Set of five annual international awards, primarily established in 1895 by Alfred Nobel
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Did “Mumbling” Mike quit?/ The Noble Prize winner from GA has a plan. To advertise on our podcast, please reach out to sales@advertisecast.com or visit https://www.advertisecast.com/TheJeffWardShow
NOBLE PRIZE ECONOMICS 2024 - ECOLONOMY - WHY RICH BECOMES RICHER AND POOR BECOMES POORER ?
Bunny is in the seaside garden of Anna Pasternak. Anna is well known as a journalist and author. Anna had the privilege of growing up in a Gertrude Jekyll garden as a child, and loves gardens with different spaces or rooms within them. One of Anna's favourite plants is lilac, as they were her great uncle, Boris Pasternak's favourite. Boris Pasternak won a Noble Prize for his book ‘Dr Zhivago'. Anna wrote a book ‘Lara: The Untold Love Story that Inspired Doctor Zhivago”, the book revealed for the first time the critical role played by Olga Ivinskaya (Boris's mistress) in his life, and argues that without Olga it is likely that Doctor Zhivago would never have been completed or published. Anna has also authored “Princess in Love” (about Diana and James Hewitt) and ‘Untitled:The Real Wallis Simpson'. Her mission is to write books that rehabilitate women whom history has treated unfairly. For her present, Bunny took Anna a little known plant, Aloysia polystachya, which can be used to make a delicious herbal tea that has been proven to help relieve anxiety.
On today's show we open with a just released report from the House Committee on the Weaponization of Government, showing the 51 “spies who lied” about the Hunter Biden laptop knew they were lying and knew they were colluding with the Biden campaign. In fact, there were active CIA contractors who were part of the plan to pull off the PsyOp attack on the American electorate. Squad member Jamaal Bowman, who thinks fire alarms open locked doors, was just crushed in a democrat primary in New York State. He lost to democrat centrist George Latimer, who was much friendlier toward Israel than the Hamas-loving Bowman. In what I believe is a complete dereliction of duty, the Supreme Court of the United States of America, in a 6-3 decision, said that censorship case brought before them could not be decided due to a lack of standing. Justice Alito, who wrote the dissenting opinion believe the Court shirks it's duty and thus “permits the successful campaign of coercion in this case to stand as an attractive model for future officials who want to control what the people say, hear and think.” Constitutional scholar and law professor Jonathan Turley is equally disappointed in the Court's failure to uphold and defend the First Amendment. DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas wants us to believe that we have never had a “more robust screening and vetting process” for guarding our border and knowing who is coming into our country. On the same day he stated that, NBC News ran a story of 50+ illegals with ties to ISIS-affiliated smuggling networks that were stopped by border patrol, but then allowed to enter the country. On a more positive note, Attorney General Andrew Bailey from Missouri just stated the Court granted his motion to block Joe Biden's illegal student loan forgiveness plan. It's a win for the Constitution, but as Biden repeatedly shows, he likely will ignore them. WH Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre wants you to believe food prices have come down thanks to Joe Biden. She is one of the dumbest people in the White House. She doesn't understand that a slower pace of inflation is still inflation! Keeping with economic news, Axios reveals that 16 Noble Prize winners in economics say if Trump wins, his plan will detonate an inflation bomb. That's cute, given and equal number of Laureates stated that Biden's “Build Back Better” plan would not cause inflation, would not increase the debt and would pay for itself. Seems the Nobel Prize doesn't mean all that much anymore, as it relates to economics. As I close, I dive into someone else's theory that Joe Biden will not be replaced because why would they? The forces behind this radical transformation of our country are getting everything they want. It's a compelling argument and one that should be considered. Finally, off the topic, but something close to me and my family, I spend just a few minutes discussing the new Harry Potter series that is being developed for HBO. I know it has nothing to do with politics, but it's a reminder that it's okay to unplug from the world from time-to-time and enjoy a good movie, a good book, a good album or just good walk outside. Take a moment to rate and review the show and then share the episode on social media. You can find me on Facebook, X, Instagram, GETTR and TRUTH Social by searching for The Alan Sanders Show. You can also support the show by visiting my Patreon page!
What, if anything, lasts forever? What is impervious to the ravages of time? What can we do today that will still be talked about a hundred years from now? I have been thinking about these questions since May 13, which is the day that a great writer named Alice Munro died. Alice Munro won the Noble Prize in Literature in 2013. She was an absolute master of the short story genre. I had never read her work before her death, so I started reading a collection with the title Too Much Happiness, published in 2009. As you might imagine, the title Too Much Happiness is ironic. The characters in this collection do not have too much happiness. One story is about a recently widowed woman named Nita. She had been married to a man twenty years older named Rich. They expected she would be the first to pass, because she was fighting cancer, and because he had gotten a recent clean bill of health from his doctor. But soon after the doctor's appointment, he passed suddenly and unexpectedly while on the way to the hardware store. It dawns on Nita that her life has changed not temporarily, but permanently. Rich is not coming back. The patterns they used to enjoy will not happen again. Who she used to be, a wife to Rich, she is no longer. And she faces this new reality with her own health challenges. She used to be a voracious reader. When Rich died, at first she thought I'll just read. So she would sit with her books in her comfy chair. They kept her company. She liked the feel of them. But she realized she could not read them anymore. Her medical treatments had diminished her attention span. What she used to be able to do, she can do no longer. Is happiness when circumstances change permanently still possible? Munro's story captures a dilemma that many of us find ourselves in. The world is changing. Our world is changing. And we wonder is it changing temporarily. Or is it changing permanently? It is not always easy, or even possible, to know for sure. Think back to the worst of Covid. In the darkest days of the pandemic, we wondered whether we would we ever be able to gather in big, robust, happy gatherings without worry again. Now we know the answer is yes. But we didn't necessarily know it at the time. There is a recency bias. The moment we are in is so powerful. Remember how we all felt in the early days of the pandemic. Now we have a different set of questions. What will be with Israel? What will be with the American Jewish community? Is our golden age over, or will the spike of anti-Semitism pass like Covid 19 passed? Will our relationship with our alma mater ever be loving and uncomplicated again?
Send us a Text Message.This is the third of a multi-episode series in which I chat with Dr. Larissa ‘Kat' Tracey about literary representations of medieval adultery and its reality. In this episode Kat and I survey and discuss the major nineteenth- and twentieth-century literary treatments of medieval adultery, focusing on the stories of La(u)ncelot and Guinevere and of Tristan/Tristram and Isolde/Isolt/Iseult The episode begins with an opera, Richard Wagner's extremely influential retelling of the tale, Tristan und Isolde. Although composed between 1857 and 1859, the opera did not premiere until 1865, because it was deemed too expensive to stage and its complex, innovative music was thought to be unperformable. We consider how Wagner reconceived his medieval source, Gottfried of Strassburg's thirteenth-century romance, through the lens of Schopenhauer's life-denying philosophy, and how in its composition art imitated life, as Wagner engaged in what was the very least an emotional affair with his wealthy Swiss patron's wife. Kat and I then discuss the very different treatments of these Arthurian stories about adultery by three leading Victorian poets and one early twentieth-century American: the poet Laureate Alfred Lord Tennyson, the decadent aesthete Algernon Swinburne, the Pre-Raphaelite artist and author William Morris, and the popular American poet Edwin Arlington Robinson, whose now all-but-forgotten best-selling poem Tristram won the Pulitzer Prize in 1928. We then turn to how twentieth-century novelists have handled the moral issues arising from medieval adultery in their renditions of the Arthurian legend. The episode concludes with an analysis of adultery in a non-Arthurian medieval novel, Sigrid Undset's historical trilogy about fourteenth-century Norway, Kristin Lavransdatter (1920-1923), which earned the author the Noble Prize for Literature in 1928, the same year that Robinson's very different Tristram won the Pulitzer. Kat and I began this episode with the intention of covering both modern literature and movies dealing with medieval adultery. But it became clear as we were recording that a single episode would be very long. So we decided to talk about medieval adultery on film in a final, fourth episode, which I will be releasing in about a week's time. And that will be it for medieval adultery, although I plan to have Kat return in future to talk about a subject on which she has written extensively, torture and cruelty in medieval literature. As I have jokingly told her, she is my go to person for medieval perversities. This episode contains two musical snippets:Wagner's “Prelude to the Liebestod [Love Death]” from his opera Tristan und Isolde, conducted by Arturo Toscanini (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lBFcDGTzgAI) “If Ever I Would Leave You” from the musical Camelot, lyrics and music by Lerner and Loewe and sung by Robert Goulet as Lancelot (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xL52hEArSfM) In my discussion of the literary texts, I drew upon the researches of several scholars, among them:John Deathridge, Wagner Beyond Good and Evil, University of California Press, 2008R.J.A. Kilbourn, “Redemption Revalued in Tristan und Isolde: Schopenhauer, Wagner, Nietzsche,” in University of Toronto Quarterly, Volume 67, Number 4, Fall 1998, pp. 781-788“Tristan und Isolde,” Wikipedia (yes, I do consult Wikipedia)“Listen on Podurama https://podurama.com Intro and exit music are by Alexander NakaradaIf you have questions, feel free to contact me at richard.abels54@gmail.com
Join Camila and Jen as they discuss The Dutch House by Ann Patchett. A finalist for the 2020 Noble Prize for Fiction, The Dutch House begins in the 1960s and explores the questions of inheritance, love, and forgiveness over the span of five decades.
We take a shot at every experiment put in front of us this week and knock it out of the park. Please send this to a Nobel Prize judge... For more amazing podcasts check out thePFPN.com!
