Podcasts about sir francis galton

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Best podcasts about sir francis galton

Latest podcast episodes about sir francis galton

Double Loop Podcast
Episode 276 - History Episode - Stories of the Forefathers

Double Loop Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2024 94:25


In this episode the guys discuss historical figures in the field of fingerprints. At the top of the episode Eric gives Glenn an Australian themed “A Truth, a Lie, and a Mandela Effect”. Glenn tells a couple of stories from his trip to London, which also inspired the topic for the episode. Because of Glenn's time in Switzerland this fall reading old texts, he learned a lot about the early days of fingerprints. The guys discuss contributions, stories and cases from Juan Vucetich, Sir Francis Galton, Sir Henry Faulds, Sir Edward Henry, Alphonse Bertillon, Dr. Edmond Locard, and more!

Beer and Conversation with Pigweed and Crowhill
432: Eugenics -- a legacy of progressive experts and the intelligensia

Beer and Conversation with Pigweed and Crowhill

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2024 42:10


The boys drink and review Pigweed's Seal Team 6 -- a homebrewed Black IPA -- then discuss eugenics. Humans have been breeding animals and plants for a very long time. Most of the foods we eat are the result of thousands of years of careful breeding by farmers, and "man's best friend" was bred from wild dogs. Why shouldn't we do the same with humans? Sir Francis Galton, a cousin of Charles Darwin who was very influenced by The Origin of Species, proposed just such a plan and called it "eugenics." Darwinism convinced Galton that an organism's most important characteristics must be biological rather than shaped by environment or experience. The idea caught fire with the intellectual elite. John D. Rockefeller, Andrew Carnegie, Theodore Roosevelt, Margaret Sanger and Alexander Graham Bell all promoted the idea to one degree or another. The Supreme Court even weighed in. In upholding a Virginia law that permitted compulsory sterilization of individuals thought unfit to reproduce, Oliver Wendell Holmes said in Buck v. Bell, "three generations of imbeciles are enough." 38 States adopted some form of eugenics laws and more than 60,000 Americans were sterilized without their consent. Adolf Hitler read about this and thought, "gee, what a good idea." After the horrors of World War II, the west turned away from eugenics. It still stands as a reminder that fine-sounding ideas approved by intelligent people can still be horribly stupid.

Alle Zeit der Welt
Eugenik I: Die Züchtung des Menschen mit Deutschland 33/45

Alle Zeit der Welt

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2024 68:51


Wir reden heute mit Jonas vom Deutschland 33/45 Podcast über die Ursprünge der Eugenik und wie die Idee so erfolgreich wurde in der Politik des frühen 20. Jahrhunderts. Dabei reden wir über Sir Francis Galton, Plötz und viele mehr.#eugenik #politik #geschichte #deutschland3345 #allezeitderwelt---Dir gefällt der Podcast? Dann kannst du uns gerne auf Patreon unterstützen: https://www.patreon.com/allezeitderweltWir würden uns ebenfalls riesig darüber freuen, wenn du uns eine Bewertung hinterlässt und uns auf YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/@allezeitderwelt) folgst! Danke für deine Unterstützung!---Quellen & Literatur:Rasse, Blut und Gene, Geschichte der Eugenik und Rassenhygiene in Deutschland Von Peter Weingart, Jürgen Kroll und Kurt Bayertz.https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Davenporthttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nature_versus_nurture Galton, Francis, English men of science, their nature and nurture, 1875, S.9.http://web.archive.org/web/20120726062454/https://www.traces.org/Teachers/Chapter_8_TheNaziConnection.pdfhttps://firstmonday.org/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/13636/11599

Classic Audiobook Collection
English Men of Science - Their Nature and Nurture by Sir Francis Galton ~ Full Audiobook

Classic Audiobook Collection

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2023 280:29


English Men of Science - Their Nature and Nurture by Sir Francis Galton audiobook. The results of a survey undertaken by Galton to learn more about individual differences and similarities between the 'pre-eminent' men of his time. Brief biographical information, biometric data and extensive quotations have been compiled and presented. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Buddha-Blog - Le bouddhisme au quotidien - Le podcast bouddhiste - des bouddhistes Chan (Zen)

Intelligence collective Supposons un instant que nous, les humains, ayons, à l'instar des oiseaux, un don collectif, un moyen de transmettre des informations sans bruits ni sons. Pouvez-vous l'imaginer, peut-être même de manière imagée ? Des capacités presque surnaturelles, certes, mais si tous les êtres humains avaient ce don, celui-ci serait à nouveau très naturel. Nous n'avons même pas besoin de l'imaginer, car cette aptitude est effectivement en nous, atrophiée, mais présente. Vous avez certainement déjà entendu : "j'allais justement t'appeler, quelle coïncidence". Ou encore : "je pensais justement à toi". Ce sont des vestiges des restes enfouis de notre "intelligence en groupe", ce sont des signes que nous aussi, les humains, avons de telles capacités en nous. Ce que l'on appelle l'intelligence en essaim est une forme d'énergie. Les membres d'un groupe émettent et reçoivent des vibrations, comme les ondes longues. Les baleines peuvent "converser" sur des milliers de kilomètres, les dauphins nagent de manière synchronisée, les loups chassent en meute, les oiseaux planent dans le ciel dans une chorégraphie parfaite, les singes apparaissent comme une unité forte au sein d'un groupe, les poissons forment des structures entières dans une conformité totalement autonome, les insectes créent des colonies entières dans une dynamique presque sans limite. L'homme serait le seul parmi les êtres vivants "supérieurs" à ne pas pouvoir faire preuve d'une telle capacité, à ne pas disposer d'une telle communication collective (à part Internet) ? Un cousin de Charles Darwin, Sir Francis Galton, a réalisé une expérience très intéressante sur un marché aux bestiaux : le public était invité à estimer le poids d'un bœuf à vendre. Galton en a calculé la valeur moyenne, qui s'écartait de moins de 0,1 pour cent du poids mesuré. Le livre "La sagesse de la multitude" de James Surowiecki aborde précisément le phénomène selon lequel l'"essaim" prend des décisions plus intelligentes que l'individu. Comment cela peut-il se produire ? Ceux d'entre nous qui sont capables de reconnaître la véritable personnalité des gens en un coup d'œil savent de quoi je parle. Ceux qui sont éveillés voient derrière les coulisses, ils ne sont plus aveuglés par des rôles prétextes. Nous observons avec fascination les bancs d'oiseaux et de poissons qui disposent manifestement d'une intelligence de groupe qui leur permet de contrôler et d'interagir à l'unisson avec leurs congénères. L'homme possède également ces capacités, mais les connaissances à ce sujet sont tombées dans l'oubli. Nous aussi, nous sommes capables d'un tel comportement, nous pouvons prendre des décisions de groupe, si seulement nous le voulons. Les décisions prises en solitaire ne sont pas toujours les meilleures. Vous vous demandez certainement comment cela peut fonctionner. La réponse est simple : au départ, il y a la question (bouddhiste) "qui suis-je" ? D'autres questions en découlent, comme "d'où viens-je" ? Ceux d'entre nous qui réfléchissent à ces questions pourront aussi regarder bien plus loin derrière la réalité ressentie et "redécouvrir" des choses tout à fait étonnantes. Amusez-vous bien ! LES GENS ORDINAIRES NE FONT QUE RÉFLÉCHIR À LA MANIÈRE DONT ILS PASSENT LEUR TEMPS. UN HOMME INTELLIGENT ESSAIE D'EN TIRER PROFIT - ARTHUR SCHOPENHAUER - PHILOSOPHE ALLEMAND - 1788 À 1860 VOUS N'ÊTES PAS AUSSI STUPIDES QUE VOUS EN AVEZ L'AIR - MUHAMMAD ALI - BOXEUR AMÉRICAIN - 1942 À 2016 Copyright : ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://shaolin-rainer.de⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ (Veuillez également télécharger mon application „Shaolin-Rainer" depuis les magasins ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Apple⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ et ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Android⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠) Veuillez nous noter sur Apple, Google ou Spotify podcast pour nous aider à promouvoir l'émission. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/buddha-blog-francais/message

V O M O (Voice Of Many as One)
What Was Sir Francis Galton Even Thinking?!!!

