Podcasts about online library

  • 42PODCASTS
  • 157EPISODES
  • 41mAVG DURATION
  • 1WEEKLY EPISODE
  • May 9, 2025LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about online library

Latest podcast episodes about online library

The Curious Task
Graeme Thompson — What Is Canadian Liberalism?

The Curious Task

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2025 63:42


In this episode from 2021, Alex Aragona speaks with Graeme Thompson about the classical liberal tradition in Canada, and what the evolution of that tradition has looked like. References from The Curious Task Episode 94 with Graeme Thompson A collection of the speeches of Wilfred Laurier can be found in an edited edition by Arthur Milnes, available from Amazon here. Macdonald Laurier and the Election of 1891 by Christopher Pennington can be found from Penguin House here. Graeme Thompson's piece “Whatever Happened to Laurier” can be found in the National Post here. Graeme mentions positive and negative liberty by Isaiah Berlin, which is discussed on the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy here. The works of Adam Smith, Edmund Burke, and J.S. Mill can be read for free through the Online Library of Liberty.  

The Great Antidote
Daniel Hannan on Executive and Legislative Power

The Great Antidote

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2025 56:52 Transcription Available


Send us a textJoin us today for a fun conversation about all things government, UK and US, with Lord Daniel Hannan of Kingsclere! Lord Hannan is a member of the House of Lords. Today, we talk about how the U.K.'s legislative is structured, what is up with executive power, the importance of the West and cohesion on the freedom front, and the idiocy of tariffs. Want to explore more?Yuval Levin on Burke, Paine, and the Great Debate, an EconTalk podcast.Phillip Klein on Fight Club Conservatives versus Disney, a Great Antidote podcast.Robert Higgs, Government Growth, in the Concise Encyclopedia of Economics.Troy Senik on Grover Cleveland, a Great Antidote podcast.Is There a Role for Monarchy in a Free Society? A Liberty Matters forum at the Online Library of Liberty.Support the showNever miss another AdamSmithWorks update.Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

CHINA RISING
The Bioweapon Truth Commission is revamping its online library. Do you have what it takes to make it shine?

CHINA RISING

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2025


The Bioweapon Truth Commission has a small budget to completely revamp its online library. Please find the link to it below, as well as my email where you can send me your CV, as far as being a library sciences graduate or a library specialist, with your proposal. https://bioweapontruth.com je**@br***********.com Thank you, Jeff J. Brown, Co-Founder... The post The Bioweapon Truth Commission is revamping its online library. Do you have what it takes to make it shine? appeared first on CHINA RISING RADIO SINOLAND.

The Great Antidote
Cara Rogers Stevens on Thomas Jefferson and Slavery

The Great Antidote

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2025 50:34 Transcription Available


Send us a textThomas Jefferson was a complicated figure. Essential to the start of our country and the university I attend, he is impossible to ignore. Yet, he held slaves, and at the same time said “all men are created equal.” What's up with that?!Yet, we need to be able to talk about him. We also need to be able to acknowledge the contributions he has made to the world, while also acknowledging the flaws in his character and behavior. His legacy is complicated, and he was a complicated person. We all are. So how do we reconcile these parts of him? Join us in our attempt to understand this. Today, we talk about Thomas Jefferson and his complicated relationship with slavery. Cara Rogers Stevens, professor of history at Ashland University and codirector of the Ashbrook Scholars Program, joins us to talk about this. She is also the author of Thomas Jefferson and The First Against Slavery, which informs much of our conversation.Want to explore more:Read the Complete Works of Thomas Jefferson at the Online Library of Liberty.Hans Eicholz, 1776 and All That: Thomas Jefferson on Adam Smith, at AdamSmithWorks.Darren Staloff on the American Founding, a Great Antidote podcast.Understanding Jefferson: Slavery, Race, and the Declaration of Independence, a Liberty Matters forum at the Online Library of Liberty.Jeffrey Rogers Hummel, U.S. Slavery and Economic Thought, in the Concise Encyclopedia of Economics.Never miss another AdamSmithWorks update.Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Engadget
FCC is coming for NPR and PBS now too, NASCAR's driver streams bringing multiview to Max, and the Video Game History Foundation's online library is now open

Engadget

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2025 6:14


FCC is coming for NPR and PBS now too, NASCAR's driver streams finally bring multiview to Max, and the Video Game History Foundation's online library is now open. It's Friday, January 31st and this is Engadget News. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

IGN Game and Entertainment News – Spoken Edition
Nintendo Adds Fatal Fury 2 and Other SNES Games to Nintendo Switch Online Library