Coralie Cooper, deputy director of NESCAUM, talks about the role of the organization and how medium- and heavy-duty trucks fit into her work. She also talks about what influenced her work including her Noble Prize-winning father's influence. She also shares her impression of NACFE's day at the White House, and what's on NESCAUM's 2024 agenda.
A law signed by President Abraham Lincoln in 1862 created the cornerstone for America's leadership in engineering and agriculture. Known as the Morrill Act, the law established land grant universities in states across the country, including Purdue University in Indiana. Since the university's launch in 1869, it has become a research powerhouse becoming the only university in the country to have both a top 10 ranked college of agriculture and college engineering. Its graduates include 27 astronauts, 3 World Food Prize laureates, 2 Noble Prize winners and the pace continues to quicken. Today we are joined by Purdue's Executive Vice President of Resreach, Dr. Karen Plaut, to share how the university is building on its momentum to advance research and create the economy of the future. Asking “what if” has been the cornerstone of Karen's career and she talks all things innovation at Purdue and where they see their greatest opportunities for impact – from agbioscience to aerospace. As the former dean of the College of Agriculture, she explores the idea that technologies across different disciplines have meaningful effect on food. Karen also talks research influencing legislation, commercializing and conducting basic research that will drastically improve lives in the future. So, what are the next gigantic leaps for Purdue? Karen talks about students being at the core of the university's success, new intersections for driving change and agbioscience's critical role in the future.
MPF Discussion with Manuj AggarwalUpgrade your Operating System with Manuj Aggarwal ManujA global thought leader who has been in AI for 15 years and has 4 patents in AI? I have served clients like Microsoft, IBM, Pearson Education, and more, producing $500 million in value for them. My work has impacted over 10 million lives and has been mentioned by the likes of President Obama and Bill Gates. I've got the perfect mix of humour, intelligence, and human relatability to take your podcast to new heights. With my deep knowledge and experience, I can break down complex topics so that even a 10-year-old can understand them – which means your listeners will be laughing, learning, and loving every minute of it! As a loving parent and ambitious overachiever, I've got stories that will inspire your audience and show them that with a little courage and some insight, anything is possible. An inspiring discussion on this episode of My Perfect Failure (Upgrade your Operating System) Manuj reveals his journey growing up in a small town in India where he went from earning $2/day working 12-hour days to the boardrooms of Fortune 500 and sharing the stage with Noble Prize winners. Some Of The Areas We Discuss· Going from earning $2 dollars a day to sharing the stage with noble prize winners.· How difficult moments ignited Manuj's desire to succeed.· Being forced into entrepreneurship.· Why Failures are opportunities to grow & succeed.· Understanding the power of our minds· How we can use successfully use Chat GPT to manifest, meditate and grow. Links to ManujWebsite: manujaggarwal.com Connect with Manuj on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/manujaggarwal/ Follow Podcast: Bootstrapping Your Dreams Show: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/bootstrapping-your-dreams-show/id1453077497 Please Leave A Review Like this show? Please leave us a review here, even one sentence helps! Consider including your Twitter handle so we can thank you personally! Paul: Contact Details · Work with me: paul@myperfectfailure.com · MPF Website: http://www.myperfectfailure.com/ · Insta: follow: https://www.instagram.com/myperfectfailure/ · Twitter: https://twitter.com/failure_perfect
Did you know that less than .2 percent of the world is Jewish? And yet, more than 20 percent of all Noble Prize winners are Jewish. What explains the high likelihood of success? On this episode of Big Shot shorts, Harley Finkelstein and David Segal explore the history of Jewish entrepreneurship with legends Charles Bronfman, Aldo Bensadoun, and Ed Sonshine. Their competitive advantage? They had everything to lose, giving them no choice but to find a way to win. — In This Episode, We Cover: (00:25) The tidal wave analogy (03:30) Why are so many Jews successful? (05:15) Entrepreneurs by necessity (06:55) The curious relationship between anti-semitism and Jewish entrepreneurship (10:00) The surprisingly small number of Jews in the world (11:35) The Jewish career path (16:50) Why Ed Sonshine is worried for future entrepreneurs (18:40) It's tough to make diamonds without pressure — Where To Find Big Shot: Website: https://www.bigshot.show/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@bigshotpodcast TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@bigshotshow Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bigshotshow/ Harley Finkelstein: https://twitter.com/harleyf David Segal: https://twitter.com/tea_maverick Production and Marketing: https://penname.co
As regular viewers know, this channel's mission is focused on wealth building, how to help its viewers fund their life goals. Risk management is a big part of successfully building wealth. But many people -- even sometimes the "smartest guys on Wall Street" -- fail to adequately protect themselves from downside risk. Perhaps the best-known example of this is the surprise implosion of the hedge fund Long Term Capital Management, back in the late 1990s. The firm was helmed by some of Wall Street's most revered talent as well as several recipients of the Noble Prize in Economics -- and yet it failed spectacularly. What lessons can we learn from this? And what chance does the regular investor have in making good financial decisions over time when even the cream of the crop can get things so wrong? For answers, we're fortunate to hear from Victor Haghani, one of the co-founding partners of Long Term Capital Management and co-author of the brand new book, The Missing Billionaires: A Guide to Better Financial Decisions #investing #wealthbuilding #wallstreet ************************ At Wealthion, we show you how to protect and build your wealth by learning from the world's top experts on finance and money. Each week we add new videos that provide you with access to the foremost specialists in investing, economics, the stock market, real estate and personal finance. Let us help you prepare your portfolio just in case the future brings one or more of the following: inflation, deflation, a bull market, a bear market, a market correction, a stock market crash, a real estate bubble, a real estate crash, an economic boom, a recession, a depression, or another global financial crisis. Put the wisdom from the money & markets experts we feature on Wealthion into action by scheduling a free consultation with Wealthion's endorsed financial advisors, who will work with you to determine the right next steps for you to take in building your wealth. SCHEDULE YOUR FREE WEALTH CONSULTATION with Wealthion's endorsed financial advisors here: https://www.wealthion.com/ Subscribe to our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKMeK-HGHfUFFArZ91rzv5A?sub_confirmation=1 Follow Adam on Twitter: https://twitter.com/menlobear Follow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Wealthion-109680281218040 ****************************** IMPORTANT NOTE: The information, opinions, and insights expressed by our guests do not necessarily reflect the views of Wealthion. They are intended to provide a diverse perspective on the economy, investing, and other relevant topics to enrich your understanding of these complex fields. While we value and appreciate the insights shared by our esteemed guests, they are to be viewed as personal opinions and not as official investment advice or recommendations from Wealthion. These opinions should not replace your own due diligence or the advice of a professional financial advisor. We strongly encourage all of our audience members to seek out the guidance of a financial advisor who can provide advice based on your individual circumstances and financial goals. Wealthion has a distinguished network of advisors who are available to guide you on your financial journey. However, should you choose to seek guidance elsewhere, we respect and support your decision to do so. The world of finance and investment is intricate and diverse. It's our mission at Wealthion to provide you with a variety of insights and perspectives to help you navigate it more effectively. We thank you for your understanding and your trust.
Get the lowdown on the latest Nobel Prize in medicine, messenger RNA technology. There's a bit of a personal connection too - turns out, Dr. Koren went to college with one of the Nobel laureates. Dr. Koren's insights on the Nobel-winning research in messenger RNA is enlightening and promises to be a game-changing future for medicine. And it's not just about the COVID-19 vaccines; this technology could also revolutionize treatments for cancer and congestive heart failure! Learn more about the Noble Prize in Medicine 2023Be a part of advancing science by participating in clinical researchShare with a friend. Rate, Review, and Subscribe to the MedEvidence! podcast to be notified when new episodes are released.Follow us on Social Media:FacebookInstagramTwitterLinkedIn Powered by ENCORE Research GroupMusic: Storyblocks - Corporate InspiredThank you for listening!
