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Lesson #8: "Making Friends: How to Promote Social and Self Awareness (Who Cares About Theory of Mind?)" In this episode, Dr. Rick speaks with Jeff, Heather, and Kate; as well as Jill and Liam about their experiences with forming friendships, as well as social and self awareness. Show Notes Winner, Michelle. https://www.socialthinking.com/ – This website has a large number of options for children of all ages to help with social thinking. Carol Gray Social Stories: https://carolgraysocialstories.com/ The Penguin Project—Drama for kids with autism: https://penguinproject.org/ Myles, Brenda, Trautman, Melissa and Schelvan, Ronda. The Hidden Curriculum: Understanding Unstated Rules in Social Situations, 2024 Autism Asperger Publishing Co. McAfee, Jeanette. Navigating the Social World. (2005) Future Horizons Sussman, Fern. TalkAbility: People skills for verbal children on the autism spectrum (2006) A Hanen Centre Publication. – A guide for parents. The Leap Model: https://challengingbehavior.org/webinar/leap-preschool-an-inclusive-model-of-early-autism-intervention/ Neurotribes: The Legacy of Autism and the Future of Neurodiversity
It's our favorite podcast of the year! Best books of 2024. Books discussed on this episode: Terry's Books: Unearthing the Bible - Titus Kennedy Papyri and the Social World of the New Testament - Sabine Huebner Come, Tell Me How You Live - Agatha Christie Port Williams Novels - Wendell Berry Assyria - Eckhart Frahm Collected Poems of T.S. Eliot The Essential George Bernard Shaw - Edited by G.K. Chesterton The Fellowship: Literary Lives of the Inklings - Philip and Carol Zaleski Cole's Books: The Achilles Trap - Steve Coll C. S. Lewis - Alistair McGrath Jonathan Edwards - George Marsden An Infinite Fountain of Light - George Marsden Churchill's D-Day - Allen Packwood and General Lord Richard Dannatt Dopamine Nation - Anna Lembke Fully Alive - Elizabeth Oldfield Habits of the Household - Justin Whitmel Earley Father Brown - G. K. Chesterton Exodus - Phil Ryken The Stalin Affair - Giles Milton
In this episode, "Beyond the Checklist: Rethinking Mental Health Care in a Bio-Psycho-Social World," we dive into the often-overlooked complexities of mental health care and challenge the current reliance on standardized diagnoses and polypharmacy. Join us as we explore why treating individuals as a set of DSM codes or prescriptions falls short and how a bio-psycho-social approach offers a more holistic, personalized path to recovery. Through real-world examples and expert insights, we discuss how factors like genetics, life history, and social environment shape mental health and why these dimensions need to be integral to treatment. Our conversation sheds light on how moving beyond a one-size-fits-all approach can lead to more meaningful and lasting change. This episode is brought to you by Neurodynamic Health Integration (NDHI)—where science meets empathy in mental health. To learn more, visit myndhi.org.
Since its release on September 23, 1995, The Family: A Proclamation to the World has become a needed doctrinal anchor during a time of confusion and opposition regarding the centrality of the family. In this episode Dr. Byran B. Korth, professor and associate department chair of Church history and doctrine, discusses his article on the divine origin and inception of the family proclamation and details its inextricable connection to seership and revelation. “But a seer can know of things which are past, and also of things which are to come, and by them shall all things be revealed . . . ” (Mosiah 8:17). Dr. Korth discusses the revelatory process used by prophets and seers to craft the proclamation precept upon precept during the nearly year-long process. Additionally, he explains two profound truths about the proclamation: first, that it serves as a response to the rise of the antifamily movement at world conferences of the United Nations in the latter quarter of the twenty-first century, and second, that it was divinely designed by the Lord's watchmen to declare to the world the role of the family in God's plan. Publications: “Seership and World Conferences: The Divine Origin and Inception of the Family Proclamation” (in Religious Educator, Vol. 24, No. 2, 2023) “Staying by the Tree of Life” (in Book of Mormon Insights: Letting God Prevail in Your Life, Religious Studies Center, 2024) “Becoming as Little Children: Participating in the Household of God” (in The Household of God: Families and Belonging in the Social World of the New Testament, Religious Studies Center, 2022) “The How and What of Modern Religious Transmission and Its Implications for Families” (Journal of Family Psychology, 35.4, 2021) “Parents Teaching Children to Believe in Christ: ‘An Echo of a Celestial Pattern'” (in Give Ear to My Words: Text and Context of Alma 36 – 42, Religious Studies Center, 2019) “Joseph Smith's 1839 – 40 Visit to Washington” (in Latter-day Saints in Washington, D.C.: History, People, and Places, Religious Studies Center, 2021) Click here to learn more about Byran Korth
Principle Season 4 Ep 20Jessica Speer is the award-winning author of books for kids and teens, including: - The Phone Book - Stay Safe, Be Smart, and Make the World Better with the Powerful Device in Your Hand, - BFF or NRF (Not Really Friends)? A Girls Guide to Happy Friendships, - Middle School - Safety Goggles Advised.For more information, visit www.JessicaSpeer.comP.S. Whenever you're ready, check out my other stuff here:Books:Check out my business book that was seen on Forbes: The Key to the GateWhat I Want My Children to Know Before I DieGet practical tips for How to Be a Record Breaking Sales Gladiator: http://xfactoredge.com/subscribeGet practical tips for How to Have Extreme Influence: https://eksinfluence.com/subscribeGet practical tips for How to Be The Dad You Were Meant To Be: eksayn.com/subscribeI am about to launch a new course for dads to be awesome. Get notified here.Sign up for my SubstackShout out to Alex Sanfilippo and Podmatch!