V O M O (Voice Of Many as One)

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2023 14:20


There are two ideas that dominate popular conceptions of intelligence. They are IQ and a memory for factual information. In this episode I'll be talking about the IQ. What really is the idea behind it? Is it a guarantee for anything? What's even the intended purpose? I've put together my two cents on the matter in this new podcast. What are you still reading? Head right in to listen

Valuable Conversations with UCL IIPP

Welcome to Valuable Conversations with the Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose. On this episode, MPA alumni Justin Beirold sits down with Ph.D. candidate Nai Kalema. If you have been following this podcast, you heard Nai as co-host on several episodes, including our conversations with George the Poet, George Aye, and Damon Silvers. But today is all about Nai. Nai is a brilliant scholar and practitioner, who has been working for years on topics including global development, innovation, and strategic design. Her Ph.D. thesis is about digital transformation and determinants of health and their relationship with Digital Identity systems in Kenya and Uganda. The recording of this episode was unusual. Typically we book a guest, record the episode, and then I lightly edit it before release. But with Nai it went a little differently. I first interviewed her when we just started working together on the podcast, in November 2021. In that conversation, we talked about her life - growing up in Minnesota, attending George Washington University, and watching the Black Lives Matter movement emerged in her home state after the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis. We discussed her work at MIT and Harvard on global development and innovation policy, and how she got interested in design. And she told me why she chose to attend IIPP for her Ph.D. research. We also talked about her research. But this is where we changed things up. By the time I was ready to release the episode, quite a lot of time had passed. And most importantly, Nai has made enormous progress in her research - including narrowing down her topic to health and digital ID systems in Kenya and Uganda. So what you are about to hear is two interviews: one on her life journey and background, and a second one, recorded nearly a year later in October 2022, where we dig in deep on the research: Digital ID, the fact that both Biometrics and Eugenics were both invented at UCL by the same person - Sir Francis Galton - and some of the bigger picture concepts like data colonialism. Because this episode is long, I've included time stamps if you want to skip around. Nai is so awesome that I have tried to work with her as much as possible. It is worth noting that along with George the Poet, Nai is the first black PhD student at IIPP. And as we discuss in the conversation, I think she is the perfect person to assume that mantle. I've learned so much from her, and I'm so grateful for her hard work and time. I hope you enjoy my conversations with Nai Kalema. *****-3 min: Nai's life journey, education, working in development and innovation -34 min: why Nai chose IIPP for her Ph.D. research -48 min: Design Justice -55 min: Nai's Ph.D. research on digital ID and health in Kenya and Uganda.***** -Recorded in two conversations: November 2021 and October 2022 -Learn more about Nai: - Nai Kalema https://www.ucl.ac.uk/bartlett/public-purpose/nai-lee-kalema - Follow Nai on Twitterr: @NaiKalema -Learn about our host: - Justin Beirold https://www.ucl.ac.uk/bartlett/public-purpose/justin-beirold - Justin's Twitter: @VibeEconomy -Follow IIPP on Twitter: @IIPP_UCL https://www.ucl.ac.uk/bartlett/public-purpose/ -Production and music by Justin Beirold

The Nonlinear Library
LW - Language models can generate superior text compared to their input by ChristianKl

The Nonlinear Library

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2023 2:20


Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Language models can generate superior text compared to their input, published by ChristianKl on January 17, 2023 on LessWrong. There's a frequent misconception that assumes that a large language model will never achieve superhuman text creation ability because such models try to create texts that are maximally unsurprising. This article will explain why that assumption is wrong. In 1906, Sir Francis Galton conducted an experiment at a fair, where he asked fair-goers to guess the weight of an ox in a weight-judging competition. The median of 787 guesses was 1,207 pounds, while the actual weight of the ox was 1,198 pounds. The error in making guesses was a result of a combination of systematic bias and random noise. The fair-goers, having knowledge of oxen, had no bias in their guesses, thus the error was entirely due to random noise. By polling the 787 guesses, Galton averaged out the random noise of each individual guess. This phenomenon was coined wisdom of the crowd. In areas where reasoning errors are mostly random noise, crowds are smarter than individual members of the crowd. By training on large data sets, large language models can access the wisdom of the crowd. The ceiling of the ability of a large language model is the wisdom of the crowd instead of the wisdom of individual members of the crowd. The fact that each word of a text is massively unsurprising based on preceding words in the text does not imply that the text overall would be massively unsurprising. If you have a text you can calculate for every word in the text the likelihood (Ltext) how likely it would follow the preceding words in the text. You can also calculate the likelihood (Lideal) of the most likely word that would follow the preceding text. Lideal - Ltext is noise. If you look at a given text you can calculate the average of the noise for each word. A well-trained large language model is able to produce texts with a lot less noise than the average of the text in its training corpus. For further reading, Kahneman wrote Noise: A Flaw in Human Judgment which goes into more detail on how a machine learning model can eliminate noise and thus make better decisions than the average of its training data. Thanks for listening. To help us out with The Nonlinear Library or to learn more, please visit nonlinear.org.

The Nonlinear Library: LessWrong
LW - Language models can generate superior text compared to their input by ChristianKl

The Nonlinear Library: LessWrong

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2023 2:20


Link to original articleWelcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Language models can generate superior text compared to their input, published by ChristianKl on January 17, 2023 on LessWrong. There's a frequent misconception that assumes that a large language model will never achieve superhuman text creation ability because such models try to create texts that are maximally unsurprising. This article will explain why that assumption is wrong. In 1906, Sir Francis Galton conducted an experiment at a fair, where he asked fair-goers to guess the weight of an ox in a weight-judging competition. The median of 787 guesses was 1,207 pounds, while the actual weight of the ox was 1,198 pounds. The error in making guesses was a result of a combination of systematic bias and random noise. The fair-goers, having knowledge of oxen, had no bias in their guesses, thus the error was entirely due to random noise. By polling the 787 guesses, Galton averaged out the random noise of each individual guess. This phenomenon was coined wisdom of the crowd. In areas where reasoning errors are mostly random noise, crowds are smarter than individual members of the crowd. By training on large data sets, large language models can access the wisdom of the crowd. The ceiling of the ability of a large language model is the wisdom of the crowd instead of the wisdom of individual members of the crowd. The fact that each word of a text is massively unsurprising based on preceding words in the text does not imply that the text overall would be massively unsurprising. If you have a text you can calculate for every word in the text the likelihood (Ltext) how likely it would follow the preceding words in the text. You can also calculate the likelihood (Lideal) of the most likely word that would follow the preceding text. Lideal - Ltext is noise. If you look at a given text you can calculate the average of the noise for each word. A well-trained large language model is able to produce texts with a lot less noise than the average of the text in its training corpus. For further reading, Kahneman wrote Noise: A Flaw in Human Judgment which goes into more detail on how a machine learning model can eliminate noise and thus make better decisions than the average of its training data. Thanks for listening. To help us out with The Nonlinear Library or to learn more, please visit nonlinear.org.

Discovery
Bad Blood: You've Got Good Genes

Discovery

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2023 27:34


We follow the story of eugenics from its origins in the middle-class salons of Victorian Britain, through the Fitter Family competitions and sterilisation laws of Gilded Age USA, to the full genocidal horrors of Nazi Germany. Eugenics is born in Victorian Britain, christened by the eccentric gentleman-scientist Sir Francis Galton. It's a movement to breed better humans, fusing new biological ideas with the politics of empire, and the inflexible snobbery of the middle-classes. The movement swiftly gains momentum - taken up by scientists, social reformers, and even novelists as a moral and political quest to address urgent social problems. By encouraging the right people to have babies, eugenicists believed we could breed ourselves to a brighter future; a future free from disease, disability, crime, even poverty. What, its proponents wondered, could be more noble? The story culminates in the First International Eugenics Congress of 1912, where a delegation of eminent public figures from around the world gather in South Kensington to advocate and develop the science – and ideology – of better breeding. Among them Winston Churchill, Arthur Balfour, the Dean of St Pauls, Charles Darwin's son, American professors and the ambassadors from Norway, Greece, and France: a global crusade in motion. But amidst the sweeping utopian rhetoric, the darker implications of eugenic ideas emerge: what of those deemed 'unfit'? What should happen to them? Contributors: Professor Joe Cain, Daniel Maier, Professor Philippa Levine, Professor Angelique Richardson Featuring the voices of David Hounslow, Joanna Monro and Hughie O'Donnell