* காந்தி சிலைக்கு ஒன்றாக மரியாதை செய்த ஆளுநர் & முதல்வர்! * சென்னை மாநகராட்சி ஆணையருக்கு டெங்கு? * இடைநிலை ஆசிரியர்கள் தொடர் போராட்டம்... என்ன செய்கிறது திமுக அரசு?* வானதி டெல்லி பயணம் ஏன்? * மருத்துவத் துறையில் NOBLE PRIZE வென்ற மருத்துவர்கள்.-The Imperfect show
The aptly named novel, “Trust” is about a man who accumulated a fortune in the early 20th century stock market. The flimflam nature of the stock market, its collapse in '29 and even the unreliable nature of the story the author tells, are elements of this book that won the Noble Prize for Literature. “Trust” by Hernan Diaz
In this Episode, James Parkyn & François Doyon La Rochelle review the latest eBook authored by James Parkyn titled Investing Life Skills for Early Savers. This eBook is available on the Capital topics website and in our Team's section on the PWL Capital website and will provide important life skills that will serve early savers on the road of making smart money decisions. eBook: Investing Life Skills for Early Savers - PWL Capital Read The Script: Introduction: François Doyon La Rochelle: You're listening to Capital Topics, episode #54! This is a monthly podcast about passive asset management and financial and tax planning ideas for the long-term investor. Your hosts for this podcast are James Parkyn and me François Doyon La Rochelle, both portfolio managers with PWL Capital. In this episode, we will review the latest eBook authored by James titled INVESTING LIFE SKILLS FOR EARLY SAVERS. Enjoy! Investing Life Skills for Early Savers : François Doyon La Rochelle: In today's Podcast, we will cover only one Topic which is a Review of the latest eBook Authored by you James titled INVESTING LIFE SKILLS FOR EARLY SAVERS. This ebook is available on the Capital Topics website and in our Team's section on the PWL Capital website. This has been a major effort and, in our Team, we made a strategic decision a few years back to add Next Generation clients to our Practice which includes the children of our current clients. James Parkyn: Yes, this has been a major undertaking as these younger clients are, in many cases, in the early stages of learning about saving and investing. In some cases, their thinking and experience are surprisingly advanced. In the case of the children of our clients, the parents were very happy we are undertaking this initiative. For them, it is part of their family values to help them develop what they consider to be an essential life skill going forward in their lives. Many of them also realize they wish they had started much younger than they did. François Doyon La Rochelle: For our Listeners, this is an eBook format, so it is relatively short at 28 pages with a lot of pictures and graphic illustrations and, is meant to be an easy jargon-free read. James, what is the main message you are trying to get across to Early Savers? James Parkyn: My main message is about the importance of starting early. It is a life skill that will serve you well on the road of life and will give you the confidence to make smart money decisions. Just to be clear for our listeners, what we mean by 'Life Skills' are the skills you need to make the most out of life. Any skill that is useful in your life can be considered a life skill. Early savers need to make this a high priority. François Doyon La Rochelle: You have had a lot of meetings with Early Savers over the last few years and what did you learn? James Parkyn: First off, I had to connect with them, so I decided to start the conversation from the vantage point of “Start with Why”. The idea comes from Author Simon Sinek who wrote a highly regarded book on the topic. François Doyon La Rochelle: What else resonates for them? James Parkyn: Well, I always like to connect with anecdotes about music. I mention the song “Time” by Pink Floyd from the seminal album “Dark Side of the Moon published in the early 1970s”. François Doyon La Rochelle: Ok, but this music is from their Parents' generation. There is another song on that album called “Money”, but the lyrics are mostly political. James Parkyn: To my surprise, many know Pink Floyd and the song. What I like about the lyrics from the song “Time” is that they convey a key message about the importance of starting early. I suspect the Band probably did not realize it when they wrote the words but somehow, they related a fundamental lesson about learning Investing Life Skills early. François Doyon La Rochelle: What do the lyrics say? James Parkyn: “Ticking away the moments that make up a dull day. Fritter and waste the hours in an offhand way. Kicking around on a piece of ground in your hometown. Waiting for someone or something to show you the way. Tired of lying in the sunshine, staying home to watch the rain. You are young and life is long, and there is time to kill today. And then one day you find ten years have got behind you. No one told you when to run, you missed the starting gun.” François Doyon La Rochelle: Wow, that's incredible how relevant the message is to our Topic. This new eBook is trying to help Early Savers to understand the importance of starting now. There will be no one to fire a starting gun to tell you to start learning and investing. James Parkyn: Exactly Francois. For me personally the joy of seeing the light go on about Investing in Life Skills is because they realize the concepts are really “accessible”. François Doyon La Rochelle: I like your choice of the word “Accessible” because it is very empowering to know and really feel “I can do this!”. So, James let's get into the meat of the eBook content. What are the Life Skills Early Savers need to develop? James Parkyn: We cover seven Investing Life Skills. The first Life Skill is Getting started. Investing in some Early Savers can be scary: “Where do I start? It is so complicated!” Even worse, some Early Savers may wonder “Why do I need to pay attention now? I have all my life ahead of me!” When you're starting, it's not easy to find the best route to achieving the financial goals you have set for yourself and your family. There are so many competing priorities to consider and only limited resources to commit to any one of them. François Doyon La Rochelle: Adding to the challenge in today's wired world with the internet and social media ever present, Early Savers have way too much information at their fingertips and in fact, what they are seeking is real knowledge and practical information that they can use to get started and to help them on this new journey they are starting. James Parkyn: I agree which is why we explain key concepts to help Early Savers take the first critical steps on their financial journey. And yes, Francois, we hope they will learn how to make good decisions and avoid major mistakes. François Doyon La Rochelle: Getting started is all about explaining the magic of compound interest. Maybe you can explain to our listeners what compound interest is. James Parkyn: Compounding is no small thing. Albert Einstein is reputed to have called it the eighth wonder of the world. It's the interest on the interest you've already earned. In other words, compounding is the money you earn on your original investment, plus the money you earn on the returns already accumulated over time. François Doyon La Rochelle: There's another important reason for getting started early on your investing journey. You will be getting into the habit of saving while learning the principles of investing and building your confidence. James Parkyn: Precisely! When you have lived through many bear markets and as you know Francois, we have had four since 2000, then your experience as an Investor with a Long-Term Mindset you will be less likely to panic sell because you have a well-engineered diversified portfolio is that you will recover and go on to grow in value. François Doyon La Rochelle: What's a good way to get started? James Parkyn: Early Savers should set up an automatic withdrawal from their bank account that goes directly to an investment account. That's called paying yourself first (before all your other expenses), and it works because you naturally adjust your spending to the amount of money you have on hand. François Doyon La Rochelle: James let's discuss the second Life Skill Early Savers need to develop: Managing your Human Capital. James Parkyn: Many people are unaware of their most valuable asset. It remains hidden in plain sight because it's taken for granted. What is this asset? Your potential to generate income over your lifetime. It's called your human capital and can be defined as the present value of all your future earnings. For most people, that works out to a huge number, especially if you're young. Your human capital is even more valuable because it's a hedge against inflation. Earnings tend to rise with the cost of living. François Doyon La Rochelle: James the term “present value of all your future earnings” is jargon for many Listeners and Early Savers. James Parkyn: Human capital is the present value of all future wages from working. You can increase your human capital by continuing your education or going for on-the-job training. Think of all your future expected earnings that you will take home as compensation up to the time you will retire from working. Then, estimate what it would be worth as a lump sum of investment capital. François Doyon La Rochelle: As it grows, you also need to protect your human capital in the same way you safeguard other important assets. James Parkyn: If you're like most people, you'll be rich in human capital when you start out in your working life, but poor in financial capital. As you move through your career, your goal should be to convert your human capital into financial capital by earning, saving and making good investment decisions. Both forms of capital are important, give them both the attention they deserve. François Doyon La Rochelle: When you add into the mix the compound return on both Human and Financial Capital that is how you get to financial independence however you may define it. James let's now discuss the third skill Early Savers need to develop: Cultivating an Investor Mindset. James Parkyn: Many people approach investing as if it were a game of chance that can be won by placing bets on the latest hot stock or investment fad. Blackrock Asset Management surveyed in 2015, 51% of Canadians said at the time that they believe investing is like gambling. While investing and gambling both involve risking money in hopes of realizing a financial gain, that's where the similarity ends. Investing – when done right – is about buying assets that have a positive expected return thanks to the income they pay and/or their long-term capital appreciation. François Doyon La Rochelle: We have covered this concept in a past Podcast. The difference between Investing and Speculating sometimes is a question of perspective and timeline. Speculation often means you expect short-term easy gains. This is a question that challenges even us professionals. James Parkyn: I agree. But for Early Savers, the Life Skill to develop is patiently sticking to a broadly diversified portfolio that reflects their risk tolerance and accepting that it may not produce the excitement of trying to hit the jackpot on a hot stock or a cryptocurrency. But they shouldn't be investing for thrills. Your aim should be to achieve your long-term goals, and that's not something to gamble on. I have heard the expression it is ok to lose money when you are young you can make it up later in life. I hate that and tell Early Savers to beware as if you look at the loss based on the effect of compounding over multiple decades of your lifespan then the loss is massively larger. François Doyon La Rochelle: Next up is the fourth Life Skill Early Savers need to develop: Keeping Your Eye on the Long Term. What is your message about this Life Skill? James Parkyn: Successful investors make consistent, smart money decisions and stick with them through market ups and downs over a period of decades. That requires discipline, an essential skill to learn early in your investing life. Develop your Plan and stick to it. François Doyon La Rochelle: This is about not falling prey to the noise in the financial media and trading based on short-term capital market events and economic news. We have talked often on our Podcast about avoiding “market timing”. Researchers have found it's one of the worst wealth-destroying mistakes you can make. A sharp downturn in the markets can be particularly difficult for some people to stomach. They talk themselves into the idea that they can pull out now and get back in when things get better. James Parkyn: However, trying to time the market presents at least two problems. First, if you sell now, when will you know it's safe to buy back into the market? Second, you risk missing out on gains while you're on the sidelines and that can have a huge impact on your long-term returns. While it can be challenging, the best investment strategy – as supported by decades of academic research – is to hold a portfolio of broadly diversified, passively managed investments through good times and bad. Why passively managed? Because research clearly shows that most active fund managers underperform their index benchmark in any given