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For stark power, the end of Part 1 is almost unequalled in modern literature. Gretchen, mad, will not leave the dungeon, and Faust leaves her. Why is there a Part 2? In it, Faust moves in new directions: into the larger sociopolitical realm, and into transpersonal psychological depths. The difficulty of making a moral judgment of Faust. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/michael-dolzani/support
The key to successful architecture isn't the beautiful design with the perfect abstractions; it is more about knowing what can go wrong and where the fragile areas are. In this episode, Barry O'Reilly (Founder at Black Tulip Technology) shares his experience as an architect with Kristof Van Tomme and points out how residuality theory can help us better understand our industry. They discuss topics like the three problems with software architecture, how residuality theory deals with these struggles, and how business strategy is a similar area. In their discussion, they also touch upon the field of LLMs. References and further resources: An Introduction to Residuality Theory - Barry O'Reilly (YouTube video) @technologytulip Residues: Time, Change, and Uncertainty in Software Architecture by Barry O'Reilly The technical and social contracts of APIs - Discussion with Marsh Gardiner (API Resilience podcast episode) AI The Docs event by Pronovix The Open Interface Web: Declaring Interfaces For An Open & Accessible World (Pronovix blog) Cause, Effect, and the Structure of the Social World by Megan T. Stevenson Safe Haven: Investing for Financial Storms by Mark Spitznagel
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Hobart is set to host the 2024 Social World Cup, marking the competition's third edition. Santosh Subedi, Secretary of Marpha Football Club Tasmania, spoke to SBS Nepali, about the team's preparations for the match, scheduled to unfold in February. - युनिभर्सिटी क्लबको आयोजनामा टास्मेनियाको होबार्टमा नयाँ वर्षको अवसरमा 'होबार्ट सोसल वर्ल्डकप २०२४' आयोजना हुने भएको छ। तेस्रो संस्करणको खेलमा मार्फा एफसी क्लबले टिम नेपालको नेतृत्व गर्दैछ। फेब्रुअरी महीनासम्म चल्ने खेलको तयारी र टिम नेपाल कस्तो हुनेछ भन्ने बारे मार्फा फुटबल क्लबका सचिव सन्तोष सुवेदीले एसबीएस नेपालीसँग गरेको कुराकानी सुन्नुहोस्
Aaron Templer is the author of the book Leading a Social World and the owner of the marketing firm, Three Over Four. He brings a unique background in the arts to his work, which is focused on the convergence of strategy, leadership, and social media. We discussed all of this and more this week on the On Brand podcast. About Aaron Templer Having studied music, English lit, and earned an MBA, Aaron Templer is an unapologetic, eclectic marketing leader, and at-times agitator. With more than 25 years of experience, Aaron is a marketing firm owner, professional instructor for the American Marketing Association, occasional speaker and professor, and hobby percussionist. His firm, speaking engagements, teachings, and writings are at the intersection of strategy, creativity, brand, influence, and leadership. Some call him the Gora Dhol Wallah. Aaron recently authored Leading in a Social World, a six-time award-winning book for business leaders and marketers that sets out a different approach to marketing in online social circles that builds the kind of connections brands and marketers desire. Links from the Show Check out Aaron's book Leading in a Social World. Aaron's marketing firm — Three Over Four. What brand has made Aaron smile recently? Aaron shared a story of meeting the author Bruce Cameron known as “The Dog Author.” Talk about smiles! Connect with Aaron on his website, AaronTempler.com. As We Wrap … Listen and subscribe at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon/Audible, Google Play, Stitcher, TuneIn, iHeart, YouTube, and RSS. Rate and review the show—If you like what you're hearing, be sure to head over to Apple Podcasts and click the 5-star button to rate the show. And, if you have a few extra seconds, write a couple of sentences and submit a review to help others find the show. Did you hear something you liked on this episode or another? Do you have a question you'd like our guests to answer? Let me know on Twitter using the hashtag #OnBrandPodcast and you may just hear your thoughts here on the show. On Brand is a part of the Marketing Podcast Network. Until next week, I'll see you on the Internet! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
François RecanatiPhilosophie du langage et de l'espritCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - The Social World: Foundational Issues - On the Mood for FictionIntervenant(s)Manuel Garcia-Carpintero, université de BarceloneRésuméHow should we think of the utterances that convey (literary) fictions? Searle (1974/5) (and before him MacDonald (1954), with better arguments) influentially argues that they are (non-deceptive) mere pretense – the simulation of acts like assertions or questions. They don't constitute sui generis, dedicated representational practices of a specific kind, fictionalizing, on a par with assertions or questions. This has been the standard view in analytic philosophy until the 1990s, casually endorsed already by Frege, and then by many others like Austin, Kripke and van Inwagen. Even though authors including Alward (2009), Predelli (2019, 2020), and Recanati (2021) still endorse the view, Walton (1990) and others provide in my view decisive objections (cf. in particular de Gaynesford 2009), mostly predicated on its lack of explanatory power for different aspects of fictionality that good theories should and can provide. Walton himself also rejects views of the kind MacDonald and Searle question, which take fictionalizing to be a sui generis speech act, but his arguments are uncompelling; Currie (1990) nicely articulated one such account inside a Gricean framework, showing its explanatory power. Recently