Seriously…
1. Bad Blood - You've Got Good Genes

Seriously…

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2022 27:53


In this 6-part series, we follow the story of eugenics from its origins in the middle-class salons of Victorian Britain, through the Fitter Family competitions and sterilisation laws of Gilded Age USA, to the full genocidal horrors of Nazi Germany. Episode 1: You've Got Good Genes Eugenics is born in Victorian Britain, christened by the eccentric gentleman-scientist Sir Francis Galton. It's a movement to breed better humans, fusing new biological ideas with the politics of empire, and the inflexible snobbery of the middle-classes. The movement swiftly gains momentum - taken up by scientists, social reformers, and even novelists as a moral and political quest to address urgent social problems. By encouraging the right people to have babies, eugenicists believed we could breed ourselves to a brighter future; a future free from disease, disability, crime, even poverty. What, its proponents wondered, could be more noble? The story culminates in the First International Eugenics Congress of 1912, where a delegation of eminent public figures from around the world gather in South Kensington to advocate and develop the science – and ideology – of better breeding. Among them Winston Churchill, Arthur Balfour, the Dean of St Pauls, Charles Darwin's son, American professors and the ambassadors from Norway, Greece, and France: a global crusade in motion. But amidst the sweeping utopian rhetoric, the darker implications of eugenic ideas emerge: what of those deemed 'unfit'? What should happen to them? Contributors: Professor Joe Cain, Daniel Maier, Professor Philippa Levine, Professor Angelique Richardson Featuring the voices of David Hounslow, Joanna Monro and Hughie O'Donnell Music and Sound Design by Jon Nicholls Presented by Adam Rutherford Produced by IIan Goodman Clips: Trump addresses a rally in Bemidji, Minnesota in 2020, C-Span / Trump on his German blood, Kings of Kallstadt 2014, directed by Simone Wendel, produced by Michael Bogar, Mario Conte, Inka Dewitz, Thomas Hofmann / Julian Huxley - Heredity in Man, Eugenics Society, 1937

Short Wave
Control: Eugenics And The Corruption Of Science

Short Wave

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2022 14:04


In 1859, Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species, a book about the evolution of non-human animals by natural selection. In its wake, a political idea arose — eugenics. Reading Darwin's book, Sir Francis Galton proposed that humans should be bred to give more "suitable" characteristics a "better chance of prevailing." Today, producer Rebecca Ramirez talks to Adam Rutherford about his new book, Control: The Dark History and Troubling Present of Eugenics, which traces the inextricable link between political ideology and science, and the enduring shadow of eugenics.

The Fake Ass Book Club
Episode 75: A Review: "Mexican Gothic" by Silvia Moreno-Garcia, in honor of Hispanic Heritage Month.

The Fake Ass Book Club

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2022 61:59


Welcome back! This week the ladies reviewed "Mexican Gothic" by Silvia Moreno- Garcia. (Warning, this episode contains spoilers for the book.) In this book, a family of in-bread colonizers living in a mold laced haunted mushroom house in the Mexico City country side, try to hold main character Noemi, and her cousin, Catalina hostage in this creepy hellscape. The Doyle family, originally from England, planned to use the women's wombs as incubators. The goal?... An effort to diversify their incestuous gene pool, while simultaneously preserving the twisted patriarch's tainted bloodline in an effort to obtain immortality! Gross and weird! It's giving serious Lord Voldermort vibes!!! Of course Kat finds a way to slide in a Star Trek reference, and they also have a fundamental disagreement on what they would have done at the end of the book. Tune in to find out what had the ladies divided! *Dedication: To the listeners: * To our listeners always, to indigenous people all over the world and the Latinx community and finally Kat's late father, that dude Buster. Warning SPOILERS!!! Adult Content & Language, please be advised this show is for adults 18 and up and the open minded. -About the Book :https://silviamoreno-garcia.com/writing/mexican-gothic/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexican_Gothic https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cGJulREPGF8 -About the Author: Silvia Moreno- Garcia https://silviamoreno-garcia.com/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silvia_Moreno-Garcia Book Rating: Moni and Kat rated the book 5 of 5 golden mushrooms and 5 red lip prints **Show Notes:* Mexican History https://www.history.com/topics/mexican-american-war/mexican-american-war *The patriarch of the Doyle Family in the book was named Howard. His name was inspired by the real life author Howard Lovecraft. About Howard Lovecraft: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H.P.Lovecraft eu·gen·ics : /yo͞oˈjeniks/, noun "The study of how to arrange reproduction within a human population to increase the occurrence of heritable characteristics regarded as "desirable". Developed largely by Sir Francis Galton as a method of "improving" the human race, eugenics was increasingly discredited as unscientific and racially biased during the 20th century, especially after the adoption of its doctrines by the Nazis in order to justify their treatment of Jews, disabled people, and other minority groups." -www.dictionary.com *Inbreeding Habsburg family history: https://www.britannica.com/topic/House-of-Habsburg https://www.thetealmango.com/featured/habsburg-jaw-the-horrific-consequences-of-royal-inbreeding-in-europe/ https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/hapsburg-monarchy *Edgar Allen Poe Poem :The Raven and the fall of the house of Usher. https://gradesfixer.com/free-essay-examples/analysis-of-poes-poems-the-raven-and-the-fall-of-the-house-of-usher/ *Mushroom healing power: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7525158/#:~:text=With%20the%20research%20advances%2C%20numerous,being%20the%20most%20remarkable%20ones. **Stranger than Fiction: * James Patterson claims white male writers face ‘another form of racism,' can't break into writing - The Washington Post https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/2022/06/14/james-patterson-white-male-writers-racism/ *Please email thefabpodcast@gmail.com with your book suggestions and "Stranger Than Fiction" stories so we can share them on the show!! *Reach out and let us how we are doing!! You can find us online by clicking our Link tree https://linktr.ee/Fabpod Patreon coming October 30, 2022!! Please join our Patreon family and support the cause. Don't forget to follow, rate, review, and SHARE our podcast! Thank you!

The Coffee Klatch with Robert Reich
Viktor Orban's eugenics and the GOP

The Coffee Klatch with Robert Reich

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2022 6:18


Yesterday, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban addressed a crowd of thousands of American admirers in Dallas, Texas, at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC). Orban described Hungary and America as “twin fronts” in a struggle against globalists, progressives, communists, and “fake news.”To fully comprehend Orban's influence on the Trump Republican Party, you need to understand the Orban has stripped Hungary of its democratic institutions and demonized immigrants. But that's not all. He has also embraced a form of eugenics, in which he claims that the future of the West is threatened by the “racial mixing” of white Christian Europeans with others. On July 23, Orban put it bluntly in a speech at the 31st Bálványos Summer Free University and Student Camp:The internationalist left employs a feint, an ideological ruse: the claim – their claim – that Europe by its very nature is populated by peoples of mixed race. … [We] do not want to become peoples of mixed-race. This is why we fought at Nándorfehérvár/Belgrade, this is why we stopped the Turks at Vienna, and – if I am not mistaken – this is why, in still older times – the French stopped the Arabs at Poitiers.Today the situation is that Islamic civilization, which is constantly moving towards Europe, has realized – precisely because of the traditions of Belgrade/Nándorfehérvár – that the route through Hungary is an unsuitable one along which to send its people up into Europe. This is why Poitiers has been replayed; now the incursion's origins are not in the East, but in the South, from where they are occupying and flooding the West. Orban's words and phrases were familiar to anyone who lived through the Nazi holocaust. After the speech, one of Orban's closest advisers resigned, calling it “pure Nazi.” Prominent American Republicans have rushed to Orban's defense. On Wednesday, when Orban stopped off at Trump's (Saudi-sponsored) golf tournament on the way to the CPAC conference, Trump called him a “friend,” adding “few people know as much about what is going on in the world today.” That evening, Tucker Carlson smirked on his Fox television show, “So Viktor Orban is now a Nazi because he wants national borders?” (Last year, Carlson did a special broadcast from Budapest during which he praised Orban's Hungary as a model for America.) And, of course, Orban gave yesterday's keynote at CPAC. Eugenics was popular at the turn of the last century. Developed largely by Sir Francis Galton — supposedly as a method to improve the human race — it called for arranging reproduction within the human population to increase characteristics regarded as desirable and minimize the undesirable. After the adoption of eugenics by the Nazis to justify their treatment of Jews, disabled people, and other minority groups, eugenics was discredited as unscientific and racially motivated. But eugenics has been reborn under another guise — that of white Christian nationalism. It is now presented as the scourge of “racial mixing” between white Christians of European descent, and others. It is a small leap from the invasions of Europe by Turks and Arabs centuries ago to the present generation of immigrants swarming over borders and “invading” white Christian nations. In Republican primary races this year, few issues have come up more frequently in TV ads than immigration — all featuring the word “invasion.” It's pure Orban. "We're gonna end this invasion," says Blake Masters, the Republican candidate for the Senate from Arizona, in one ad. “Invasion” is featured in ads for Gov. Brian Kemp in Georgia, Senator Rick Scott in Florida, and Kari Lake (now in a close race in the Republican primary for governor in Arizona). And, of course, for the past six years Trump has warned that America is being “invaded” by immigrants.The word “invasion” has a long history among white nationalists. It has been widely used by supporters of the "replacement theory" — the baseless conspiracy theory that Jews or elites are intentionally replacing white Americans with immigrants and people of color. Both Blake Masters and J.D. Vance, the Republican candidate for the Senate from Ohio (each the beneficiary of $15 million in campaign funding from far-right billionaire Peter Thiel and of a Trump endorsement) claim that Democrats are deliberately trying to “import” immigrants in an attempt to “replace Americans who were born here.”The racist tropes of “invasion” and “replacement” are intended to stoke fear and drive votes. They also fuel violence. Three years ago, a white gunman opened fire at a Walmart in El Paso, killing 23 people, most of them Latino. The suspect was motivated by what he called a "Hispanic invasion" of people coming to the U.S. illegally. The man suspected of killing 10 Black people earlier this year in Buffalo was also motivated by the replacement theory.The bogus science of eugenics, popular at the turn of the last century but since disgraced and forgotten, has now morphed into white Christian nationalism — which, at its core, is nothing but ugly racism. Along with Trump's big Lie, it defines today's Republican Party. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit robertreich.substack.com/subscribe