year. François Doyon La Rochelle: The fifth Life Skill Early Savers need to develop: Understanding Human Biases. James, what do you say to Early savers about the psychological aspects of Investing? James Parkyn: I tell them they need to understand how their basic human instincts can cause them to make poor financial decisions. We all fall prey to mental and emotional biases that can lead to serious investing errors. François Doyon La Rochelle: To control the influence of mental and emotional biases, you must first be aware of them and then guide yourself back to rational thinking and good decision-making processes. What are some of the key biases? James Parkyn: Behavioral economics has been a huge growth area with two major Nobel Prizes being awarded to academics for their work in the past 20 years or so. There is an amazing amount of research that deals with Behavioral biases. I highlight the top 4 that I believe Early Savers should watch out for in your thinking about investments. Recency Bias: This is the tendency to give greater importance to events that have occurred in the recent past. Recency bias can cause you to depart from your investment plan to jump on a hot market trend or sell during a market downturn. Over-Confidence: It's common for people to develop unwarranted confidence in their abilities, including their ability to make exceptional profits in financial markets. Overconfidence can lead investors to make risky bets based on a misguided belief in their ability to predict the future. Confirmation Bias: This occurs when investors seek out information that confirms their point of view and discount divergent opinions. Loss Aversion: Behavioral finance researchers have determined that people feel the pain of a loss about twice as strong as the pleasure they get from an equivalent gain. Loss aversion is another bias that can distort your decision-making by causing you to prioritize avoiding losses over earning gains. François Doyon La Rochelle: Good investment advice and processes such as annual portfolio reviews, automatic contributions, and periodic portfolio rebalancing can help Early Savers keep their emotions in check and keep them on track with their Long-Term Investment plan. The sixth Life Skill Early Savers need to develop: Diversifying to Reduce Your Risk. This is another topic we address often on our Podcast. What is the message of this Life Skill? James Parkyn: Diversifying your portfolio by holding many investments in different markets is a fundamental strategy for successful investing. Noble Prize-winning economist Harry Markowitz famously described it as “the only free lunch in finance.” François Doyon La Rochelle: Markowitz demonstrated that when you combine assets that perform differently over time you lower the overall riskiness of your portfolio without reducing expected returns. James Parkyn: It comes down to not putting all your eggs in one basket. When you own just a few stocks, the failure of any one of those companies can lead to a permanent loss of your savings. But when you own many stocks—ideally all of them in a given market— the poor performance of some will be offset by the better performance of others. François Doyon La Rochelle: A word of caution: This doesn't mean you will never lose, but your gains and losses will reflect those of the overall market. You've removed what's known as unsystematic risk – the risk unique to a specific company or industry. James Parkyn: The same principle applies to holding different asset types such as stocks, bonds, and real estate. Each produces different returns in any given period and by combining them in a portfolio you reduce its riskiness. François Doyon La Rochelle: It may come as a surprise, but research shows that many investors hold woefully under-diversified portfolios. James Parkyn: Fortunately, Early Savers can avoid this basic investing error by owning passively managed funds that allow you to broadly diversify at a very low cost. François Doyon La Rochelle: The seventh and last Life Skill Early Savers need to develop: Controlling Your Emotions. James, how is this Life Skill different compared to learning about Human cognitive biases? James Parkyn: Great Question Francois. As you said earlier, here is the message I want to convey is to pay attention to how you react emotionally to market volatility. Among the most important of these is to tune out media noise about the day-to-day movements in the markets and focus instead on your long-term Investment plan. It should have asset allocation targets that reflect your objectives and risk tolerance. As markets move up or down, you periodically rebalance your portfolio back to your target asset allocations and keep your faith that the process works overtime. François Doyon La Rochelle: As we have stated before, The Financial Services industry and the Financial Media promote active management which pushes us to do a lot of trading. Think of all the industry advertising showing someone in front of a trading screen of stock quotes. Unfortunately, many Investors equate trading with adding value. James Parkyn: I have a great quote from a longtime collaborator of Warrant Buffett, Louis Simpson, who oversaw investments at Berkshire Hathaway's giant GEICO insurance subsidiary. He once said: “We do a lot of thinking and not a lot of acting. A lot of investors do a lot of acting and not a lot of thinking.” For me, this, in a nutshell, reflects how we manage our clients' money and how we are different from most of the financial services industry. We buy very carefully; we hold and defer tax and rebalance when it makes sense to do so. We do this all while sticking to the Clients' well-thought-out plans. François Doyon La Rochelle: I love this quote too. Louis A. Simpson was one of Warren Buffett's favorite fund managers and a one-time potential successor. He was much lesser known than Buffett or Charlie Munger. Sadly, he passed away at the beginning of 2022 at age 85. We should point out to our Listeners that by acting a lot he means trading a lot. So now, let's get back to the Investing Life Skill of Controlling Your Emotions. When markets go up it's relatively easy to keep your emotions in check for most investors when your portfolio goes up every day. James Parkyn: Down markets are a fact of life when you invest. Taking a controlled amount of risk is what allows you to earn returns and build your wealth. However, falling markets can create anxiety and pressure to act which can feel overwhelming at times. This is when investors must control their emotions to avoid making errors that will lead to a permanent loss of capital. François Doyon La Rochelle: All Investors must guard against the fact their thoughts can deceive them. You may think you're making rational decisions when in fact your actions are being driven by fear. That's why you should prepare yourself for market downturns by striving to recognize when you're feeling under stress and cultivating strategies to deal with unhealthy emotions. James, you also provide recommendations for Books. What do you recommend? James Parkyn: First, I recommend that the Early Savers read our eBook “7 Deadly Sins of Investing” that we published in 2021. It is in some ways a companion piece to this new eBook. I also recommend two must-reads for Early Savers who want to develop a deeper level of knowledge: The Psychology of Money by Morgan Housel: This is a very popular book and it is very useful to both Professional Investors and Individuals. award-winning author Morgan Housel shares 19 short stories exploring the strange ways people think about money and teaches you how to make better sense of one of life's most important topics. Think, Act, and Invest Like Warren Buffett by Larry E. Swedroe Think, act and invest like the best investor out there: Warren Buffett. While you can't invest exactly like he does, Think, Act, and Invest Like Warren Buffett provides a solid, sensible investing approach based on Buffett's advice regarding investment strategies. François Doyon La Rochelle: James, you also provide recommendations for Books for Parents. What Books do you recommend for them? James Parkyn: I recommend two very good but different books: It Makes Total Cents by Tom Henske. He is an American author. Some material in this book is specific to Americans Investors and reflects US tax laws. It Makes Total Cents (spelled with a “c” as a play on words) is a short, easy-to-read bite-size guide to help parents. This concise book is meant to be read a chapter per month covering the 12 most important money topics that a child should understand before going to university or college. The Wisest Investment by Robin Taub. She is a Canadian and her book is about teaching your kids to be responsible, independent, and money smart. Robin Taub lays out a roadmap for teaching your kids about money. Financial literacy has been a long-ignored subject and the result has been generation after generation entering adulthood without a grasp of money basics. This eventually leads to unnecessary stress in adulthood and ultimately causes stress leading to health issues. François Doyon La Rochelle: James, you also provide recommendations for Books for Parents. What Books do you recommend for them? Conclusion: François Doyon La Rochelle: So, this is it for today's podcast Investing Life Skills for Early savers. Thank you, James Parkyn for sharing your expertise and your knowledge. James Parkyn: You are welcome, Francois. François Doyon La Rochelle: That's it for episode #54 of Capital Topics! Do not forget, if you would like to submit questions or suggestions for the show, please email us at: capitaltopics@pwlcapital.com Also, if you like our podcast, please share it when with family and friends and if you have not subscribed to it, please do. Again, thank you for tuning in and please join us for our next episode to be released on August 2nd. See you soon!
Contrary to Ordinary, Exploring Extraordinary Personal Journeys
If you're going to be a trailblazer, then you're going to have to take down a few trees along the way. You have to be willing to follow your nose and believe in what you're doing enough to embrace your critics with open arms.Today's guest is Philip Marsh, Professor Emeritus of Oral Microbiology at the School of Dentistry at the University of Leeds in the UK. In his impressive career, he's published over 300 research papers and review articles and is co-author of a leading textbook on oral microbiology. He has won numerous awards including the ORCA-Rolex Award for Caries Research in 1991, the IADR Distinguished Science Award (Research in Dental Caries) in 1998, the Society for General Microbiology (UK) Colworth Prize Award in 2001, and a Lifetime Achievement Award in 2008 from the World Congress of Minimally Invasive Dentistry. The only one missing is a Noble Prize!Join us next time for Part 2 of Phil's interview.ResourcesFollow your curiosity, connect, and join our ever-growing community of extraordinary minds.CariFree WebsiteCariFree on InstagramCariFree on FacebookCariFree on PinterestCariFree on TwitterProfessor Philip D. Marsh's LinkedInUniversity of Leeds School of Dentistry What's In This EpisodePhil's journey to the field of oral microbiologyThe confidence-shattering criticism he faced early in his careerHow Phil braved the wilderness and stood up for what he believed inThe science behind Phil's groundbreaking theories
This is part 7 and the final question of my interview with Tom Hegna, a top US Economist and 2-time Bestselling Author. We'll explore why Tom wrote his books and what steps he shares in them to help retirees make a plan. Can you understand the advice top PhDs and Noble Prize winners give about retirement? Would you like a simple step-by-step guide in plain English? Don't you think it's time to ask the right questions and get honest answers?Join me each week for a FREE education on how to keep your retirement safe, REALLY safe!www.SafeMoneyRetirement.com
Most of us were learning the alphabet or how to read in kindergarten. But what if you could have been doing scientific experiments? On this episode of Let's Talk Chemistry, hosts Yeongseo Son and Olivia Lambertson talk about their interview with Dr. Danny Schechtman, the 2011 Nobel Laureate and Distinguished Professor of Material Science and Engineering at Iowa State University. We talk about transmission electron microscopy, quasicrystals, a science kindergarten, and facing backlash in science. We hope you enjoy! If you would like to know more about Dr. Danny Schectman you can check out his Noble Prize-winning discovery or reach him by email at dannys@iastate.edu. About us: ChemTalk is a small student-led and ad-free non-profit working to become the top chemistry education platform in the country. Please support us by following our social media channels, sharing our content, and donating if possible. You can access our website for videos, articles, and tutorials on general, organic, and biochemistry. We also have a VERY cool interactive periodic table, articles about the elements and their properties, and experiment demos. ChemTalk is on TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter which you can access here. Thank you for listening and see you next time!