other writers have argued that a more conventionalist, Austinian framework provides better accounts, including García-Carpintero (2013), Abell (2020) and Bergman & Franzén (2022). While following Currie I suggested classifying speech acts of fictionalizing as directives, the latter authors defend classifying them as declarations – like giving out players, naming ships or sentencing offenders. In my paper I'll question the declaration view, but I'll also explore another alternative to the directive account, by considering whether fictionalizings are a variety of constative act, along lines that Predelli (1997), Recanati (2000), and Reimer (2005) have theorized.Manuel García-Carpintero a obtenu son doctorat à l'université de Barcelone, où il enseigne depuis. Il travaille dans le domaine de la philosophie du langage et de l'esprit, ainsi que sur des questions épistémologiques et métaphysiques connexes. Il termine actuellement un livre sous contrat avec Oxford University Press sur la nature des actes de langage en général et de l'assertion en particulier, intitulé Tell Me What You Know.Ce colloque international se tient en prélude à la soutenance de thèse de Maryam Ebrahimi Dinani, assistante de recherche du Pr Recanati. Il réunit deux des membres du jury (Kathrin Koslicki, de l'Université de Neuchâtel, et Manuel Garcia-Carpintero, de l'Université de Barcelone) et deux invités (Indrek Reiland, de l'Université de Vienne, et Olivier Massin, de l'Université de Neuchâtel), sous la présidence de Kevin Mulligan, de l'Université de Genève.
François RecanatiPhilosophie du langage et de l'espritCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - The Social World: Foundational Issues - The Pure Commodity Theory of MoneyIntervenant(s)Olivier Massin, université de NeuchâtelRésumé"The paper defends the view that money is any continuant used as a medium of exchange, a view dubbed the pure commodity theory of money. By contrast to the standard commodity theory, which equates money with a material commodity which spontaneously ends up being used as a means of exchange, the pure commodity theory does not place any requirement on the origin or materiality of money. I then compare the pure commodity theory with four main rivals. On the credit theory, money is a kind of debt or claim; on the abstract theory, money is a position on a ratio scale. On the property theory, money is some property of an agent, namely the agent's purchasing power. On the institutional theory, money is a system of rules. I argue that the credit theory and the abstract theory are in fact versions of the pure commodity theory, for claims and positions on ratio scale, properly understood, are continuants used as media of exchange. I argue that the property and the institutional theories are better construed not as theories about money, but as a theory about closely connected phenomena. The property theory is a theory about the purchasing power conferred by money. The institutional theory is a theory about what explains the existence and maintenance of money. One central strand is that there exists animportant category of exchangeable goods, intangible goods, the neglect of which leads to dismiss the commodity theory on poor grounds."Olivier Massin est agrégé de philosophie et professeur à l'université de Neuchâtel. Ses recherches s'inscrivent dans le cadre de la métaphysique descriptive. Il s'intéresse à l'école brentanienne de philosophie et à des questions telles que : Qu'est-ce qu'une force ? Qu'un mélange ? Qu'un échange économique ? Que la propriété ? Qu'une montagne ? Que le toucher ? Qu'un désir ? Qu'une valeur ? Que le plaisir ? Que le continu ? Que l'optimisme ? Que la richesse ? Qu'un effort ? Que la solidité ? Que l'optimisme ? Que l'argent ? Qu'une fondue ?Ce colloque international se tient en prélude à la soutenance de thèse de Maryam Ebrahimi Dinani, assistante de recherche du Pr Recanati. Il réunit deux des membres du jury (Kathrin Koslicki, de l'Université de Neuchâtel, et Manuel Garcia-Carpintero, de l'Université de Barcelone) et deux invités (Indrek Reiland, de l'Université de Vienne, et Olivier Massin, de l'Université de Neuchâtel), sous la présidence de Kevin Mulligan, de l'Université de Genève.
François RecanatiPhilosophie du langage et de l'espritCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - The Social World: Foundational Issues - What Is It to Accept a Rule?Intervenant(s)Indrek Reiland, université de VienneRésuméRegulative rules like social and legal rules and constitutive rules of games and language are in force contingently, and due to human activity. On standard views like Reinach's or Hart's, for rules to be in force is either for a legislative authority to have enacted them or for people to accept them. But what kind of attitude is acceptance of a rule? In this talk I will start working towards an answer to this question by discussing constraints on possible answers and the merits and shortcomings of available views.Indrek Reiland est titulaire d'une bourse postdoctorale Lise Meitner, à l'université de Vienne. Il a reçu son doctorat de l'université de Californie du Sud. Il est spécialisé dans le domaine de la philosophie du langage et de l'esprit et travaille sur la nature des règles sociales et le rôle qu'elles jouent dans la constitution des langues publiques. Ses travaux ont été publiés, entre autres, dans Analysis, Erkenntnis, Mind & Language, Philosophical Studies, Philosophy and Phenomenological Research et Synthese.Ce colloque international se tient en prélude à la soutenance de thèse de Maryam Ebrahimi Dinani, assistante de recherche du Pr Recanati. Il réunit deux des membres du jury (Kathrin Koslicki, de l'Université de Neuchâtel, et Manuel Garcia-Carpintero, de l'Université de Barcelone) et deux invités (Indrek Reiland, de l'Université de Vienne, et Olivier Massin, de l'Université de Neuchâtel), sous la présidence de Kevin Mulligan, de l'Université de Genève.