IGN Game and Entertainment News – Spoken Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2025 2:28


Super. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

IGN Game and Entertainment News – Spoken Edition
Nintendo Switch Online Library Adds Game Boy Classic Donkey Kong Land 3

IGN Game and Entertainment News – Spoken Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2024 2:16


Go ape. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Great Antidote
David Beito on Rose Lane Says: Thoughts on Race, Liberty, and Equality

The Great Antidote

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2024 45:30 Transcription Available


Send us a textNot often do we find people who make the case for how race, liberty, and equality belong together. Even less often do we find them making arguments in the height of racially and economically troubled times. And EVEN LESS do we find audio clips of them doing so. These people are inspiring. They stand up against the currents of the time to speak their minds, for the benefit of everyone. In doing so, they garner respect and build coalitions across ideological lines, because they have to. We can learn from them and aspire to be like them today.In a really unique episode, I am excited to welcome David Beito to the podcast to talk about Rose Wilder Lane's column, "Rose Lane Says," and how she brought together these three concepts of race, liberty, and equality to make an appealing case for freedom. He shares with us a clip of Lane herself, speaking on these issues. Want to explore more?Timothy Sandefur on Freedom's Furies, a Great Antidote podcast.Nico Perrino on Individual Rights and Free Expression, a Great Antidote podcast.Rachel Ferguson on Black Liberation Through the Marketplace, a Great Antidote podcast. Alice Temnick, Prudence on the Prairie, at Speaking of SmithMustafa Akyol, Liberty Was Islam's First Call, at the Online Library of LibertyNever miss another AdamSmithWorks update.Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

IGN Game and Entertainment News – Spoken Edition
Nintendo Switch Online Library Adds Shadow Man and Turok 2: Seeds of Evil

IGN Game and Entertainment News – Spoken Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2024 2:30


Shedding light. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Fitness Pain Free Show
What PHYSICAL THERAPISTS Need to Know About MENISCUS Injuries

The Fitness Pain Free Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2024 36:41


FPF Certification Pre-sale Enrollment (Save $300) with FREE Mini-course: https://fitnesspainfree.com/programs/fpf-certification-presale-page/ 

The Fitness Pain Free Show
OSGOOD-SCHLATTER Disease - What Physical Therapists Need to Know

The Fitness Pain Free Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2024 48:31


FPF Certification Pre-sale Enrollment (Save $300) with FREE Mini-course: https://fitnesspainfree.com/programs/fpf-certification-presale-page/ 

The Great Antidote
Bruce Caldwell on Hayek: A Life

The Great Antidote

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2024 55:08 Transcription Available


Send us a textIt's often said that if you want to get to know someone, you should look through their garbage. Now, I don't recommend this method of getting to know someone (it's kind of gross). But biographers often have the luck of getting to know the people they study by looking through their stuff- that stuff not being actual garbage. For example, Bruce Caldwell spent time with Hayek's skis and botanical photographs. You might be thinking, why do I care? Why does anyone care? Hayek didn't even write about skiing or photography! That's exactly the point: the minutia of life, those characteristics that are seemingly irrelevant to the output of an academic can give insight into their uniqueness. Hayek's context, his family, and youth and involvement in certain political parties, shines a light on what, why, and how he thought, which helps us to better understand him and his ideas. Join me today in conversation with Bruce Caldwell, one of Hayek's biographers, to explore the context of Hayek and what it means to be a biographer. Caldwell is a research professor of economics at Duke where he is the Director of the Center for the History of Political Economy. He is also the co-author of the book Hayek: A Life, among other works. He also believes Santa Claus exists (stay tuned to hear why!). Want to explore more?Don Boudreaux on the Essential Hayek, a Great Antidote podcast.Bruce Caldwell on Hayek, an EconTalk podcast.Rosolino Candela, Using Reason to Understand the Abuse and Decline of Reason, an Econlib Liberty Classic.Peter Boettke, Hayek's Nobel at 50, at EconLog.Peter Boettke, Hayek's Epistemic Liberalism, in Liberty Matters at the Online Library of Liberty.Never miss another AdamSmithWorks update.Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

The Great Antidote
Jacob Levy on Smith, Hayek, and Social Justice

The Great Antidote

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2024 64:47 Transcription Available