In 1985 a new form of carbon was discovered, won a Nobel prize…AND rocked the world of healing sciences. This molecule ESS60, once thought to be toxic, just so happened to have profound anti-inflammatory and antioxidant benefits for the human body. Explore the beauty of Carbon ESS60 for life extension, happy cells, glowing skin, athletic performance, and much more.Meet our guestSome may call him a mad scientist, but don't let the lab coat fool you! Chris Burres has been an entrepreneur since 1991 with the founding of the first company to deliver carbon nanomaterials. When Chris realized that one of the chemicals he sold which was based on Nobel Prize-winning chemistry and researched by NASA, had been proven to significantly increase the lifespan of mammals, he struggled with his own skepticism and with the moral implications of marketing the material, ESS60, as a supplement.Thank you to our partners Outliyr Peak Performance Shop: get exclusive discounts on cutting-edge health, wellness, & performance gear Upgrade your brain with the FREE Outliyr Nootropics Mini-CourseKey takeaways Why you should ALWAYS buy supplements from reliable sources and avoid buying fakes How a simple carbon molecule could almost double your lifespan Why C60 won a Noble Prize and the healing power it possesses The precise science behind anti-aging and managing inflammation The amazing results of ESS60 from migraine support to hair and nail growthLinks Watch it on YouTube: https://youtu.be/AtRDVXiGYbA Full episode show notes: mindbodypeak.com/105Connect with Nick on social media Instagram Twitter YouTube LinkedInEasy ways to support Subscribe Leave an Apple Podcast review Suggest a guestDo you have questions, thoughts, or feedback for us? Let me know at mindbodypeak.com/105 and one of us will get back to you!Be an Outliyr,Nick
This week we're heading to where the wind comes sweepin' down the plain. That's right, this week our hosts Game, FiG, and Knob are heading down to Oklahoma for the Grateful Dead's October 11th, 1977 show. Discussions abound about El Paso, why the Grateful Dead dropped Help>Slip>Franklin's, and a heady March Madness bracket... Help On The Way > Slipknot! > Franklin's Tower Jack Straw Peggy-O El Paso Sunrise Deal Let It Grow Dancin' In The Streets > Dire Wolf Estimated Prophet > Eyes Of The World > Drums > Not Fade Away > Wharf Rat > Around and Around
The Children's Life of the Bee by Maurice Maeterlinck audiobook. Buzz, buzz, buzz. A fascinating and beautifully written explanation of the life of the honey bee. Maeterlinck, who won the Noble Prize for Literature, wrote a more scholarly work called The Life of the Bee but then rewrote it in simpler terms so that children could appreciate what goes in a hive. The book describes in simple language the inner workings of a hive from its beginning with a swarm to the fully functional hive with thousands of workers, drones and a queen busily building, repairing and gathering.
Trent's on Weight Watchers. Frankie wants to be able to wear makeup. Riggs receives a text suggesting TaylorMade deserves a Noble Prize for the Stealth 2. Also — Are today's golf stars too soft? How does the LPGA Tour get bigger? Is the universe real? Does Frankie regret saying the WMPO is bigger than the PGA Championship? And more.You can find every episode of this show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or YouTube. Prime Members can listen ad-free on Amazon Music. For more, visit barstool.link/foreplaypod
The 2022 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to a scientist who made some striking discoveries about a species of human-like animal called Neanderthals. On this journey, Dr. G explains the discoveries and discusses their implications both to science and the Bible. The 2022 Noble Prize in Physiology or Medicine Pre-order Mrs. G's heart-warming, first novel, A Bellwether Christmason Amazon or from any book retailer. Get 15% discount by ordering it from FaithfulText. CLICK HERE. Dr. G wants to hear from you! So join the conversation with him and your fellow travelers now on his FACEBOOK PAGE. Or email Dr. G directly by clicking HERE. ORDER DR. G's NEWEST BOOK! Believing is Seeing. * Tyndale * Books-A-Million * ChristianBook* Amazon* Barnes & Noble
The 2022 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to a scientist who made some striking discoveries about a species of human-like animal called Neanderthals. On this journey, Dr. G explains the discoveries and discusses their implications both to science and the Bible. The 2022 Noble Prize in Physiology or Medicine Pre-order Mrs. G's heart-warming, first novel, A Bellwether Christmason Amazon or from any book retailer. Get 15% discount by ordering it from FaithfulText. CLICK HERE. Dr. G wants to hear from you! So join the conversation with him and your fellow travelers now on his FACEBOOK PAGE. Or email Dr. G directly by clicking HERE. ORDER DR. G's NEWEST BOOK! Believing is Seeing. * Tyndale * Books-A-Million * ChristianBook* Amazon* Barnes & Noble
Leading academics and senior members of the investment community came together to explore new paradigms in asset management. The virtual summit covered the tectonic shift in global finance currently underway, ESG investing, and other recent key developments and challenges within the industry. In this podcast, you will hear our distinguished speakers, including New York University's Professor Robert Engle, 2003 winner of the Noble Prize for Economics, discussing the big issues of today's investment scene. Listen to explore environmental, social and governance issues, the debate on active versus passive investment, the future path of financial technology and the risks that could shake the world. You can also hear the full session with Professor Laura Starks on our LBS Soundcloud channel.
Auður Jónsdóttir is one of the most accomplished and influential authors writing in Iceland today. Her novels have inspired interest in Iceland, as well as abroad, for their rare blend of incisive frankness and humor. She won the Icelandic Literary Prize for The People in the Basement and the Icelandic Women's Literature Prize for Secretaries to the Spirits. Both novels were nominated for the Nordic Council's Literature Prize.Auður's latest novel, Quake (Stóri skjálfti), became her most successful publication to date and gathered a huge following among Icelandic readers of all ages, strengthening her position as an important writer of her generation. Read Quake By Auður Jónsdóttir Questions I Asked Auður Jónsdóttir Your grandfather, Halldór Laxness, is one of the most famous Icelanders. For those that are unaware, he won the Noble Prize for literature in 1955. Was he an influence for why you became a writer?Is a goal for you to also win the Noble Prize, or is it just nice if it happens?Where do you get the ideas for your book topics?You are considered one of the most important writers of your generation in Iceland. Why do you think your books resonate so well with generation here?You worked as an in-house writer for the Reykjavík City Theater, which resulted in a play being adapted from your book, “The People in the Basement”. What was that process like (going from writing novels to writing a play)?Are there any authors (other than your grandfather), Icelandic or otherwise, that have inspired your writing or you admire?What, for you, is the most challenging part when it comes to writing a book?What advice do you have for people who want a career in writing?What is your favorite Icelandic word or phrase? Visit Halldór Laxness' Home in Iceland A while back, I did a podcast episode about Auður's grandfather, Halldór Laxness. He was a fascinating person, and as mentioned, the only Icelander to receive a Nobel Prize (so far).If you are interested in visiting his home, Gljúfrasteinn, which is now a museum, check out this link. Share This Post Facebook Email Twitter Let's Be Social Youtube Tiktok Instagram Facebook
Noble Prize winner Daniel Kahneman explained in his book, Thinking Fast and Slow, that the human brain can be viewed as being divided into two separate brains, the fast thinking instinctual brain that we inherited from our hominid ancestors and our slow thinking cerebral cortex that sets us apart from those ancestors and all other animals. Politicians on the left and right direct their campaign ads to the fast thinking side of our brains, but it is our slow thinking brains that are the solution to our current divisive politics. In this podcast, the Edifice of Trust host, Victor Bolles, look smore closely at this phenomenon.
NOBLE Prize 2022 Economic Sciences Banks Crisis and Challenges.