François RecanatiPhilosophie du langage et de l'espritCollège de FranceAnnée 2023-2024Colloque - The Social World: Foundational Issues - Artifact Kinds, Functions, and CapacitiesIntervenant(s)Kathrin Koslicki, université de NeuchâtelRésuméIn the case of some artifacts, the connection between the kind to which the artifact belongs, its function, and its capacities appears to be quite straightfoward. For example, a well-functioning can-opener belongs to the artifact-kind, can-opener, its function is to open cans, and being able to open cans is also among its capacities. This seemingly straightforward connection between artifact kinds, functions, and capacities, however, does not always obtain. A malfunctioning can-opener, for example, still belongs to the kind, can-opener, and can be said to have the function of opening cans, even though, in its current state, it seems to lack the corresponding capacity to open cans. In addition, while each artifact of course has many capacities, only some of these capacities are correlated with an artifact's function or its kind-membership. For example, the mere fact that an anvil can be used as a doorstop does not bring it about that the kind, anvil, is regarded as a subspecies of the kind, doorstop, or that anvils are taken to have the same function as doorstops. In this talk, I explore different ways of resolving such potential misalignments between artifact kinds, functions, and capacities.Kathrin KoslickiKathrin Koslicki est professeure de philosophie théorique à l'Université de Neuchâtel. Pr Koslicki est originaire de Munich, en Allemagne, et a déménagé aux États-Unis pour obtenir son BA en philosophie à la SUNY Stony Brook en 1990 et son doctorat au MIT en 1995. Avant de retourner en Europe en 2020 pour rejoindre l'Institut de philosophie de l'Université de Neuchâtel, elle a occupé des postes de professeure dans de nombreuses régions des États-Unis et du Canada. Plus récemment, elle était titulaire de la chaire de recherche du Canada de niveau 1 en épistémologie et métaphysique à l'Université de l'Alberta.Les intérêts de recherche de la Pr Koslicki en philosophie se situent principalement dans les domaines de la métaphysique, la philosophie du langage et la philosophie grecque ancienne, en particulier Aristote. Dans ses deux livres (The Structure of Objects, Oxford University Press, 2008 ; et Form, Matter, Substance, Oxford University Press, 2018), elle défend une analyse néo-aristotélicienne d'objets particuliers concrets en tant que composés de matière (hulē) et de forme (morphē).Ce colloque international se tient en prélude à la soutenance de thèse de Maryam Ebrahimi Dinani, assistante de recherche du Pr Recanati. Il réunit deux des membres du jury (Kathrin Koslicki, de l'Université de Neuchâtel, et Manuel Garcia-Carpintero, de l'Université de Barcelone) et deux invités (Indrek Reiland, de l'Université de Vienne, et Olivier Massin, de l'Université de Neuchâtel), sous la présidence de Kevin Mulligan, de l'Université de Genève.
Begäret att resa sitter djupt i människan. Men måste en resa vara lång för att räknas? Poeten och latinforskaren Anna Blennow berättar om resande i antikens Egypten och ser kopplingar till vår tid. ESSÄ: Detta är en text där skribenten reflekterar över ett ämne eller ett verk. Åsikter som uttrycks är skribentens egna. Denna essä sändes första gången i augusti 2020.”Ni bör veta, ärade damer och systrar, att från det ställe där vi stod (...), på toppen av det mittersta berget, såg vi under oss (...) Egypten, Palestina, Röda havet och Parthenska havet, som sträcker sig till Alexandria, och saracenernas oändliga land. Man kan knappast tro det, men de heliga männen pekade ut allt detta för oss.”Den som skriver det här är en kvinna. Det är allt vi vet säkert. Troligen hette hon Egeria och var från Spanien, och det var troligen i slutet av 300-talet som hon företog sin fyra år långa resa till platser som Jerusalem, Egypten, Syrien och Konstantinopel. Förmodligen tillhörde hon en klostergemenskap, och det är till systrarna där hon riktar sin reseberättelse. Texten, som återfanns i ett klosterbibliotek i Arezzo i slutet av 1800-talet, är en av de äldsta bevarade skildringarna av en kristen pilgrimsfärd.Egeria reste inte ensam. Hon talar om ett odefinierat ”vi”, men texten gör det tydligt att hon var sällskapets ledare och möttes med aktning vart än hon kom. Resan genomfördes på åsnerygg – ett för tiden mycket vanligt transportalternativ, robustare och billigare än hästar – och ibland till fots om landskapet var för oländigt, till exempel när berget Sinai skulle bestigas.Antikens resenärer var främst soldater, ämbetsmän, handelsmän och budbärare, vars kringflackande ingick i deras profession. Att utan anledning vara på resande fot, eller att sakna fast bostad, ansågs både beklagansvärt och misstänkt. Men under senantiken började både kvinnor och män göra alltmer omfattande resor i religiösa ärenden, och själva förflyttningen och umbärandena på färden fick mening genom religiösa ideal.De som ständigt reste betraktades dock ofta med skepsis under den tidiga medeltiden. Regula Magistri, en klosterregel som nedtecknades på 500-talet, ägnar en av de längsta passagerna åt hur man skulle förhålla sig till de kringvandrande munkar som kallades gyrovagi, ”de som strövar omkring i cirklar”. De betraktades som falska munkar eftersom de inte ville inordna sig under ett specifikt kloster, utan ”tillbringar sina liv som gäster under ett par dagar i