The Farm Podcast Mach II
Galton, Eugenics, AI and the School World Order w/ John Klyczek

The Farm Podcast Mach II

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2022 127:28


education system, education technology, "Ed-Tech," public schools, outcome-based education, creation of corporate workforce, competency-based education, Common Core, public=private partnerships, charter schools, community schools, charter vs community school factions, Sir Francis Galton, the legacy of eugenics, gifted program, gifted program vs basic education, Skinner, behavioralism, Skinner boxes, Skull and Bones, Society of Cincinnati, Daniel Coit Gilman, Trump administration, Biden administration, Obama administration, Betsy DeVos, the American Legislative Executive Council, ALEC, Utah SRA claims, Project BEST, nature vs nurture, the relationship between IQ and genetics, psychometrics, 23 and Me, data mining, educational algorithms, IQ-SEL, AI, VR, AR, gamification of education, social credit system, public school data as a means of training AIJohn's official website:https://www.schoolworldorder.info/ Get bonus content on Patreon Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

Engines of Our Ingenuity
Engines of Our Ingenuity 2244: The Gentleman Traveler

Engines of Our Ingenuity

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2022 3:49


Drinks with Great Minds in History
Philip II of Spain: Eugenics, Management, and Street Smarts

Drinks with Great Minds in History

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2022 41:07


Hello Great Minds, it's time for "A Twist of Psych!"Shari joins me for another fun round of "A Twist of Psych," this time on King Philip II of Spain.  We discuss the a bit about incest and eugenics, as well as management psychology, Philip's lack of "Street Smarts" and the Triarchic Theory of Intelligence. Key Topics:  Sir Francis Galton, Eugenics, Robert J. Sternberg, Triarchic Theory of Intelligence, Industrial-Organizational PsychologyThanks for listening!Cheers!Support the show here...Patreon Link - https://www.patreon.com/user?u=34398347&fan_landing=trueBe sure to follow DGMH on Instagram @drinkswithgreatminds_podcast and Join the DGMH Facebook group @ "Drinks with Great Men in History"Music:Hall of the Mountain King by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3845-hall-of-the-mountain-kingLicense: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Artwork by @Tali Rose... Check it out!Support the show

Not Your Average Financial Podcast™
Episode 246: Chaos, Plinko Boards and Your Financial Future

Not Your Average Financial Podcast™

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2022 26:33


In this episode, we ask: Have you ever seen a double pendulum? Have you ever played Plinko? What about quantum mechanics? What about the bell curve? What about emerging patterns? What about statistics? What about Sir Francis Galton? What about order out of chaos? What about Monte Carlo simulations? Can you unwind a portfolio in...

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Last 2 Weeks-70% Picks ESBC Against The Spread -2021-33 wks of profit

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2021 128:17


Bottomline :301 wins divided by 492 bets =61% (52.5% is break even) 301 times $950 average payout per win is $285,950 -$191,000 in losses = $94,000 in profit for the year. Those betting $100 per game is $9,400.00 in profit. $940 for those betting $10 per game Who is consistently making you $$$ ? What is the highest and best use of your time as a sports fan ? The person with the best information wins consistently in a repeatable and scalable We know that how we experience the NFL monetizing is helpful to people Compounding monetary effect of winning 31 Straight Weeks In A row of profit like you pay interest with a credit card by winning each week ; you pay your self compound interest ....Compound effect Exclusive Expert Picks. What makes us experts ? We make money every week for you consistently sports betting aggregator We make sure you do not get taken advantage of in the Sportsbetting Market We are the Bloomberg, CNBC And Fox Business of #sportsbetting #nflbetting #collegefootballbetting and #collegebasketballbetting Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players. scott cobe @sjcobe1 Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals" Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian josuevizcay.medium.com/top-10-rules-…l-bdc7d132490 linktr.ee/esbcpodcastnetwork Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Process is
 1)Research
 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic
 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games
 However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals" Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian josuevizcay.medium.com/top-10-rules-…l-bdc7d132490 linktr.ee/esbcpodcastnetwork

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week16 70% Picks ESBC Against The Spread -2021

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2021 120:17


277/456=60.7% = $84,150 profit / average American makes $53,000 a year Who is consistently making you $$$ ? What is the highest and best use of your time as a sports fan ? The person with the best information wins consistently in a repeatable and scalable Compounding monetary effect of winning 31 Straight Weeks In A row of profit like you pay interest with a credit card by winning each week ; you pay your self compound interest ....Compound effect Exclusive Expert Picks. What makes us experts ? We make money every week for you consistently sports betting aggregator We make sure you do not get taken advantage of in the Sportsbetting Market We are the Bloomberg, CNBC And Fox Business of #sportsbetting #nflbetting #collegefootballbetting and #collegebasketballbetting Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players. scott cobe @sjcobe1 Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals" Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian josuevizcay.medium.com/top-10-rules-…l-bdc7d132490 linktr.ee/esbcpodcastnetwork Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Process is
 1)Research
 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic
 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games
 However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals" Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian josuevizcay.medium.com/top-10-rules-…l-bdc7d132490 linktr.ee/esbcpodcastnetwork

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week 15 Hawthorne Effect Learn From Bets We Got Wrong

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2021 80:40


If you always make an excuse as a SportsBettor for why you lost a bet you're never going to improve your performance Be accountable, learn from your mistakes We are the Bloomberg, CNBC And Fox Business of #sportsbetting #nflbetting#collegefootballbetting and #collegebasketballbetting Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players. Current Las Vegas Knights Player scott cobe @sjcobe1 josuevizcay.medium.com/top-10-rules-…l-bdc7d132490 linktr.ee/esbcpodcastnetwork https://www.vsin.com/ Jim Coventry @JimCoventryNFL Follows you RotoWire NFL analyst- Sat/Sun SiriusXM Fantasy Sports Radio host. Many top-50 contest finishes and a #1 overall. @KingsClassicFF #SFB11 #EFFC3 #DWG7 Chicago (Southwest suburbs)rotowire.com/writer.php?nam…Born May 12Joined July 2009f www.vsin.com Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Process is
 1)Research
 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic
 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games
 However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals" Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week15-70% Picks ESBC Against The Spread -2021

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2021 88:29


250/167 = 59.95% = $75,500 profit / average American makes $53,000 250 times $950 the average win =$237,500- minus $167,000 in losses is $75,000 in profit Compounding monetary effect of winning 31 Straight Weeks In A row of profit like you pay interest with a credit card by winning each week ; you pay your self compound interest ....Compound effect Exclusive Picks We make sure you do not get taken advantage of in the Sportsbetting Market We are the Bloomberg, CNBC And Fox Business of #sportsbetting #nflbetting #collegefootballbetting and #collegebasketballbetting Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players. scott cobe @sjcobe1 @JimCoventryNFL RotoWire NFL analyst- Sat/Sun SiriusXM Fantasy Sports Radio host. Many top-50 contest finishes and a #1 overall. @KingsClassicFF #SFB11 #EFFC3 #DWG7 Chicago (Southwest suburbs)rotowire.com/writer.php?nam… https://www.vsin.com/ Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Process is
 1)Research
 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic
 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games
 However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals" Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian josuevizcay.medium.com/top-10-rules-…l-bdc7d132490 linktr.ee/esbcpodcastnetwork

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week 14 Hawthorne Effect Hawthorne Effect Learn From Bets We Got Wrong

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2021 93:33


If you always make an excuse as a SportsBettor for why you lost a bet you're never going to improve your performance Be accountable, learn from your mistakes We are the Bloomberg, CNBC And Fox Business of #sportsbetting #nflbetting#collegefootballbetting and #collegebasketballbetting Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players. scott cobe @sjcobe1 josuevizcay.medium.com/top-10-rules-…l-bdc7d132490 linktr.ee/esbcpodcastnetwork Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Process is
 1)Research
 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic
 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games
 However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals" Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

