristóteles, Tomás propuso que la razón se basa en lo que nos dicen nuestros sentidos: lo que podemos ver, sentir, oír, oler y tocar. La Revelación se basa en algo más. Aunque la razón puede llevarnos a creer en Dios -algo que ya habían dicho otros teólogos como Anselmo-, sólo la revelación puede mostrarnos a Dios tal como es realmente, el Dios de la Biblia. La filosofía deja clara la existencia de Dios. Pero sólo la teología basada en la Revelación nos dice cómo es el Dios que existe.Tomás aceptó el principio de Aristóteles de que todo efecto tiene una causa, toda causa una causa anterior, y así sucesivamente hasta la Causa Primera. Declaró que la creación se remonta a una Causa Primera divina, el Creador. Sin embargo, el conocimiento pleno de Dios -la Trinidad, por ejemplo- sólo llega a través de la revelación. A partir de este conocimiento descubrimos el origen y el destino del hombre.Aquino continúa: "El hombre es un pecador necesitado de salvación: El hombre es un pecador necesitado de una gracia especial de Dios. Jesucristo, con su sacrificio, ha conseguido la reconciliación del hombre con Dios. Todos los que reciben los beneficios de la obra de Cristo están justificados, pero la clave, como en la enseñanza católica tradicional, reside en la forma en que se aplican los beneficios de la obra de Cristo. Cristo ganó la gracia; pero la Iglesia la imparte. Aquino enseñó que los cristianos necesitan la infusión constante de la "gracia cooperante", mediante la cual se estimulan en el alma las virtudes cristianas. Ayudado por esta gracia cooperante, el cristiano puede hacer obras que agraden a Dios y ganar méritos especiales a los ojos de Dios.Esta gracia, decía Aquino, sólo llega a los hombres a través de los sacramentos divinamente designados y puestos bajo la custodia de la Iglesia; es decir, la Iglesia romana visible y organizada, dirigida por el Papa. Tan convencido estaba Aquino de la autoridad divina del Papado que insistía en que la sumisión al Papa era necesaria para la salvación.Siguiendo a un escolástico anterior, Pedro de Lombardía, Aquino sostuvo que los siete sacramentos son un medio por el que la Iglesia imparte la gracia a las personas. Decía que, puesto que el pecado sigue siendo un problema para el creyente bautizado, Dios proporcionaba la penitencia, un sacramento que permitía la curación espiritual.Con cierta cautela, Tomás también aceptó la práctica de las indulgencias que había ganado aceptación durante las Cruzadas. Aquino enseñaba que, gracias a la obra de Cristo y a los hechos meritorios de los santos, la Iglesia tenía acceso a un "tesoro de méritos", una especie de gran reserva espiritual de bondad sobrante. Los sacerdotes podían recurrir a este depósito para ayudar a los cristianos que no tuvieran méritos propios suficientes. Examinaremos más detenidamente las indulgencias más adelante, cuando lleguemos a la Reforma.Aquino dijo que los malvados pasan al infierno, mientras que los fieles que han utilizado sabiamente los medios de gracia pasan inmediatamente al cielo. Pero el grueso de los cristianos que habían seguido a Cristo de forma inadecuada, tenían que sufrir la purificación en el purgatorio antes de ascender a las alegrías del cielo. Afortunadamente, estas almas no están más allá de la ayuda de la Iglesia en la Tierra, razonaba Aquino. Las oraciones a los santos y las misas especiales podían aliviar las penas de las almas del purgatorio.Ahora bien, no había nada nuevo en todo esto. Ya se había dicho muchas veces. Pero Tomás situó las enseñanzas tradicionales de la Iglesia en un marco cósmico.Los escritos de Tomás, y había más de los que contenía la Summa, fueron atacados antes de que estuviera en la tumba. En 1277, el arzobispo de París intentó que se condenara a Tomás, pero el clero de Roma lo impidió. Aunque Tomás fue canonizado en 1325, pasaron otros 200 años antes de que sus enseñanzas fueran aclamadas como preeminentes y una importante refutación del protestantismo. Sus escritos desempeñaron un papel destacado en el Concilio de Trento de la Contrarreforma.En 1879, una bula papal respaldó la teología de Aquino, hoy conocida como Tomismo, como expresión auténtica de la doctrina y dijo que debía ser estudiada por todos los estudiantes de teología. Tanto los eruditos Protestantes como los Católicos estudian profundamente su obra.Probablemente, el propio Tomás no estaría satisfecho. Hacia el final de su vida, tuvo una visión que le obligó a abandonar su pluma. Aunque había experimentado tales visiones durante años, ésta era diferente. Su secretario le rogó que recogiera la pluma y continuara, pero Aquino replicó: "No puedo. Se me han revelado tales cosas que lo que he escrito no parece más que paja". Su Suma Teológica, uno de los escritos más influyentes de la historia de la Iglesia, quedó inconclusa cuando murió tres meses después.