Very few authors in the history of mankind are talented enough to be remembered forever along with their writings. Tagore is one such exceptions. Whether it is his Noble Prize winning Geetanjali or the characters he created such as Kabuliwala… the writings of Rabindranath Tagore are still afresh in the minds of literary lovers. This week's Sahiti Sravanti attempts to find why his writings are so unique and perennial. Host: Varala Anand
We open today with the monthly inflation report and it is not good. Before I dive into the numbers and bring you the reality of just how bad it is, I remind you through a montage of soundbites what the “Wizards of Smart” in the Biden regime have been trying to tell us since May of 2021. They have been wrong about everything. But, the media and die-hard Leftists still cling to their words as if they are Gospel. Just this past Sunday, on State of the Union, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen tried to convince us that while inflation is higher than it should be, we are not in a recession. Well, they can keep lying to themselves and writing new definitions for words, but she is the same woman who said an inflationary cycle was not coming. For months she assured the public it was going to be a blip and then go away. Since she was so wrong for so long, why would anyone believe her now? CNBC's Rick Santinelli was forced to reveal the bad numbers this morning. He then tried to distance himself from the Biden regime's policies by saying, “We agreed spending was causing inflation yet Biden keeps spending even more.” He went on to label the spending related to the Inflation Reduction Act, the subsidies for US microchip manufacturers and forgiving college loans. Heather Long with the Washington Post (you know it's bad when one of the biggest arms of Democrat propaganda can't spin a positive) tweeted that while gasoline prices are down, Americans are still feeling the sting of inflation with food prices up 13.5% in the past year – the largest since 1979; rent up 6.7% in the past year – largest since 1986; electricity up 15.8% in the past year – largest since 1981; and, health insurance up 24.3% year-to-year – the largest ever increase in US recorded history. And while the average American is now loosing at least one month's income to the rising prices for food, rent and energy, their average hourly wages slipped 2.8%. In effect, the average family is now spending over $6000 a year more for the exact same things they were buying just one year ago today. All of this is due to the policies of the Biden White House. The Fed has been trying to slowly pick at the bandage instead of rip it off like I suggested they should do earlier this year. Instead, their slow up-tick of interest has done nothing to stop inflation and will need to be slam the brakes if we want to prevent this economy from spiraling down into a depression for months if not years to come. As to our Strategic Petroleum Reserves, they have not been this depleted since 1984 and the Biden regime, in an attempt to make it look as if they have the price at the pump issue taken off the voting table, plans to dip into it even more until just before the election. As soon as they stop, combined with OPEC+ already stating their intention to slow oil production, will reverse the downward trend at the pump as soon as the midterms are over. It's all a ruse to win votes and retain power. To show you they don't care, they are planning a celebration today at the White House. They are praising the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act. They are going to party while the United States economy (and most of us) burns in the background. And as a side note, all those concessions Joe Machin (D-WV) thought he was getting by voting for the IRA, are being kicked to the curb. Democrats are doing what Democrats do best, lie to get their way then leave you holding a bag full of empty promises. He betrayed his own constituents and, by way of extension, the entire country by believing his party's own lies. Finally we end with a reminder of what a real Noble Prize winning economists said about inflation. Milton Friedman, at the close of the Carter administration was asked about the cause of inflation. His answer from decades ago still applies today, because truth is truth, regardless of how much magic-thinking folks in D.C. are capable of conjuring. Government spending and printing of money is always and has always been the root of inflation. Yet, the Biden regime is planning to throw a party today in honor of printing and spending trillions more. Take a moment to rate and review the show and then share the episode on social media. You can find me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, GETTR and TRUTH Social by searching for The Alan Sanders Show. You can also support the show by visiting my Patreon page!
Abdulrazak Gurnah is the latest Nobel Prize recipient in literature, receiving the award for his decades of writing about colonialism, refugees, and family. Gurnah joins us to discuss his career and his latest novel, Afterlives, a story of characters living under German colonial rule in East Africa. *Gurnah will be speaking tonight at the New York Public Library SNFL event center at 6:30 p.m.
Perspective of peoples have always been different from what science actually is. We have discussed some topics about some scientific concepts and also have discussed the reason why in-spite of being such a great physicist, cosmologist and an author, Stephan Hawking didn't received any Noble Prize. Our Socials: Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC0oJajEF6nm7dc-6Ysks8ZQ Twitter: https://twitter.com/nepalifreak 'Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nepalifreak Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nepalifreakclub/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@nepalifreak Email: nepalifreakclub@gmail.com
http://suzannekoven.com/ Health Story Collaborative https://thenocturnists.com/ http://suzannekoven.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/Literature-and-Medicine-List-2.pdf Bio/Show Notes:Shownotes Letter to a Young Female Physician Suzanne Koven was born and raised in New York City. She received her B.A. in English literature from Yale and her M.D. from Johns Hopkins. She also holds an M.F.A. in nonfiction from the Bennington Writing Seminars. After her residency training at Johns Hopkins Hospital she joined the faculty of Harvard Medical School and has practiced primary care internal medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston for over 30 years. In 2019 she was named inaugural Writer in Residence at Mass General. Her essays, articles, blogs, and reviews have appeared in The Boston Globe, The New England Journal of Medicine, The Lancet, The New Yorker.com, Psychology Today, The L.A. Review of Books, The Virginia Quarterly, STAT, and other publications. Her monthly column “In Practice” appeared in the Boston Globe and won the Will Solimene Award for Excellence in Medical Writing from the American Medical Writers Association in 2012. Her interview column, “The Big Idea,” appears at The Rumpus. Suzanne conducts workshops, moderates panel discussions, and speaks to a variety of audiences about literature and medicine, narrative and storytelling in medicine, women's health, mental healthcare, and primary care. Suzanne's essay collection, Letter to a Young Female Physician, was published by W.W. Norton & Co. in 2021. Excerpts from podcast interview: This conversation really starts with your 2017 essay describing the challenges faced by female physicians. Resounding message: “Dear young colleague, you are not a fraud. Your training will serve you well. Your humanity will serve your patients even better.” Did it surprise you that this book still needed to be written some 30 years after your training experiences involving sexism and imposter syndrome? In the book you reference a NYT op-ed by a female anesthesiologist w/ 4 kids to asserted that “women physicians who work part-time are betraying their patients, their full-time colleagues, and the taxpayers who subsidized their medical education.” You trained at Johns Hopkins and Harvard, were you an outlier among female colleagues since you chose to practice medicine part-time very early on in your career and do you think that was part of why you were constantly feeling like you needed to prove yourself? Throughout the book you shared your incessant struggle with body image and dieting – revealing your family nickname “Big Tush” and joking “If I ever knew as much about medicine as I know about dieting, I would win the Noble Prize!” One of my favorite passages towards the end of the book is your ultimate self-acceptance: “I now see that everything I have ever felt good about- in my marriage, my parenting, my writing, and my doctoring- has been the work of the loud, curvy, curly headed girl, operating on instinct and without self-consciousness. And every wrong turn I've ever taken has been in pursuit of …the woman I thought I was supposed to be. CURVY CURLY always wins. Always.” Trend in med schools to accept more humanities students and to focus on BOTH competence and compassion in medicine. Reminds me of Dr. Kate Treadway's course for 1st year med students: “Introduction to the Profession” Students are sent out into the hospital to speak with patients. They can ask anything, but REQUIRED to ask: “What advice would you give me as I begin my career?” #1 answer patients give: “I JUST WANT YOU TO LISTEN TO ME”? Do you think it's becoming easier to integrate humanities and storytelling into our practice and how does that change the way we see patients? As much as it is a letter to other physicians, your book is very much a personal memoir. The portrayal of your relationship with your mom was so vivid, all the way to her final stages of life after suffering from a stroke. There was something you wrote which I think can be really helpful to young stressed out professional moms: “ I was reminded of something my mother, not at all inclined to self-pity, said to me near the end of her life when I asked what I could do for her: “Bring me back my husband, my friends, my career, my health- that's what you could do.” SUCH a Reminder that whatever stress you think you have now, you're going to miss it! Was that also a wake up call for you to appreciate the busyness of life? Describing another female physician who was a friend, but had a tendency to compare herself unfavorably to you… “She marveled at how I'd simultaneously served her coffee and cookies, cuddled my daughter in my lap, offerd my son, who lay on the floor in a car seat a bottle, and swatted away our Chesapeake Bay retriever who was determined to lick milk dribbles off the baby's face- all while we gossiped about work. “You should have seen her, She was a Goddess.” P. 120 In the book you write about your son's at one point intractable epilepsy and how terrifying it was despite BOTH your and your husbands training. “People ask “Is it easier or harder to have a sick child when both parents are doctors?” But this is the wrong question. There is no hard, no easy. Only fear and love, panic and relief shaking and not shaking.” Can you share one of your unforgettable PAGING DOCTOR MOM MOMENTS with us, a time that's etched in your mind when trying to balance medicine and motherhood collided?