taget vid olika kloster, eftersom de dagligen vill välkomnas som gäster på ständigt nya platser.” Såväl deras rastlöshet som deras återkommande missbrukande av klostrens gästfrihet fördömdes grundligt.Pilgrimsfärder skulle senare under medeltiden bli en central del av den kristna praktiken, men vid flera tidiga kyrkokoncilier försökte man begränsa det religiösa resandet. Kyrkofadern Gregorios av Nyssa ansåg att pilgrimsfärder inte bara var onödiga utan rent skadliga, och målade upp livet i Jerusalem som omoraliskt och olämpligt för goda kristna. Även Augustinus avrådde. Resan skulle helst förbli mera harmlös metafor för människans livsfärd snarare än faktisk förflyttning.Varför reser vi? Hur påverkar det egentligen oss själva och dem vi besöker? Alltsedan antiken har vi rest i religionens namn, eller för att få vörda världsliga underverk som pyramiderna eller frihetsgudinnan. Vi reser för att söka ett varmare eller kallare klimat: såväl rika romare som medeltida påvar hade sommarvillor. Och resorna är kanske oftare nu än förr inriktade på konsumtion av upplevelser, varor och tjänster.Latinets ord peregrinus som blivit vårt ”pilgrim” saknar från början religiös konnotation, och betyder i grunden främling eller resenär. Vi reser också för att bli främlingar, i flykt från vardagen. Vi reser likt rastlösa och nöjeslystna gyrovagi. Men vi reser också för att träffa släkt och vänner, mikroresor till andra sidan stan, mellan Ulricehamn och Borås, hem till Luleå över julen.Så reste man också förr. Sabine Huebner, professor i antikens historia, har utifrån de rika textkällor som finns bevarade från Egypten under romersk kejsartid gjort en studie av hur enklare befolkningsklasser levde. Det är förhållanden som i princip aldrig skymtar i de litterära texterna från den romerska antiken, vars upphovspersoner utgjorde ett fåtal välbeställda procent av det stora romarrikets invånare. Kortfattade anteckningar och kvitton på krukskärvor och papyrusremsor som bevarats i det torra ökenklimatet öppnar dörren till en värld av vardagsliv, där resor bortom de breda vägarna kan spåras.Precis som Egeria färdades man oftast med åsna eller till fots, men också med båt där det fanns vattenvägar. Tack vare bevarade kvitton vet vi till och med vad resorna kostade. Några dagars båtfärd till Alexandria gick på två månadslöner för en enkel arbetare, medan en åsna kunde hyras per dag för en bråkdel av den kostnaden, motsvarande två dagslöner.Varför reste man? Den främsta orsaken var handel och varutransporter, men det fanns också många långt mer privata skäl. Födslar, födelsedagar, sjukdom och begravningar ledde till täta besök av familjemedlemmar och släktingar som bodde på annan ort. Föräldrar som hade råd att skicka sina barn till närmaste större stad för utbildning reste dit på visit, och barnen kom ofta hem och hälsade på.Och inte bara människor rörde på sig. Bevarade brev som skickats med resenärer berättar om ständig skriftlig kommunikation mellan familjemedlemmar. En son skriver klagande till sin mor: ”Jag har skickat dig så många brev, och ändå har du inte sänt mig ett enda, trots att så många rest nedför floden sedan dess.” ”Det här är det tredje brevet jag skickar dig, och du har fortfarande inte svarat”, skriver en annan man till sin bror.Och textkällorna från det romerska Egypten har visat att även kvinnor reste i högre utsträckning än man tidigare trott. Den som väntade barn återvände ofta till sitt föräldrahem inför förlossningen, och det var också vanligt att kvinnor reste till gravida släktingar för att bistå vid födseln. De reste med sina män om dessa fått arbete långt från hemmet, eller i olika praktiska och professionella ärenden.I vår samtid är vi, precis som i antikens Egypten, i ständig förflyttning i så hög grad att vi nästan inte längre är medvetna om det. Att vara i rörelse är ett sätt att leva snarare än att resa, och för många är riktiga resor ofta synonyma med stora äventyr på andra sidan jorden. Men när det kommer till kritan bär mikroresorna på minst lika omvälvande existentiella erfarenheter: besöket hos de gamla föräldrarna, taxiresan till BB för den förstföddas ankomst, bröllopsfester, begravningar. Det är sådana små utflykter vi kan ta för givna, och inte ens tänker på som resor.Men om allt resande plötsligt förhindras, som när en pandemi bryter ut och gör all mänsklig närkontakt riskabel, är det inte främst jordenruntresorna vi saknar, utan mikroresorna människor emellan.När Egeria anlände till Odessa på sin pilgrimsfärd välkomnades hon med följande ord av stadens biskop: ”Min dotter, för religionens skull har du ålagt dig en så stor möda att du rest hit nästan från världens ände, och därför ska vi visa dig vilka platser du än vill se.”De mödosamma, långa och makalösa resorna gör kanske störst avtryck i eftervärldens historieskrivning. Spårvagnsbiljetter och taxikvitton hamnar sällan i arkiven. Men de unika textdokumenten från den egyptiska antiken påminner oss om att resorna i det lilla alltid har utgjort kärnan i den mänskliga tillvaron.Anna Blennow, latinforskare och poetLitteraturEgeria. Resebrev från det heliga landet, översättning av Christina Sandquist Öberg, inledning och kommentar av Per Beskow, Artos & Norma bokförlag 2006.Maribel Dietz, Wandering monks, virgins, and pilgrims. Ascetic travel in the Mediterranean world, A.D. 300–800, The Pennsylvania State University Press 2005.Sabine R. Huebner, Papyri and the Social World of the New Testament, Cambridge University Press 2019.