Bea and Abby speak with Kathy McAfee about how capitalist "solutions" to climate crisis--like carbon trading and offset markets--don't work, and how ultimately there is no such thing as "green capitalism." Find our book Health Communism here: www.versobooks.com/books/4081-health-communism Death Panel merch here (patrons get a discount code): www.deathpanel.net/merch As always, support Death Panel at www.patreon.com/deathpanelpod For more on the concept of "The Right to Maim" that Beatrice references in this episode, see our episode with Jasbir Puar here: https://soundcloud.com/deathpanel/body-politics-w-jasbir-puar-unlocked
After a harrowing encounter brings closure to one of our heroes, the party sets sail for the impending battle of Gallowspire. Tune in as the end begins now! Website: hideouslaughterpodcast.com Patreon: patreon.com/hideouslaughter Ko-Fi: https://ko-fi.com/hideouslaughterproductions BESTOW CURSE RSS: https://feed.podbean.com/bestowcurse/feed.xml Etsy: https://www.etsy.com/shop/HideousLaughterPod Discord: https://discord.gg/ruG6hxB Email: thehideouslaughterpodcast@gmail.com Twitter/Snapchat: @laughterhideous Facebook/Instagram: @hideouslaughterpod Reddit: reddit.com/r/HideousLaughter Die Hard Dice Code: Hideous Background Music: Syrinscape Theme Song By Kevin McLeod
0:00 Intro 5:03 Headlines 30:49 Interview with Jim Gale 1:15:08 Interview with Todd Coconato - Climate lunatics in the Biden regime now going after DISHWASHER appliances - Climate tyrants want Americans to live with NO stoves, NO hot water, NO flushing toilets, NO cars and NO dishwashers - Fast food chains found to be using bizarre FILLERS in their chicken nugget menu items - Biden reluctantly brings back Trump rule to slow the mass asylum rush on the US border - Biden family crime cartel took $10 million in bribes to peddle influence - AI chatbot to replace human workers at fast food drive through restaurants - Ex VP of Pfizer reveals covid vaccines were a DELIBERATE operation to MAIM and KILL billions worldwide - JD Rucker warns that the collapse of society is accelerating - Full interview with Jim Gale, inspiring others to grow sustainable, regenerative food forests - Intead of mutilating childrens' genitals, why don't we teach them to grow food? - Interview with Pastor Todd Coconato, who warns about the fall of the Church and the rise of demonic influence across America For more updates, visit: http://www.brighteon.com/channel/hrreport NaturalNews videos would not be possible without you, as always we remain passionately dedicated to our mission of educating people all over the world on the subject of natural healing remedies and personal liberty (food freedom, medical freedom, the freedom of speech, etc.). Together, we're helping create a better world, with more honest food labeling, reduced chemical contamination, the avoidance of toxic heavy metals and vastly increased scientific transparency. ▶️ Every dollar you spend at the Health Ranger Store goes toward helping us achieve important science and content goals for humanity: https://www.healthrangerstore.com/ ▶️ Sign Up For Our Newsletter: https://www.naturalnews.com/Readerregistration.html ▶️ Brighteon: https://www.brighteon.com/channels/hrreport ▶️ Join Our Social Network: https://brighteon.social/@HealthRanger ▶️ Check In Stock Products at: https://PrepWithMike.com
The Alan Cox Show