Each year computer scientists at KAUST engage with peers at the annual SC conference, the largest supercomputing event of its kind in the world. Long-time friend to KAUST Jack Dongarra is a familiar face there. The veteran computer scientist and Top500 list producer was recently awarded the 2022 Turing Award, considered to be “the Noble Prize of Computing,” for contributions that have significantly shaped the field. Jack has also influenced HPC developments at KAUST. In this profile, recorded at SC21 in St. Louis, he talks about connections made here and throughout his career in conversation with KAUST computer scientists Hatem Ltaief and Bilel Hadri, his former postdoctoral students, and David Keyes, KAUST founding faculty member and Director of the Extreme Computing Research Center. Jack retires this summer after 32-years of service as a professor at the University of Tennessee. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
What's the background of a Noble Prize winner in chemistry, where are the next innovations in science, and how do you say “asymmetric organocatalysis”? Find out the answers on this week's episode as we chat with David MacMillan. From food production to industrial manufacturing, catalysts are all around us and play an outsized role in our lives. It's estimated that 90% of all commercially produced chemical products are reliant on catalysts at some point in the manufacturing process. Many of these reactions aren't sustainable. When studying as a post-doc at Harvard, David MacMillan had a eureka moment that led to groundbreaking research for green chemistry with his innovative organocatalysis.David also works to catalyze human connections and accelerate scientific advancement through his work at the Princeton Catalysis Initiative. His insights into catalyzing cross-field collaboration are sure to inspire!About David MacMillanDavid MacMillan is a Nobel laureate, the James S. McDonnell Distinguished University Professor of Chemistry at Princeton University, and director of the Princeton Catalysis Initiative, which accelerates research collaboration between scholars at Princeton and industry. He conceptualized and pioneered the field of asymmetric organocatalysis, and in 2021, he was named a co-recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work in the field.Along with numerous awards and commendations, Professor MacMillan has been elected a Fellow of the Royal Society and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.Princeton Catalysis InitiativePCI catalyzes collaborations between molecular, physical, biological, and social scientists who conduct high-impact research across disparate fields of study. By creating a new mechanism conducive to interdisciplinary research, PCI unites historically distinct areas to unleash new thinking, novel technologies, and ground-breaking applications.Links: https://chemistry.princeton.edu/faculty/david-macmillanhttps://pci.princeton.edu/https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/chemistry/2021/macmillan/facts/https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OrganocatalysisQualio WebsitePrevious episodes: https://www.qualio.com/from-lab-to-launch-podcastApply to be on the show: https://forms.gle/uUH2YtCFxJHrVGeL8Music by keldez
Next Level Soul with Alex Ferrari: A Spirituality & Personal Growth Podcast
Dr. Ervin Laszlo spent his childhood in Budapest, Hungary. He was a celebrated child prodigy on the piano, with public appearances from the age of nine. Receiving a Grand Prize at the international music competition in Geneva, he was allowed to leave Hungary and begin an international concert career, first in Europe and then in America. Laszlo received the Sorbonne's highest degree, the Doctorat ès Lettres et Sciences Humaines in 1970.Shifting to the life of a scientist and humanist, he lectured at various U.S. Universities including Yale and Princeton. Following his work on modeling the future evolution of world order at Princeton, he was asked to produce a report for the Club of Rome, of which he was a member. In the late 70s and early 80s, Laszlo ran global projects at the United Nations Institute for Training and Research at the request of the Secretary-General. In the 1990s his research led him to the discovery of the Akashic Field.The author, co-author or editor of 106 different books that have appeared in a total of 25 languages, Ervin Laszlo has also written several hundred papers and articles in scientific journals and popular magazines. He is a member of numerous scientific bodies, including the International Academy of Science, the World Academy of Arts and Science, the International Academy of Philosophy of Science, and the International Medici Academy.He was elected member of the Hungarian Academy of Science in 2010. Ervin Laszlo was awarded the state doctorate (the highest Ph.D) from the Sorbonne, the University of Paris in 1970, and received honorary Ph.D's from the United States, Canada, Finland, and Hungary.He was the recipient of the Peace Prize of Japan, the Goi Award, in 2001, of the International Mandir of Peace Prize of Assisi in 2005, and of the Luxembourg World Peace Prize in 2017. He was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 2004 and 2005. In 2019, Ervin Laszlo was cited as one of the "100 Most Spiritually Influential Living People in the World" according to Watkins Mind Body Spirit magazine. In 2020 he was cited as 28th of the OOOM Magazine's Top 100: The World's Most Inspiring People” list.I suggest you get your free ticket to the The Laszio Upshift Festival 2022.During the Upshift Festival, we will connect online to celebrate the book launch of Ervin Laszlo. There will be dialogues between the author and the hosts, reading excerpts from the book, Q&A with the audience and special guest appearances! A trailer for the PBS documentary about Dr Laszlo's life will be shown as well as snippets from the new Upshift Podcast series by the Shift Network. Get your ticket here: Upshift Festival 2022Enjoy my conversation with Dr. Ervin Laszlo.
Are the new diabetes drugs really helping our health, or just creating more profits for Big Pharma?In this podcast, I look at 100 years of insulin and how Noble Prize winner Sir Fredrik Banting, who discovered insulin, gave it to the world because he believed everyone who needed it deserved it. Unfortunately, over the last 100 years, drug companies have made a fortune selling insulin. Now under pressure to reduce the costs, they have invented some new drugs for type-2 diabetes. These drugs do nothing to reverse type-2 diabetes and come with an expensive price tag and some serious side effects.We have thousands of New Zealanders who unnecessarily lose limbs to diabetes. Sadly, many doctors don't know that type-2 diabetes isn't a disease of high blood sugar, it is a disease of insulin resistance. High blood sugar is the symptom - not the cause. The solution to a disease caused by lifestyle is to change the lifestyle. To start you on your journey, I highly recommend the books by Issy Warack and Estrelita van Rensburg. you can find them here:https://www.amazon.com/Eat-Your-Way-Health-Recipes/dp/1838137823- Eat Well or Die Slowly - Your Guide to Metabolic Health- Eat Your Way to Health - Recipes for Success- Seafood and Vegetarian RecipesYou can have the PDF "Understanding Functional Blood Chemistry Analysis" sent directly to your inbox: Understanding-Functional-Blood-Chemistry-Analysis-Susan-Birch.pdfIf you enjoyed this podcast, please subscribe, like and share.If you have any guests you would like to hear from or questions answered please let me know. Email susan@susanbirch.co.nzYou can sign up for my newsletter to keep up-to-date with the content I am publishing, monthly blogs and Q & A webinars with experts from around the world.https://mailchi.mp/61eb6eb3e0df/newsletter-signupYou can download my free health and wellbeing planner, and my handy guide to protein on the free resources page on my website.https://www.susanbirch.co.nz/free-downloads/You can follow me on Facebook here:https://www.facebook.com/thehealthdetectivenz
Dr. Brian Keating is the Chancellor's Distinguished Professor at the University of California San Diego and the author of more than 200 scientific publications, two US Patents, and the best-selling memoir Losing the Noble Prize. Keating did research at Case Western Reserve University, Brown University, Stanford, and Caltech. In 2007 he received the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers from President Bush. Keating is a Fellow of the American Physical Society, and co-leads the Simons Array and Simons Observatory cosmology projects in Chile. He is a pilot and an honorary lifetime member of the National Society of Black Physicists. Here's what you'll hear in my conversation with Dr. Brian Keating: -Why so many elite scientists are atheists... -What's wrong with living as though God is real, even if He isn't?... -How and why science has been stripped from basic debate... -There's no one skill in anything we do... -How to be a good student... -Why curiosity often takes on a negative connotation... -What Brian is on the real-time path of learning at the time of recording this interview... Resources mentioned in this episode: https://briankeating.com (Brian's website) https://www.facebook.com/drbriankeating/ (Facebook) https://twitter.com/@DrBrianKeating (Twitter) https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-keating-ab893a10a/ (LinkedIn) https://www.instagram.com/drbriankeating/ (Instagram) https://www.youtube.com/DrBrianKeating (YouTube)
In this episode of Partnering Leadership, Mahan Tavakoli speaks with Jon Levy, behavioral scientist and author of the book You're Invited: The Art and Science of Cultivating Influence. Jon Levy shares how we can build stronger and more trusting relationships and how leaders can use the science of connection to increase team trust and engagement. Some highlights:-Jon Levy's interest in building community and relationships-Jon Levy talks about culture and psychological safety as essential keys to increasing connection in organizations.-Leading with Benevolence-Vulnerability loops as a way to build trust-Jon Levy's Influencer Dinners and the science behind attracting Noble Prize winners, Olympic athletes, business leaders, artists, and royalty. -The Ikea Effect and how to use it to build trust and greater connection. -The mere exposure effect and its role in team collaboration. Also mentioned in this episode:-Kent Grayson, associate professor at Kellogg School and the faculty director of The Trust ProjectBooks by Jon Levy:You're Invited: The Art and Science of Cultivating Influence by Jon LevyBook Recommendations:Thinking Fast and Slow by Dan KahnemanPredictably Irrational by Dr. Dan ArielyDare to Lead by Brene BrownDream Team by Shane SnowConnect with Jon Levy:Jon Levy Official WebsiteJon Levy on LinkedInJon Levy on InstagramJon Levy on FacebookJon Levy on TwitterConnect with Mahan Tavakoli:MahanTavakoli.comMore information and resources available at the Partnering Leadership Podcast website: PartneringLeadership.com
With Philip Keeler and Philip Jones“Strange But True Radio for a mixed up generation.”A new podcast available to download every Saturday.“Alexa, play Strange But True Radio Podcast”Check us out on YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8tlkNOeGB2C1AnjYCl3fZgFollow us on Facebook @strangebuttrueradio and twitter @strangebtrMUSICAll music we play is legal for us to use, and is licensed through www.epidemicsound.com Any other music we play are from bands who have given us expressed permission to use their songs.Sting: A soft embrace.Show Theme/Bed: Screensaver Fractals - Midnight CyclerMusic 1: ES_Side By Side - Tomas SkyldebergMusic 2: ES_Feeling Like - HallmanMusic 3: ES_Vegas - Onda NorteListen to Strange But True Radio:On demand as a podcastYou can also listen on demand any time of the day and anywhere in the world, just search “Strange But True Radio Podcast” in any of these:Apple PodcastsAmazon MusicGoogle PodcastsSpotifyDeezeriheartradioSmart Devicestrangebuttureradio.comStrange But True Radio is an online radio station, a mix of live shows from talk to music throughout the week. Running almost 20years with a few gaps, we aim to bring you Talk: intelligent discussion, on travel, politics, current trends, history, paranormal and ancient discoveries... Live news events. Music: Hand-picked tunes for the season. When we are not live tune into a podcast and hear all our shows. Fancy joining us as a listener tune in! Tell friends and family about us and spread the word.
Our ability to sense heat, cold and touch is essential for survival and underpins our interaction with the world around us. In our daily lives we take these sensations for granted, but how are nerve impulses initiated so that temperature and pressure can be perceived? This question has been solved by this year's Nobel Prize laureates. David Julius utilized capsaicin, a pungent compound from chili peppers that induces a burning sensation, to identify a sensor in the nerve endings of the skin that responds to heat. Ardem Patapoutian used pressure-sensitive cells to discover a novel class of sensors that respond to mechanical stimuli in the skin and internal organs. These breakthrough discoveries launched intense research activities leading to a rapid increase in our understanding of how our nervous system senses heat, cold, and mechanical stimuli. The laureates identified critical missing links in our understanding of the complex interplay between our senses and the environment.