If you always make an excuse as a SportsBettor for why you lost a bet you're never going to improve your performance Be accountable, learn from your mistakes We are the Bloomberg, CNBC And Fox Business of #sportsbetting #nflbetting#collegefootballbetting and #collegebasketballbetting Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player  who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players. scott cobe @sjcobe1 josuevizcay.medium.com/top-10-rules-…l-bdc7d132490 linktr.ee/esbcpodcastnetwork WE use as a tool the Hawthorn Effect that whatever you track and measure you improve it performance by 10 to 20% Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Process is
 1)Research
 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic
 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games
 However  "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We  have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long  term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with  by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg  Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert  Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first  discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As  part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have  children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had  children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed  the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series  with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where  chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more  moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected  happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned  with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to  overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make  long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In  particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when  evaluating extreme early outcomes. " High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals" Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week14-70% Picks ESBC Against The Spread -2021

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2021 121:54


Bottom-line 233-152=60.5% = (233 Times/ $950=221,350 minus152,000= Profit of $63,350.00/ average American makes $53,000.00 Exclusive Picks We make sure you do not get taken advantage of in the Sportsbetting Market We are the Bloomberg, CNBC And Fox Business of #sportsbetting #nflbetting #collegefootballbetting and #collegebasketballbetting Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players. scott cobe @sjcobe1 @JimCoventryNFL Follows you RotoWire NFL analyst- Sat/Sun SiriusXM Fantasy Sports Radio host. Many top-50 contest finishes and a #1 overall. @KingsClassicFF #SFB11 #EFFC3 #DWG7 Chicago (Southwest suburbs)rotowire.com/writer.php?nam… Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Process is
 1)Research
 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic
 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games
 However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals" Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian josuevizcay.medium.com/top-10-rules-…l-bdc7d132490 linktr.ee/esbcpodcastnetwork

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week 13 Hawthorne Effect Hawthorne Effect Learn From Bets We Got Wrong

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2021 100:17


If you always make an excuse as a SportsBettor for why you lost a bet you're never going to improve your performance Be accountable, learn from your mistakes We are the Bloomberg, CNBC And Fox Business of #sportsbetting #nflbetting#collegefootballbetting and #collegebasketballbetting Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players. scott cobe @sjcobe1 josuevizcay.medium.com/top-10-rules-…l-bdc7d132490 linktr.ee/esbcpodcastnetwork Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Process is
 1)Research
 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic
 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games
 However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals" Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
70% Against The Spread NFL Thanksgiving Picks So You Make Money On Every Game

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2021 119:47


61.7 % Year To Date (52.5% is breakeven) If you always make an excuse as a SportsBettor for why you lost a bet you're never going to improve your performance Be accountable, learn from your mistakes We are the Bloomberg, CNBC And Fox Business of #sportsbetting #nflbetting#collegefootballbetting and #collegebasketballbetting Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players . scott cobe @sjcobe1 Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Process is
 1)Research
 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic
 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games
 However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals" Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian josuevizcay.medium.com/top-10-rules-…l-bdc7d132490 linktr.ee/esbcpodcastnetwork

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
70% Against The Spread “Hawthorne Effect” What ever you track And Measure You Improve 10-20%

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2021 65:39


 If you always make an excuse as a SportsBettor for why you lost a bet you're never going to improve your performance Be accountable, learn from your mistakes We are the Bloomberg, CNBC And Fox Business of #sportsbetting #nflbetting#collegefootballbetting and #collegebasketballbetting Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players. scott cobe @sjcobe1 Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Process is
 1)Research
 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic
 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games
 However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals" Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian josuevizcay.medium.com/top-10-rules-…l-bdc7d132490 linktr.ee/esbcpodcastnetwork

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week11-70% Picks ESBC Against The Spread -2021

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2021 157:56


Bottomline 182-109=62.5% =$63,900.00 profit on NFL We are the Bloomberg, CNBC And Fox Business of #sportsbetting #nflbetting #collegefootballbetting and #collegebasketballbetting Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players. scott cobe @sjcobe1 Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Process is
 1)Research
 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic
 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games
 However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals" Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian josuevizcay.medium.com/top-10-rules-…l-bdc7d132490 linktr.ee/esbcpodcastnetwork

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week -10 Hawthorne Effect NFL Betting MasterClass 2021

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2021 100:30


Bottomline 160-95=62.7% =$57,000 profit 152,000-$57,00.00 =$57,000 profit on NFL  If you always make an excuse as a SportsBettor for why you lost a bet you're never going to improve your performance Be accountable, learn from your mistakes We are the Bloomberg, CNBC And Fox Business of #sportsbetting #nflbetting #collegefootballbetting and #collegebasketballbetting Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players. scott cobe @sjcobe1 Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Process is
 1)Research
 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic
 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games
 However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals" Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian josuevizcay.medium.com/top-10-rules-…l-bdc7d132490 linktr.ee/esbcpodcastnetwork

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week10-70% Picks ESBC Against The Spread -2021

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2021 109:51


Bottomline 160-95=62.7% =$57,000 profit 152,000-$57,00.00 =$57,000 profit on NFL Hardest working #Sportdsbetting Podcast in the United States And We Share A Detailed Process We are the Bloomberg, CNBC And Fox Business of #sportsbetting #nflbetting #collegefootballbetting and #collegebasketballbetting Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players. scott cobe @sjcobe1 Josh Abner MBA Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Process is 1)Research 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the PodcastBet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals" Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian josuevizcay.medium.com/top-10-rules-…l-bdc7d132490 linktr.ee/esbcpodcastnetwork

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week -9 Hawthorne Effect NFL Betting MasterClass 2021

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2021 87:53


Bottomline 160-95=62.7% =$57,000 profit 152,000-$57,00.00 =$57,000 profit on NFL We are the Bloomberg, CNBC And Fox Business of #sportsbetting #nflbetting #collegefootballbetting and #collegebasketballbetting Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players. scott cobe @sjcobe1 Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Process is
 1)Research
 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic
 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games
 However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals" Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian josuevizcay.medium.com/top-10-rules-…l-bdc7d132490 linktr.ee/esbcpodcastnetwork

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week 9-70% Picks ESBC Against The Spread -2021

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2021 116:41


Bottomline 19-12=59% Week 8 (52.5% is breakeven) 140-84=62.5% Year To Date Hardest working NFL Sportsbetting Podcast! Pro picks free on every game, side snd total Bet Like A Pro . And Grow To Be A Pro You learn more from the bets you got wrong than the bets you got right We are the Bloomberg ; CNBC And Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp Lines Are Lies" Links To Betting Education Articles wp.me/pgcnL-60 We want people to learn business finance and to increase happiness watching football games, collaborate
& laugh with the betting public & anyone else “Most expensive advice is bad advice”
Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals"
Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players. scott cobe
@sjcobe1
Follows you
High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Process is

 1)Research 

2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 
3)Rigorously apply logic 

4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games

However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking"
Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " Per Ian O'connor book Belicheat figured out how to use an illegal Lacrosse stick. Bilicheat does it for the thrill ; not for money or even competitive advantage

The Fake Ass Book Club
Episode 26: "Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents"- Isabel Wilkerson Part 2.