Transgender woman Venus Xtravaganza was featured in the groundbreaking documentary Paris is Burning, which delves into the Harlem ball scene of the late 1980's. Abruptly during the film, the audience is informed that Venus was murdered and that her body was discovered strangled to death under a hotel bed four days after her death. Her murder remains unsolved, but someone knows the truth. SOURCESParis is Burning; Documentary by Jennie Livington, 1990Jackson, J. D. (2002). The Social World of Voguing. Journal for the Anthropological Study of Human Movement.Bailey, E. A. (2009, April 23). Constructing Home and Family: How the Ballroom Community Supports African American GLBTQ Youth in the Face of HIV/AIDShttps://www.miaminewtimes.com/music/vogue-a-seven-part-guide-to-ballroom-culture-6473265
On this episode, evolutionary biologist David Sloan Wilson joins Nate to unpack how evolution can be used to explain and understand modern human behavior, particularly with respect to cooperation and pro-social behavior. David is a leading scholar in this field, especially on the resurgence of the concept ‘multi-level selection'. How can an evolutionary idea, first thought of by Darwin and subsequently ignored until recently, shed light on human's inherent balance between competition and cooperation? And how might our improved knowledge of where we come from inform our behaviors and collective governance in the decades ahead? About David Sloan Wilson: David Sloan Wilson is one of the foremost evolutionary thinkers and gifted communicators about evolution to the general public. He is SUNY Distinguished Professor of Biology and Anthropology Emeritus at Binghamton University and President of the nonprofit organization ProSocial World, whose mission is "To consciously evolve a world that works for all". His most recent books are This View of Life: Completing the Darwinian Revolution, Prosocial: Using Evolutionary Science to Build Productive, Equitable, and Collaborative Groups (with Paul Atkins and Steven C. Hayes), and his first novel, Atlas Hugged: The Autobiography of John Galt III. For Show Notes and More visit: https://www.thegreatsimplification.com/episode/56-david-sloan-wilson
In this episode, Élaina interviews fellow philosopher Matthew Cull about the difference between “ideal” and “non-ideal” ethical theories in relation to access to healthcare for transgender people in the UK. You can read Matthew's work here: “Against Abolition”, Feminist Philosophy Quarterly, 2019 “Demarcating the Social World with Hume”, Philosophical Papers, 2022 Texts mentioned in the episode (All links are affiliated to Bookshop.org UK and any purchases made through them will generate a small commission that helps to support the podcast): Sexual Hegemony: Statecraft, Sodomy, and Capital in the Rise of the World System, by Christopher Chitty “Ideal Theory” as Ideology, by Charles W. Mills (PDF) The Electronic Wireless Show (podcast) Second Skins, by Jay Prosser Invisible Lives, by Viviane Namaste Subscribe to Philosophy Casting Call and leave it a 5-star review wherever you can! Follow Philosophy Casting Call on Twitter and Instagram @philoCCpod Read the full episode transcripts at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com Support the podcast by becoming a monthly donor on Ko-Fi.com Follow Élaina on Twitter @ElainaGMamaril
This week we are back in the Marketing Studio with Jeff Clark, our resident Rockstar CMO Strategic Advisor and former Research Director at SiriusDecisions/Forrester, who shares his four steps for creating campaigns that deliver ART - Awareness Revenue & Trust. Oh, and he adds an E for Enablement to our acronym. Ian then goes backstage with Aaron Templer, who is an unapologetic eclectic having studied music and English literature and earned an MBA, Aaron is a 25-year marketing leader, a marketing firm owner (Three Over Four), a professional instructor for the American Marketing Association, an occasional speaker and professor, hobby percussionist - and some call him the Gora Dhol Wallah. Aaron's firm, speaking engagements, teachings, and writings are at the intersection of strategy, creativity, brand, influence, and leadership and he recently published his first book, Leading in a Social World, which is a six-time award winner and, as one review put it, "turns our perception of social media marketing on its head. It's a fun conversation, as they discuss Aaron's career, agency and book, and he chucks a surprising icon of modern marketing into the Rockstar CMO Swimming Pool. Finally, Ian winds down the week in the Rockstar CMO virtual bar with Robert Rose, Chief Trouble Maker at The Content Advisory and over a cocktail they discuss the importance of brand, especially if you are thinking of launching a content marketing project. Enjoy! -- The Links The people: Ian Truscott on LinkedIn and Twitter Jeff Clark on LinkedIn and Twitter Aaron Templer on LinkedIn, Mastodon and his website Robert Rose on LinkedIn and at The Content Advisory As mentioned in this week's episode: Discussion about ARTE and Campaigns on episode 143 Aaron's agency: Three Over Four The Gora Dhol Wallah Ian's back to basics brand article: Back to Brand Aaron's book: Leading in a Social World Robert's column for The Content Marketing Institute Robert's Experience Advisors community Rockstar CMO: Rockstar CMO on the web, Twitter, and LinkedIn Previous episodes and all show notes: Rockstar CMO FM Track List: Piano Music is by Johnny Easton, shared under a creative commons license We'll be right back by Stienski & Mass Media – on YouTube Cause We've Ended as Lovers by Jeff Beck on Spotify -- Please get in touch if you have any thoughts or suggestions on the topics we discuss. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Social World of the School: Education and Community in Interwar London (Manchester UP, 2022) shows why the study of schooling matters to the history of twentieth-century Britain. Dr. Hester Barron integrates the history of education within the wider concerns of modern social history. Drawing on a rich array of archival and autobiographical sources, she captures in vivid detail the individual moments that made up the minutiae of classroom life. The book focuses on elementary education in interwar London, arguing that schools were grounded in their local communities as lynchpins of social life and drivers of change. Exploring crucial questions around identity and belonging, poverty and aspiration, class and culture, behaviour and citizenship, Dr. Barron provides vital context for twenty-first century debates about education and society, showing how the same concerns were framed a century ago. This interview was conducted by Dr. Miranda Melcher whose doctoral work focused on post-conflict military integration, understanding treaty negotiation and implementation in civil war contexts, with qualitative analysis of the Angolan and Mozambican civil wars. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
The Social World of the School: Education and Community in Interwar London (Manchester UP, 2022) shows why the study of schooling matters to the history of twentieth-century Britain. Dr. Hester Barron integrates the history of education within the wider concerns of modern social history. Drawing on a rich array of archival and autobiographical sources, she captures in vivid detail the individual moments that made up the minutiae of classroom life. The book focuses on elementary education in interwar London, arguing that schools were grounded in their local communities as lynchpins of social life and drivers of change. Exploring crucial questions around identity and belonging, poverty and aspiration, class and culture, behaviour and citizenship, Dr. Barron provides vital context for twenty-first century debates about education and society, showing how the same concerns were framed a century ago. This interview was conducted by Dr. Miranda Melcher whose doctoral work focused on post-conflict military integration, understanding treaty negotiation and implementation in civil war contexts, with qualitative analysis of the Angolan and Mozambican civil wars. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
The Social World of the School: Education and Community in Interwar London (Manchester UP, 2022) shows why the study of schooling matters to the history of twentieth-century Britain. Dr. Hester Barron integrates the history of education within the wider concerns of modern social history. Drawing on a rich array of archival and autobiographical sources, she captures in vivid detail the individual moments that made up the minutiae of classroom life. The book focuses on elementary education in interwar London, arguing that schools were grounded in their local communities as lynchpins of social life and drivers of change. Exploring crucial questions around identity and belonging, poverty and aspiration, class and culture, behaviour and citizenship, Dr. Barron provides vital context for twenty-first century debates about education and society, showing how the same concerns were framed a century ago. This interview was conducted by Dr. Miranda Melcher whose doctoral work focused on post-conflict military integration, understanding treaty negotiation and implementation in civil war contexts, with qualitative analysis of the Angolan and Mozambican civil wars. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/european-studies
The Social World of the School: Education and Community in Interwar London (Manchester UP, 2022) shows why the study of schooling matters to the history of twentieth-century Britain. Dr. Hester Barron integrates the history of education within the wider concerns of modern social history. Drawing on a rich array of archival and autobiographical sources, she captures in vivid detail the individual moments that made up the minutiae of classroom life. The book focuses on elementary education in interwar London, arguing that schools were grounded in their local communities as lynchpins of social life and drivers of change. Exploring crucial questions around identity and belonging, poverty and aspiration, class and culture, behaviour and citizenship, Dr. Barron provides vital context for twenty-first century debates about education and society, showing how the same concerns were framed a century ago. This interview was conducted by Dr. Miranda Melcher whose doctoral work focused on post-conflict military integration, understanding treaty negotiation and implementation in civil war contexts, with qualitative analysis of the Angolan and Mozambican civil wars. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/public-policy
The Social World of the School: Education and Community in Interwar London (Manchester UP, 2022) shows why the study of schooling matters to the history of twentieth-century Britain. Dr. Hester Barron integrates the history of education within the wider concerns of modern social history. Drawing on a rich array of archival and autobiographical sources, she captures in vivid detail the individual moments that made up the minutiae of classroom life. The book focuses on elementary education in interwar London, arguing that schools were grounded in their local communities as lynchpins of social life and drivers of change. Exploring crucial questions around identity and belonging, poverty and aspiration, class and culture, behaviour and citizenship, Dr. Barron provides vital context for twenty-first century debates about education and society, showing how the same concerns were framed a century ago. This interview was conducted by Dr. Miranda Melcher whose doctoral work focused on post-conflict military integration, understanding treaty negotiation and implementation in civil war contexts, with qualitative analysis of the Angolan and Mozambican civil wars. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/education