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Today I want to finish up our series of Harv Ekers 17 Wealth Files from the Secrets of the Millionaire Mind NYT Best Seller. I'll start again (in case you didn't listen to the first 3 in this series) reminding you that we are talking about changing the way you think about things in your life in order to create a new, more abundant, mindset to lead you to success…in every area of your life. Yes, we are talking in extremes…rich/poor…no, we are not judging rich vs poor…we are simply contrasting things that help you create more success, happiness and wealth into your life. And just to clear it up for you right now, I 100% believe that you are better off with more money and success in your life. Money is not good or bad. Your relationship and view of money can be good or bad, but money itself is a good thing, and you can do much more good with than without it…believe that. So, let's review how Rich and Successful people think and act and we can dig into the last 6 Wealth Files here today. Review from last 3 episodes: Wealth File #1 Rich people believe “I create my life.” Poor people believe “Life happens to me.” Wealth File #2 Rich people play the money game to win. Poor people play the money game to not lose. Wealth File #3 Rich people are committed to being rich. Poor people want to be rich. Wealth File #4 Rich people think big. Poor people think small. Wealth File #5 Rich people focus on opportunities. Poor people focus on obstacles. Wealth File #6 Rich people admire other rich and successful people. Poor people resent rich and successful people. Wealth File #7 Rich people associate with positive, successful people. Poor people associate with negative or unsuccessful people. Wealth File #8 Rich people are willing to promote themselves and their value. Poor people think negatively about selling and promotion. Wealth File #9 Rich people are bigger than their problems. Poor people are smaller than their problems. Wealth File #10 Rich people are excellent receivers. Poor people are poor receivers. Wealth File #11 Rich people choose to get paid based on results. Poor people choose to get paid based on time. This brings us to the final 6 Wealth Files to cover... Wealth File #12 Rich people think “both.” Poor people think “either/or.” I believe this principle is all about Abundant thinking… Do you believe there is abundance in the universe? Are you willing to choose to believe there is abundance? The reason this is so important is that “abundant thinkers” have opened the world of possibilities and believe that there is a win win available in each situation. They been with solutions rather than focus on the problem. Therefore they have more opportunity to create solutions, win at the game of life and their filter on life allows this. If you are acting out of scarcity mindset, you believe that for every winner there is a loser. You believe that there are limited time, resources and opportunities in life. This is why you might resent others success. This is why you may blame others for failure and even blame your life, business, and relationships on being a victim of circumstance. Ultimately, if you will choose to have an abundant mindset, I know that you will create much more success in your life. You absolutely can have your cake and eat it too. :) Wealth File #13 Rich people focus on their net worth. Poor people focus on their working income. This distinction has been wired into us from birth. What do you want to do rather than what do you want your life to be like. What do you make for a living rather than what is your net worth. We talk about budgets and expenses, but we don't talk about, track or grow the other “key areas” of true success and net worth. These other areas, as Harv puts it, are things like Income, Savings, Investments, Simplification…and I would add active and passive income streams. I would highly encourage you to always be increasing your active income (raising ceiling) while actively growing your passive income through business, investments and residuals. No you might be saying, “George, I don't have those other areas and don't know where to start with investing or expanding my business from a “job” to a “passive” income stream.” Well, it doesn't matter whether you are currently pursuing a course of action or don't know where to start…the bottom line is “where focus goes, energy flows”. I didn't have these either until I prioritized finding the right ones and learning, growing, networking, and developing them. That's why i surround myself with successful people. That is why you are listening to this podcast. The point I am trying to make is that you need to prioritize, focus and spend time on your NET WORTH and you will see it grown. This leads perfectly into the next wealth file. Wealth File #14 Rich people manage their money well. Poor people mismanage their money well. If you don't learn to manage your money well, then your money will always run your life. Period. Obviously, this means you need to learn to properly budget your money…even if it seems like an overwhelming, boring or tedious task. And, you need to learn to be “frugal” with your money. I know most people view frugality in a bad way, but I'm saying you need to learn the difference between things that are expenses vs investments. You need to start “really and sincerely” thinking about if you NEED that new car, watch, lifestyle or you just WANT IT. When you start to plan an amazing life and start to follow that plan through a filter of frugality, you can create peace of mind, happiness, and amazing levels of success. This is because we stop “wasting money” to impress people that don't really care about your lifestyle and wealth in the first place. A good friend of mine, Bill Danko…who wrote The NYT Best Selling Book The Millionaire Next Door, discussed and showed clearly that it doesn't take a exorbitant amount of money to create true wealth. He later went on to write another best seller, called Richer Than a Millionaire, that adds the idea that you can have Wealth and Happiness (which is better than just having wealth). But, it takes a PLAN. It takes FRUGALITY. It takes DISCIPLINE. It takes the CONSCIOUS DECISION to Manage your Money WELL.' In fact, Bill spoke at a recent High Net Worth Investor Conference we did and he taught me something I hadn't heard before that leads right into the next wealth file. Wealth File #15 Rich people have their money work hard for them. Poor people work hard for their money. Bill talked about a gentleman named Franco Modigliani, who won the 1985 Noble Prize in Economics. He won the Noble Prize for his money life-cycle hypothesis. Basically, he said that through your working years and being Frugal…saving money is important so that you can build wealth…so that you can live comfortably in your non-working years when you are older. In other words: wen you are young, you WORK FOR MONEY…when you are old, MONEY WORKS FOR YOU. The problem is that NO ONE is saving money anymore. People spend money on dumb stuff that doesnt build wealth just to impress people that dont matter. Worse yet, they spend money on things to make themselves feel good only to later realize that these things only bring temporary satisfaction and not long term happiness. I know exactly how that feels and many of us can relate….can you? Thank you Bill for listening and reminding me of these important principles. Now, I know this is a long episode so hang in there with me while we approach the finish line cause this stuff is super important. Wealth File #16 Rich people act in spite of fear. Poor people let fear stop them. I have adopted and combined a few different mentor teachings on this topic because I feel its important. Prosperity Pillar # 3 is ACT IN SPITE OF MY MOOD. Let's really discuss this for a second because this involves motivation, discipline and most importantly FEAR. Are you letting fear stop you or is it motivation, discipline or confidence. Identify WHY and WHAT holds you back. Without doing this you cannot overcome this mindset. But, I will highly recommend one particular solution for you to consider…. You will be the average of the 5 people you surround yourself with the most…Belief Transference, Confidence, Motivation, etc. Got it? Wealth File #17 Rich people constantly learn and grow. Poor people think they already know. This one is self explanatory, but let me give you some examples…go through the last couple months of this podcast…. I am constantly learning, growing and developing. It's what drives me, creates fulfillment for me and impact. There is a reason for this…Its one of our 6 CORE HUMAN NEEDS, like Tony Robbins talks about. I am going to be covering the 6 Core Human Needs from Robbins next week so don't miss it, but the key to understand here is that if you are not “growing” you are “dying”. If you are not learning (and think you know it all), you will NEVER BE RICH and SUCCESSFUL…at least not long term.
In this, the premier episode of the Bob Gatty & Chris Waldron Show, Chris says anybody with a brain should get off of Twitter so as to deprive Donald Trump of his audience. He also says the media should stop reporting on his tweets. Bob thoroughly disagrees, explaining that taking such action would leave a huge informational void. From Twitter to Trump's witch doctor ideas that maybe people should ingest disinfectants to his wish that "Noble" Prize winning journalists would return their awards, the conversation explores the news of the past week with humor and sarcasm. Take a listen...Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-lean-to-the-left-podcast--4719048/support.
I've always maintained that the only reason people would want to live a longer life is if they could still maintain their health, body, and mind… I personally believe this as well, since quality of life means so much in terms of your enjoyment of living… It's also why I believe so much in the power of Natural Medicine which helps to rebalance the underlying root causes of what ails so many people… However, I am never opposed to using all modalities that work naturally with the body and have been proven to be safe… This is why I want to share with you this Nobel Prize-winning stem cell discovery, which may have the potential to add 20 years to your life. For all the details tune into #CabralConcept 1537 – Enjoy the show and let me know if you have any questions! - - - Show Notes & Resources: http://StephenCabral.com/1537 - - - Dr. Cabral's New Book, The Rain Barrel Effect https://amzn.to/2H0W7Ge - - - Join the Community & Get Your Questions Answered: http://CabralSupportGroup.com - - - Dr. Cabral's Most Popular At-Home Lab Tests: > Complete Minerals & Metals Test (Test for mineral imbalances & heavy metal toxicity) - - - > Complete Candida, Metabolic & Vitamins Test (Test for 75 biomarkers including yeast & bacterial gut overgrowth, as well as vitamin levels) - - - > Complete Stress, Mood & Metabolism Test (Discover your complete thyroid, adrenal, hormone, vitamin D & insulin levels) - - - > Complete Stress, Sleep & Hormones Test (Run your adrenal & hormone levels) - - - > Complete Food Sensitivity Test (Find out your hidden food sensitivities) - - - > Complete Omega-3 & Inflammation Test (Discover your levels of inflammation related to your omega-6 to omega-3 levels)
Today William D Nordhaus and Paul Romer were announced as joint winners of the Noble Prize for Economic Science. Yes, science! Neither would qualify for the profession's newest award, to be launched next year, simultaneous to the Noble award ceremony. In this podcast Professor Steve Keen talks to Phil Dobbie about the launch of the ‘Nobble Prize for Economics' for those with barking mad assumptions that have (or will) pervert the course of economics for some time. Steve suggests Ben Bernanke would be a notable contender as well as, of course, Milton Friedman. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
Nobel Laureate Professor Robert John Aumann talks game theory, a bit of politics and much more with 2NJB. Listen, like and share!