The Fake Ass Book Club

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2021 48:12


Welcome back to the Fake Ass Book Club. Your host continue to talk about New York Times Bestseller and Oprah's Book Club pick, Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents. Kat starts by very sloppily explaining Noah's Ark and the curse of Ham. This book also leads to conversations around why the Santa Claus and Tooth Fairy myths can be harmful, why Mother Teresa was awful in real life, eugenics, Steven Universe, and In Living Color's Classic sketch "Men on Film". Wow, what a diverse podcast this is. Sit back, relax, and enjoy the ride. Cheers! Trigger Warning: Use of Racial Epitaphs, Explict Language Caste Part 2: 8 pilars of caste continued 5-8 FIVE: Occupational Hierarchy In the reasoning of Senator James Henry Hammond of South Carolina, in 1858, society needs to have menial workers, and since this means people of little intellect and skill, society was lucky to have “‘found a race adapted to that purpose.'” (p. 131) Hence after the Civil Was, South Carolina prohibited black from performing any labor except farming or domestic work. In North Carolina people in the lowest caste were forbidden to do trading. Thus they could not earn extra money in order to better their situation. Even the Great Migration did not help blacks to escape their caste. In the North they were given a position lower than the recent European immigrants. “‘Every avenue for improvement was closed against him,' wrote William A. Sinclair. (p. 134). SIX: Dehumanization and Stigma Dehumanizing another human being is a long process, programming one group to deny the evidence of their senses. In both Nazi Germany and the U.S., attempts have been made to strip target groups of their individuality: Jews' heads were shamed, clothing was replaced with striped uniforms, numbers replaced names. In the American South, Africans were given mocking new names, were forced to do the heaviest work for a bare minimum of food, were compelled to wear clothing not much different than potato bags, were punished for showing any human response to their conditions. Abolitionist William Goodell wrote that the American slave was “‘punished with a severity from which all others are exempted. He is under the control of the law, though unprotected by the law, and can know law only as an enemy.'” (p. 146) The inhumanity of the labor itself (draining swamps, chopping trees, hauling logs) further dehumanized both American and Nazi slaves. Both Jews and African-Americans were used as victims of medical experiments. The “total control over black bodies game them unfettered access to the anatomy of live subjects.” (p. 148) In our country we accepted a culture of cruelty toward this lowest caste: “made violence and mockery seem mundane and amusing . . . built up the immune system against empathy.” (p.149) SEVEN: Terror as Enforcement, Cruelty as a Means of Control Whipping and flogging (one extreme was “bucking” p. 155) were the most common measures for controlling slaves. Other methods included burning or branding slaves, vigilante shootings, and public lynchings. In both the U.S. and in Nazi Germany, those in control sowed “dissension among the subordinate caste by creating a hierarchy among the captives, rewarding those who identified more with the oppressor rather than the oppressed and who would report back to them any plots of escape or uprising.” (p. 156) In the 20th century in the U.S., slavey was over but the consequences for acting above one's caste were the same. EIGHT: Inherent Superiority versus Inherent Inferiority The image of African-Americans was controlled for a hundred years and more after the Emancipation Proclamation. Movie roles were for heavy women with the dialect of field hands, filling the roles of servants. Jim Crow laws forced African Americans to relinquish their place on the pavement to a white person; black soldiers were “set upon and killed for wearing eerie army uniforms,” just as the SS would kill Jewish women wearing furs. The garments were above their caste. (p. 161) African Americans could incite write rage “‘In the tone of an answer,' Douglass wrote, ‘in answering at all; in not answering; in the expression of countenance; in the motion of the heard; in the gait, manner and bearing. . . . ‘ This code extended for generations. Years after the Nazis were defeated across the Atlantic.” (p. 163 *eu·gen·ics /yo͞oˈjeniks/ noun the study of how to arrange reproduction within a human population to increase the occurrence of heritable characteristics regarded as desirable. Developed largely by Sir Francis Galton as a method of improving the human race, eugenics was increasingly discredited as unscientific and racially biased during the 20th century, especially after the adoption of its doctrines by the Nazis in order to justify their treatment of Jews, disabled people, and other minority groups. *Mother Teresa stuff- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jV4YzOwMu6I https://thehoya.com/noted-scholar-attacks-mother-teresa-legacy/ *Men on Film- In Living Color -Correction Kenon Ivory Waynes was the one who showed his butt on the Zoom call not Damon Waynes. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2OKwRsnWO84 thefabpodcast@gmail.com thefabpodcast on IG

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week -8 Hawthorne Effect NFL Betting MasterClass 2021

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2021 103:39


140-84=62.5% (52.5% is breakeven) But you learn more from bets you got wrong verses bets you got right But you learn more from bet you got wrong verses bets you got right Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Process is
 1)Research
 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic
 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games
 However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " "Regression to the mean" plays out its importance with betting lines

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week 8-70% Picks ESBC Against The Spread -2021

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2021 124:49


Bottom-line 16-11=59% (52.5% is breakeven)Week #8 122-73=62% for the year (122/$950=$115,900-$73,000)=$42,000 profit after w eek 7 "Lines Are Lies" Articles https://wp.me/pgcnL-60 Hardest working NFL Sportsbetting Podcast We want people to learn business finance and to increase happiness watching football games, collaborate
& laugh with the betting public & anyone else Bet Like A Pro . And Grow To Be A Pro You learn more from the bets you got wrong than the bets you got right We are the Bloomberg ; CNBC And Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice”
Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals"
Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players. scott cobe
@sjcobe1
Follows you
High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Process is

 1)Research 

2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 
3)Rigorously apply logic 

4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games

However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking"
Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " Per Ian O'connor book Belicheat figured out how to use an illegal Lacrosse stick. Bilicheat does it for the thrill ; not for money or even competitive advantage

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week -7 Hawthorne Effect NFL Betting MasterClass 2021

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2021 90:13


Bottomline 26 Weeks straight of profit 62.5% (52.5% is breakeven) $42,500 in profit this year betting $1000.00 a game But you learn more from bet you got wrong verses bets you got right Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Process is
 1)Research
 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic
 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games
 However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " "Regression to the mean" plays out its importance with betting lines

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week 7-70% Picks ESBC Against The Spread -2021

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2021 106:50


Last Week 17-13=56% (52.5% is breakeven) 121-72=63% (YTD) $42,950.00 Profit "By the grace of God This year) Hardest working NFL Sportsbetting Podcast We want people to learn business finance and to increase happiness watching football games, collaborate
& laugh with the betting public & anyone else Bet Like A Pro . And Grow To Be A Pro You learn more from the bets you got wrong than the bets you got right We are the Bloomberg ; CNBC And Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice”
Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals"
Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players. scott cobe
@sjcobe1
Follows you
High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Process is

 1)Research 

2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 
3)Rigorously apply logic 

4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games

However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking"
Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " Per Ian O'connor book Belicheat figured out how to use an illegal Lacrosse stick. Bilicheat does it for the thrill ; not for money or even competitive advantage

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week 6-70% Picks ESBC Against The Spread -2021

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2021 117:59


We give out all of the picks every game ; the side and every over/under Hardest working NFL Sportsbetting Podcast We want people to learn business finance and to increase happiness watching football games, collaborate
& laugh with the betting public & anyone else Bet Like A Pro . And Grow To Be A Pro You learn more from the bets you got wrong than the bets you got right We are the Bloomberg ; CNBC And Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice”
Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals"
Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players. scott cobe
@sjcobe1
Follows you
High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Process is

 1)Research 

2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 
3)Rigorously apply logic 

4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games

However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking"
Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " Per Ian O'connor book Belicheat figured out how to use an illegal Lacrosse stick. Bilicheat does it for the thrill ; not for money or even competitive advantage "Regression to the mean" plays out its importance with betting lines

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week 5-70% Picks ESBC Against The Spread -2021

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2021 121:35


Bottom line 82 wins verses 49 Losses =$28,900 profit All picks are 100% every game ; every over/under Hardest working NFL Sportsbetting Podcast We want people to learn business finance and to increase happiness watching football games, collaborate & laugh with the betting public & anyone else Bet Like A Pro . And Grow To Be A Pro You learn more from the bets you got wrong than the bets you got right We are the Bloomberg ; CNBC And Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigation Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals"
Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players. scott cobe @sjcobe1 Follows you High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Process is
 1)Research
 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic
 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games
 However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " Per Ian O'connor book Belicheat figured out how to use an illegal Lacrosse stick. Bilicheat does it for the thrill ; not for money or even competitive advantage "Regression to the mean" plays out its importance with betting lines https://josuevizcay.medium.com/top-10-rules-for-betting-gambling-nfl-cfb-and-college-basketball-bdc7d132490

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week - 4 Hawthorne Effect NFL Betting MasterClass 2021

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2021 48:20


This Episode We go over the "Bets we got wrong" 21-11=65% Wk *(52.5% is break even) "Ground Hog Day" 60-38=62% (Year To Date) =$19,000.00 ish profit You learn more from the bets you got wrong than the bets you got right Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Process is
 1)Research
 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic
 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games
 However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore th

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week 4-70% Picks ESBC Against The Spread -2021

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2021 133:52


21-11=66% wk 3 *(52.5% is break even) 60-38=62% (Year To Date) =$19,000.00 ish profit Bet Like A Pro . And Grow To Be A Pro You learn more from the bets you got wrong than the bets you got right We are the Bloomberg ; CNBC And Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Josh Vizcay MBA - Financial Services "Makes Money As Financial Services Professional -Tax Mitigates Money For Business And Wealthy Individuals"
Also County Boards, City Councils, and local Political Corruption Historian Chad Nolan @cnolan3 is an accomplished College Football and Arena League Football player who has worked with big time NFL and current college football players. scott cobe @sjcobe1 Follows you High stakes football manager and avid podcast listener i now am a fantasy football writer and contributor#sfb11 wb2021 and #effc3 and Pollys playoff league Process is
 1)Research
 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic
 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games
 However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " Per Ian O'connor book Bilcheat figured out how to use an illegal Lacrosse stick. Bilicheat does it for the thrill ; not for money or even competitive advantage "Regression to the mean" plays out its importance with betting lines

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report
NFL Week - 3 Hawthorne Effect NFL Betting MasterClass 2021

#ESBC NFL Betting and Team Report

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2021 48:36


This Episode We go over the "Bets we got wrong" 21-11=66% wk 3 *(52.5% is break even) 60-38=62% (Year To Date) =$19,000.00 ish profit You learn more from the bets you got wrong than the bets you got right Link To Hawthorne Effect www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hawthorne-effect.asp “Most expensive advice is bad advice” Process is
 1)Research
 2) Use math (which is pattern recognition not calculation and statistics) 3)Rigorously apply logic
 4) Make a good decision that consistently results in free cash flow, profit and money. Podcast is actionable information in real time to monetize the outcomes of the games
 However "Salesman think short term-businessman and women think long term"
We have 1000% ROI -Return on investment. "Higher level thinking is long term thinking" Meaning 10 times more money than what you started with by listening o the Podcast
Bet The Process This is the CNBC Bloomberg Fox Business Of Sportsbetting Regression To The Mean As Robert Glazer writes "The concept of regression to the mean was first discovered by the statistician and sociologist Sir Francis Galton. As part of his research, Galton observed that tall parents tended to have children who were shorter than them, whereas short parents often had children who were taller than them. Based on this, Galton developed the principle of regression to the mean, which states that in any series with complex phenomena that are dependent on many variables, where chance is involved, extreme outcomes tend to be followed by more moderate ones. In other words, if something extremely unexpected happens, it is likely to be followed by something that's more aligned with statistical projections or expectations. We have a tendency to overreact to results in the short term and use those outcomes to make long term decisions, ignoring the reality of regression to the mean. In particular, we tend to ignore the role of luck and timing when evaluating extreme early outcomes. " "Regression to the mean" plays out its importance with betting lines

NTEB BIBLE RADIO: Rightly Dividing
NTEB PROPHECY NEWS PODCAST: Are We Right Now Watching The Long Called For Global Depopulation Demanded By The New World Order Eugenicists?