Send us a textThe title of this episode might confuse you: what on earth do Adam Smith and F. A. Hayek have to say about social justice? A surprising amount, given how much we talk about it!Smith makes a big point of critiquing men of pride and vanity. What happens when those ultimately negative aspects of humanity go too far, into the territory of what he calls “domineering”? What happens when small acts of domination are aggregated throughout a society? So here we are, talking about slavery, Jim Crow, and the civil rights movement, through the lens of Hayek and Adam Smith. Our tour guide on this perilous journey towards the implementation and understanding of justice is the wonderful Jacob Levy.  Levy is the Tomlinson Professor of Political Theory at McGill University. He is also the coordinator of the research group on Constitutional Studies at McGill. Want to explore more?Jacob Levy, Rationalism, Pluralism, and the History of Liberal Ideas, a Liberty Matters symposium at the Online Library of Liberty. Don Boudreaux on the Essential Hayek, a Great Antidote podcast.Steven Horwitz, Spontaneous Order in Adam Smith, at AdamSmithWorks.Dan Klein on Adam Smith's Justice, a Great Antidote podcast.Rosolino Candela, Private Property and Social Justice: Complements or Substitutes? at Econlib.Never miss another AdamSmithWorks update.Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

The Great Antidote
Don Boudreaux on The Essential Hayek

The Great Antidote

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2024 52:42 Transcription Available


Send us a textThe month of October 2024 marks the 50th anniversary of F. A. Hayek winning the Nobel Prize. Winning such a prize is obviously a big deal, but someone wins one every year, so what's the big deal about this guy? Well. Hayek's contributions to the field of economics are significant because they spoke to more than simply economics. Spontaneous order, price signals as information, and the pretense of knowledge all might come to mind, but they might not. (Maybe you're new to this! If so, helloooo there!) These concepts branch into philosophy, social structure, and the nature of the human mind. Stick with us to learn the depths and beauty of Hayekian thought, in the first of this series! Want to explore more?Profile in Liberty: Friedrich A. Hayek, at Econlib.Don Boudreaux on Reading Hayek, an EconTalk podcast.Elaine Sternberg, The Power and Pervasiveness of Spontaneous Order, at Econlib.Nicholas Wapshott on Keynes and Hayek, an EconTalk podcast.Hayek and Spontaneous Orders, at the Online Library of Liberty.Never miss another AdamSmithWorks update.Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

The Great Antidote
Nicholas Snow on Prohibition

The Great Antidote

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2024 56:58 Transcription Available


Send us a text Do you ever take a moment to think about the fact that Americans, the people of the land of the free, spent 13 years under Prohibition? Did you know that Americans used to seriously “drink like a fish”? And no, I'm not talking about fraternity men in college. I'm talking about everyone, everywhere, from George Washington's parties to lunchtimes in the manufacturing factories (until Henry Ford put a stop to it, you know, for efficiency purposes). Then Prohibition happened. What were the forces that drove Prohibition into existence? Our first and only constitutional amendment to be repealed, what was so severe about America under prohibition that it only lasted 13 years? How did a guy smuggle whiskey into America in an egg carton? All that and more on this episode with Wabash College Professor Nicholas Snow. Tune in! Want to explore more?Read John Alcorn's 2019 series on prohibition of all kinds at EconLog.Daniel Okrent on Prohibition and his Book, Last Call, an EconTalk podcast.Lysander Spooner, Vices are Not Crimes. A Vindication of Moral Liberty, at the Online Library of Liberty.Randy Simmons on Public Choice, a Great Antidote podcast.Sandra Peart on Ethical Quandaries and Politics Without Romance, a Great Antidote podcast.Never miss another AdamSmithWorks update.Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

The Great Antidote
Yuval Levin on The American Covenant

The Great Antidote

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2024 50:10 Transcription Available


Send us a textEven though I hope you've been avoiding the election news like I have (as you would the plague), admittedly, it's hard to do. It's like someone is blasting it outside your window at 5 AM. Or like a billboard outside your front door that you can't help but see every time you step outside. Bummer.  Fortunately, AEI's wonderful Yuval Levin joins us today to talk about the remedy to the plight of election season and America's recent malaise (not to echo Jimmy Carter…): the American constitution. Now, I know, you might be rolling your eyes and thinking “Those classical liberals are at it again, always talking about the founding…” But seriously. Remembering and embracing the spirit upon which America was founded—one of intellectual and political dynamism—is key to striking the balance between life, politics, and disagreement that has felt so off-kilter recently. Levin is the director of Social, Cultural, and Constitutional Studies at AEI, as well as the founder and editor of National Affairs. He recently released the book American Covenant, which we are talking about today. Join us today for a livelier, timelier version of what you learned in your 7th-grade civics class. Want to explore more?How the Constitution Can Bring us Together, an EconTalk podcast with Yuval Levin.Yuval Levin on a Time to Build, an EconTalk podcast.Darren Staloff on the American Founding, a Great Antidote podcast.Christy Lynn Horpedahl, A Skeptic's Guide to the Perfect Commonwealth, at Speaking of Smith.Understanding Jefferson: Slavery, Race, and the Declaration of Independence, a Liberty Matters Forum at the Online Library of Liberty.Never miss another AdamSmithWorks update.Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