NTEB BIBLE RADIO: Rightly Dividing

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2021 100:26


On this episode of the NTEB Prophecy News Podcast, the New World Order for over a century has broadcast, in overt statements as well as through the arcane medium of predictive programming, the coming planned global reduction of the human population. Population reduction has long been the rally cry of eugenicists Sir Francis Galton, Margaret Sanger, Adolf Hitler, David Rockefeller, George Soros, Bill Gates Sr., Bill Gates, Planned Parenthood, the United Nations, the World Health Organization, and engraved on the tables of the Georgia Guidestones. So my question to you is this, has the killing already begun? Today on the Prophecy News Podcast, we will show you some mind-numbing revelations happening right now, and then take you to the book of Revelation where it has all be foretold in the scripture of truth. Today the Biden administration announced they would be drastically reducing the amount of life-saving monoclonal antibodies currently being sent to areas hard-hit by COVID-19 like Florida, Arizona and other mostly conservative states. Such an act is tantamount to murder, just imagine if the medicine in question was something designed to treat heat attacks instead of COVID. But this is only the beginning, the New World Order has decreed that if you refuse to be injected with the vaccine, you will no longer be allowed to live. Let the games begin.

On Opinion
Psychometrics: measuring ourselves, with John Rust

On Opinion

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2021 44:55


### S2 E22: Psychometrics: measuring ourselves> _“Psychometrics is one of the most important or influential areas of applied psychology”_Psychometrics, the study of personality and ability, began with the Chinese Imperial Court exams, which measured intelligence and civility, as well as archery and horse-riding. Via the East India Company, testing - of intelligence as well as psychological traits - spread to the British and French civil service, and then onwards to education. Psychometrics gave us exams.John Rust, one of the world's foremost authorities, walks us through the history and politics of psychometrics, from eugenics and the fraught question of race and IQ, through to the four core psychographic theories of personality: Freud's psychoanalysis, Carl Rogers' Humanistic Theory of person, the Social Learning approach, to the Genetic (Rust's own focus). In the process, he tackles the very politics of testing, psychometry's complicated place in the world of psychology, and the validity of Myers-Briggs and OCEAN tests.> _“It's a remarkably important area of science. If we can get it right, we can do lots of good. If you get it wrong, there can be a disaster.”_Listen to John explain:- The origins of psychometrics- The problem with Evolutionary Psychology- The Naturalistic Fallacy- Myers-Briggs and Big 5 Theories of Personality- The Flynn Effect - The ethics of psychometrics in the age of Big Data and ‘Surveillance Capitalism'Works cited include:- Sir Francis Galton's [Lexical Hypothesis](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lexical_hypothesis)- Raymond Cattell and his [16 Personality Types](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/16PF_Questionnaire)- James Flynn's [work on IQ and race](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flynn_effect)Read the [**Full Transcript**] (https://www.parlia.com/article/transcript-understanding-psychometry-with-john)[**John Rust**](https://www.psychometrics.cam.ac.uk/about-us/directory/john-rust)John Rust is the founder of The Psychometrics Centre and an Associate Fellow of the Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence. He is also a Senior Member of Darwin College. On Opinion is a member of [The Democracy Group] (https://www.democracygroup.org/), a network of podcasts that examines what's broken in our democracy and how we can work together to fix it.Listen to Out Of Order.More on this episodeLearn all about On OpinionMeet Turi Munthe: https://twitter.com/turiLearn more about the Parlia project here: https://www.parlia.com/aboutAnd visit us at: https://www.parlia.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Dan 11:32
Dan 11:32 Episode 14: Sir Francis Galton, Father of Eugenics

Dan 11:32

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2021 155:42


"Eugenics" is “the study or practice of attempting to improve the human gene pool by encouraging the reproduction of people considered to have desirable traits and discouraging or preventing the reproduction of people considered to have undesirable traits.” In this episode, we examine the work and legacy of Sir Francis Galton, and the continuing influence of eugenicist ideology on the spirit of the age in the 21st Century.

The Science of Self
Look For Equilibrium Points

The Science of Self

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2021 13:10


Mental Model #8: Look for Equilibrium Points. This mental model is about noticing trends in progress. When you first start something, you go from zero to one - that's an infinite rate of progress. Then you go from one to two, two to three, and so on, and the rate of progress slows, and the returns start diminishing. Somewhere around there is an equilibrium point that truly represents what the average mean will be. Don't make the mistake of not waiting for it. Mental Model #9: Wait for the Regression to the Mean. This is the final mental model about seeing the whole picture in terms of information. A change without a reason for the change is not really a change; it's just a deviation. As such, it doesn't represent what will continue to happen in the future. A regression to the mean is when things settle back down and resume what they were doing before - this is representative of reality. Hear it Here - https://bit.ly/mentalmodelshollins Show notes and/or episode transcripts are available at https://bit.ly/self-growth-home Peter Hollins is a bestselling author, human psychology researcher, and a dedicated student of the human condition. Visit https://bit.ly/peterhollins to pick up your FREE human nature cheat sheet: 7 surprising psychology studies that will change the way you think. For narration information visit Russell Newton at https://bit.ly/VoW-home For production information visit Newton Media Group LLC at https://bit.ly/newtonmg #EquilibriumPoints #Galton #Goldilocks #Outlier #Regression #SirFrancisGalton #LookForEquilibriumPoints #RussellNewton #NewtonMG #PeterHollins #ArtandScienceofSelf-Growth Equilibrium Points,Galton,Goldilocks,Outlier,Regression,Sir Francis Galton,Look For Equilibrium Points,Russell Newton,NewtonMG,Peter Hollins,Art and Science of Self-Growth

Free Audiobooks
The Art of Travel - Sir Francis Galton - Book 6, Part 1

Free Audiobooks

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2021 494:23


The Art of Travel - Sir Francis Galton - Book 6, Part 1 Title: The Art of Travel Overview: The Art of Travel is a handbook of practical advice for the adventure-seeking Victorian. We hear how to organize all steps of a voyage, from the very beginnings (qualifications of a traveler, how to organize an expedition, the perfect outfit), to the actual trip (how to choose a bivouac, huts, and tents, what game to shoot - and how, as well as dealing with (hostile) savages), until the final, hopefully successful, return of the traveler (arranging memoranda). Published: 1872 Series: The Art of ... Author: Sir Francis Galton Genre: Essays & Short Works, Literary Criticism Episode: The Art of Travel - Sir Francis Galton - Book 6, Part 1 Part: 1 of 2 Length Part: 8:13:48 Book: 6 Length Book: 13:38:20 Episodes: 0 - 23 of 47 Narrator: Availle Language: English Rated: Guidance Suggested Edition: Unabridged Audiobook Keywords: travel, danger, adventure, review, advice, history, voyage, organize, trip Hashtags: #freeaudiobooks #audiobook #mustread #readingbooks #audiblebooks #favoritebooks #free #booklist #audible #freeaudiobook #travel #voyage #advice #organize #adventure #trip Credits: All LibriVox Recordings are in the Public Domain. Wikipedia (c) Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. WOMBO Dream. Availle. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/free-audiobooks/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/free-audiobooks/support

Free Audiobooks
The Art of Travel - Sir Francis Galton - Book 6, Part 2

Free Audiobooks

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2021 325:34


The Art of Travel - Sir Francis Galton - Book 6, Part 2 Title: The Art of Travel Overview: The Art of Travel is a handbook of practical advice for the adventure-seeking Victorian. We hear how to organize all steps of a voyage, from the very beginnings (qualifications of a traveler, how to organize an expedition, the perfect outfit), to the actual trip (how to choose a bivouac, huts, and tents, what game to shoot - and how, as well as dealing with (hostile) savages), until the final, hopefully successful, return of the traveler (arranging memoranda). Published: 1872 Series: The Art of ... Author: Sir Francis Galton Genre: Nonfiction, Nature, Travel & Geography Episode: The Art of Travel - Sir Francis Galton - Book 6, Part 2 Part: 2 of 2 Length Part: 5:24:59 Book: 6 Length Book: 13:38:20 Episodes: 24 - 47 of 47 Narrator: Availle Language: English Rated: Guidance Suggested Edition: Unabridged Audiobook Keywords: travel, danger, adventure, review, advice, history, voyage, organize, trip Hashtags: #freeaudiobooks #audiobook #mustread #readingbooks #audiblebooks #favoritebooks #free #booklist #audible #freeaudiobook #travel #voyage #advice #organize #adventure #trip Credits: All LibriVox Recordings are in the Public Domain. Wikipedia (c) Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. WOMBO Dream. Availle. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/free-audiobooks/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/free-audiobooks/support

Word with Bowne, or That Dude who Teaches English
Tom Buchanan and The Displays of Racism and White Nationalism in The Great Gatsby

Word with Bowne, or That Dude who Teaches English

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2020 15:51


Let's take an intimate look at the characterization of Tom Buchanano: a vile, powerful, wealthy, hypocritical, and racist character by picking at the words that Fitzgerald uses to describe such a man who existed in numerous manifgestiations in the eugenics of the 1920s and 1930s, leading up to World War II and The Holocaust. Eugenics: "the study of how to arrange reproduction within a human population to increase the occurrence of heritable characteristics regarded as desirable. Developed largely by Sir Francis Galton as a method of improving the human race, eugenics was increasingly discredited as unscientific and racially biased during the 20th century, especially after the adoption of its doctrines by the Nazis in order to justify their treatment of Jews, disabled people, and other minority groups."

In the KNOW!
Techno Thriller "The Crucible of Steele" by Linda M. Whitaker: An Interview

In the KNOW!

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2020 39:14


Linda M. Whitaker is a retail data scientist, and a writer of science and technology thrillers.  By day she plays with numbers, by night, with words. Linda started writing around 2011 when she took her first mystery class with Ellen Hart, a prolific Minneapolis author.   Many years of learning and perseverance have finally led to her debut novel. Linda resides with her husband in the mountains of Western North Carolina.  She loves running in the forest, gardening, cooking, and playing with her dog and cat. Debut Novel, “The Crucible of Steele” - Thriller, near future Science Fiction BUY on Amazon: US, CA, UK, etc “Emiko's Story” - If you'd like to learn more about Georgia Steele's world, click HERE for a free copy of Emiko's Story as told through the teen’s eyes. Accompany Emiko as she goes on her search for Georgia.  To learn more about “The Darwin Letters” and Sir Francis Galton, click on Whitaker’s Blog HERE. "Elon Musk Announces Neuralink Advance Toward Syncing Our Brains with AI" linda@lmwhitaker.com  lmwhitaker.com   Linda M. Whitaker Author Facebook Page Linda Whitaker Twitter handle:  @lindamwhitaker ----- For the “In the Know” Interview Request Form, click HERE. Diann@DiannAbroad.com       DiannAbroad.com  Click HERE for Diann’s new book: “Claim Denied”   Music by Rafael Javadov: “The Amelia Island Sun” and “Hunt Valley” ©Copyright All Rights Reserved 2020 Thank you for listening. Please leave comments and forward to your friends.  

Intervalo de Confiança
InfC # 05 - Influencers da Ciência: Sir Francis Galton

Intervalo de Confiança

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2020 45:25


Hoje é dia do "Influencers da Ciência", um Spin-Off do podcast "Intervalo de Confiança". Neste programa trazemos o nome de Influencers que de fato trouxeram algo de positivo para a sociedade, aqueles que expandiram as fronteiras do conhecimento científico e hoje permitiram o desenvolvimento de diversas áreas. Neste episódio, Igor Alcantara fala sobre a vida e obra daquele que podemos considerar o Anakin Skywalker da ciência. Francis Galton tem importantes contribuições para a ciência, ao ponto de quem sem essas descobertas, a ciência que fazemos hoje seria impraticável. Assim como seu famoso primo (descubra quem é ao ouvir o programa), o mundo seria diferente sem seu trabalho. A Força do conhecimento era presente na família, mas Galton deixou o preconceito levá-lo para o lado sombrio e isso manchou para sempre sua história. Escute este episódio e conheça mais sobre esta importante personalidade. Apresentou este episódio Igor Alcantara. A edição foi feita por Leo Oliveira. A vitrine do episódio foi criada por Diego Madeira. Não esqueça de visitar nosso site em http://intervalodeconfianca.com.br

COMPLEXITY
Albert Kao on Animal Sociality & Collective Computation

COMPLEXITY

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2020 52:38


Over one hundred years ago, Sir Francis Galton asked 787 villagers to guess an ox’s weight. None of them got it right, but averaging the answers led to a near-perfect estimate. This is a textbook case of the so-called “wisdom of crowds,” in which we’re smarter as collectives than we are as individuals. But the story of why evolution sometimes favors sociality is not so simple — everyone can call up cases in which larger groups make worse decisions. More nuanced scientific research is required for a deeper understanding of the origins and fitness benefits of collective computation — how the complexity of an environment or problem, or the structure of a group, provides the evolutionary pressures that have shaped the landscape of wild and civilized societies alike. Not every group deploys the same rules for decision-making; some decide by a majority, some by consensus. Some groups break up into smaller sub-groups and evaluate things in a hierarchy of modular decisions. Some crowds are wise and some are dumber than their parts, and understanding how and when and why the living world adopts a vast diversity of different strategies for sociality yields potent insights into how to tackle the most wicked problems of our time.This week’s guest is Albert Kao, a Baird Scholar and Omidyar Fellow here at SFI. Kao came to Santa Fe after receiving his PhD in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Princeton and spending three years as a James S. McDonnell fellow at Harvard. In this episode, we talk about his research into social animals and collective decision-making, just one of several reasons why a species might evolve to live in groups. What do the features of these groups, or the environments they live in, have to do with how they process information and act in the world?If you enjoy this podcast, please help us reach a wider audience by subscribing, leaving a review, and telling your friends about the show on social media.Thank you for listening!Albert’s WebsiteAlbert’s Google Scholar PageDiscussed:Quanta Magazine’s “Smarter Parts Make Collective Systems Too Stubborn”Visit our website for more information or to support our science and communication efforts.Join our Facebook discussion group to meet like minds and talk about each episode.Podcast Theme Music by Mitch Mignano.Follow us on social media:Twitter • YouTube • Facebook • Instagram • LinkedIn

Critical Nonsense
Baking and Legal Sports Betting

Critical Nonsense

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2019 42:21


What makes baking special? And what could happen now that sports betting is (mostly) legal? [22:22] This week, Aaron and Joey talk about anxiety, chemistry, grandmas, predictive markets, Sir Francis Galton, and Mary Berry. They don't talk about which of Mary, Merry, and Marry sound the same. references The Atlantic on anxiety-baking. More on prediction markets. Predict it. Wiki's bio on Sir Francis Galton.

Index Fund Advisors - Podcast
IFA.tv - Galton Board and the Regression to the Mean - Show 277

Index Fund Advisors - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2018 7:39


It was in 1876 in a Victorian workshop rather like this one that Sir Francis Galton constructed a contraption called the Galton Board.

Index Fund Advisors - Podcast
IFA.tv - Galton Board and the Normal Distribution - Show 275

Index Fund Advisors - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2018 7:01


You may not have heard of him, but Sir Francis Galton was a Victorian genius.

Index Fund Advisors - Podcast
IFA.tv - Francis Galton: Part 1: Whenever You Can, Count - Show 255

Index Fund Advisors - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2018 4:29


Most people have never heard of him, but Sir Francis Galton was a Victorian genius. In part one of this three part series we explore his background.

Why We Do What We Do
026 │Aphantasia: Thinking Without Pictures │ Why We Do What We Do

Why We Do What We Do

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2017 52:11


In 1880 Sir Francis Galton first identified a phenomenon in which people cannot visualize. Reports suggested that as much as 2.5% of the population may live this experience daily. Until now this phenomenon has remained largely unexplored. However, Cognitive neurologist Professor Adam Zeman, at the University of Exeter Medical School, has revisited this recently, including coining of the term "Aphantasia to describe the experience. In this episode, Abraham and RYANO talk about Aphantasia, in their typical "consumable psychology" style. Listen in, and remember that you can reach us directly at 775.525.0908, at info@wwdwwdpodcast.com, through the comments below OR on social via @wwdwwdpodcast or #wwdwwdpodcast.