The Great Antidote
Henry C. Clark on Growth

The Great Antidote

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2024 79:33 Transcription Available


Send us a textGrowth is essential to human life. Always has been, always will be. From the moment we are born, we grow, and we continue to throughout our lives, whether that is physically, mentally, or otherwise. Societies grow too.But what is growth? Real growth is replicable, durable, and sustainable (and not in the sense that immediately comes to mind). Your seven-year-old doesn't shrink back down after she grows an inch. It might happen when she's ninety, but that's gravity (and don't you think she's had a good run at this point? We should accept that it's ok to have a growth recession every now and again). So how have intellectuals conceptualized the growth of societies, environments, and economies over time? And how should we think about growth? The wonderful Henry C. Clark joins us on the podcast today to answer these questions and more. He is the program director of the Political Economy Project at Dartmouth College and the author of several books including the newly released The Moral Economy We Have Lost: Life Before Mass Abundance. Go check it out!Want to explore more?Henry Clark on the Enlightenments, a Great Antidote podcast.Pierre Desrochers, From Prometheus to Arcadia: Liberals, Conservatives, the Environment, and Cultural Cognition, at Econlib.Robert Pindyck on Averting and Adapting to Climate Change, an EconTalk podcast.Sandra Peart and David Levy, Happiness and the Vanity of the Philosopher: Part1, at Econlib.Deirdre McCloskey and Economists' Ideas About Ideas, a Liberty Matters forum at the Online Library of Liberty.Never miss another AdamSmithWorks update.Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

The Great Antidote
Candace Smith on Etiquette

The Great Antidote

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2024 57:55 Transcription Available


Send us a textSome questions are hard to ask. Some questions you don't want to ask. Some questions are hard for you to hear the answers to. Like, how do you tell someone, politely, that they eat with their mouth open? Between a rock and a hard place, you know you gotta do it. You really don't want to, but you know you can't stand to watch it anymore either.Candace Smith is a wonderful teacher of etiquette and the creator of the Etiquette: For the Business of Life blog. Her philosophy on the importance of etiquette is that if the world was a little more polite, that we'd live in a much kinder world. Join us today for a conversation about how to make that change in your life and community today! Want to explore more?Candace Smith, Etiquette and Adam Smith, at Speaking of SmithDan Klein on Smith: Self-Command, Pride, and Vanity, a Great Antidote podcast.Leonidas Montes, The Importance of Self-Command, at AdamSmithWorks.Sarah Skwire, The Science of Dining, at the Online Library of Liberty.Never miss another AdamSmithWorks update.Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

The Fitness Pain Free Show
Avoid Biceps Tendinopathy Mistakes: Expert Physical Therapy Tips with Rob Manske

The Fitness Pain Free Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2024


 FREE Guide - Biceps Tendinopathy - Evidence Based "Cheat Sheet" for Clinicians: https://fitnesspainfree.com/programs/biceps-tendinopathy-evidence-based-cheat-sheet-lead-magnet/ Thanks for watching!Rotator Cuff MASTER COURSE: https://fitnesspainfree.com/programs/fpf-insiders/ 

The Fitness Pain Free Show
Weightlifter's Shoulder [Guide for Physical Therapists] AC Joint Pain

The Fitness Pain Free Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2024 49:27


 FREE Guide - Weightlifter's Shoulder Evidence Based "Cheat Sheet" https://fitnesspainfree.com/2024/07/weightlifters-shoulder-guide-for-physical-therapists-ac-joint-pain/

Lost in the Stacks: the Research Library Rock'n'Roll Radio Show
Episode 608: Equal Access to the Online Library

Lost in the Stacks: the Research Library Rock'n'Roll Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2024 58:12 Transcription Available


PART 1 of ACCESSIBILITY AUDIT series Guests: Dawn Evans, Accessibility Specialist and Valerie Morrison, E-Text Manager, GT's Center for Inclusive Design and Innovation (CIDI) First broadcast July 19 2024. Transcript at: https://hdl.handle.net/1853/75448; Playlist  here "If you could define accessibility in less than ten words..."