The Social World of the School: Education and Community in Interwar London (Manchester UP, 2022) shows why the study of schooling matters to the history of twentieth-century Britain. Dr. Hester Barron integrates the history of education within the wider concerns of modern social history. Drawing on a rich array of archival and autobiographical sources, she captures in vivid detail the individual moments that made up the minutiae of classroom life. The book focuses on elementary education in interwar London, arguing that schools were grounded in their local communities as lynchpins of social life and drivers of change. Exploring crucial questions around identity and belonging, poverty and aspiration, class and culture, behaviour and citizenship, Dr. Barron provides vital context for twenty-first century debates about education and society, showing how the same concerns were framed a century ago. This interview was conducted by Dr. Miranda Melcher whose doctoral work focused on post-conflict military integration, understanding treaty negotiation and implementation in civil war contexts, with qualitative analysis of the Angolan and Mozambican civil wars. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Social World of the School: Education and Community in Interwar London (Manchester UP, 2022) shows why the study of schooling matters to the history of twentieth-century Britain. Dr. Hester Barron integrates the history of education within the wider concerns of modern social history. Drawing on a rich array of archival and autobiographical sources, she captures in vivid detail the individual moments that made up the minutiae of classroom life. The book focuses on elementary education in interwar London, arguing that schools were grounded in their local communities as lynchpins of social life and drivers of change. Exploring crucial questions around identity and belonging, poverty and aspiration, class and culture, behaviour and citizenship, Dr. Barron provides vital context for twenty-first century debates about education and society, showing how the same concerns were framed a century ago. This interview was conducted by Dr. Miranda Melcher whose doctoral work focused on post-conflict military integration, understanding treaty negotiation and implementation in civil war contexts, with qualitative analysis of the Angolan and Mozambican civil wars. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/british-studies
Best Of Belfast: Stories of local legends from Northern Ireland
Matthew Scott is a Digital Media Entrepreneur working hard to change Media Entertainment, Digital Storytelling and Digital Democracy. Over the last 20-years he has worked as a creator, producer, marketer and innovator with the likes of SKY, BBC, Discovery Networks, Nike, Coca-Cola, Ford, Lego, Intel, Sony Pictures and countless more. His new company Play Human focuses on helping creators/brands engage with their audiences in the post-social world. In today's episode we talk about: Growing up on Bangor His early days as a storyteller What got him into tech How he ended up working with some of the biggest brands on the planet What the post-social world will look like And the biggest lessons he's learned along the way. Check it out. // https://bestofbelfast.org/stories/matthew-scott-play-human //
How can we achieve more humanity in the workplace? If this is something that you are passionate about, you have come to the right place! In this episode, we bring you an enlightening conversation with Dr. Sanja Licina and Maddie Grant on achieving a human-centered workplace. Dr. Sanja Licina is an organizational psychologist and the president of QuestionPro Workforce. She has dedicated her entire career to helping companies create cultures that employees love to be part of. Maddie Grant is the co-founder of Propel, as well as an expert culture designer and digital strategist, focusing on helping organizations unlock the power in their culture. She is also the author of a number of books including Humanize: How People-Centric Organizations Succeed in a Social World, which was surprisingly ahead of its time when it was published over a decade ago. After covering Sanja and Maddie's no-straight-path stories, we talk about creating systems to better support humanity in the workplace in spite of business objectives and capitalist constraints. We discuss the importance of empathy as a leader, how well-being is more front and center than ever before, and how important flexibility of location and time is to workplace culture and employee retention. Tune in for this fascinating conversation! Links Mentioned in Today's Episode: Dr. Sanja Licina Maddie Grant Work @ Life Work @ Life — 'How a Successful Career Path Can Be Anything but Linear' Hubspot Creators Program QuestionPro Workforce Propel Humanize: How People-Centric Organizations Succeed in a Social World When Millennials Take Over: Preparing For The Ridiculously Optimistic Future Of Business The Non-Obvious Guide To Employee Engagement (For Millennials, Boomers And Everyone Else) Ashley Menzies Babatunde Ashley Menzies Babatunde on Instagram
Is it easier or harder to make friends in gaming now or in the past? As time marches forward, the way we interact, especially in gaming, has shifted away from Couch Co-op to strong online social chats & communities. In this time, there has been a shift in how we interact within & between communities, and even within the games and chats themselves. Come listen to three anti-social outcasts give their uncredible two cents on the social aspects of the gaming world! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
In a dark social world, where buyers are making decisions before they pick up the phone, what role does sales play? Morgan sits down with Chris Walker, CEO of Refine Labs, to discuss where sales teams fit into his overall vision of go-to-market. They discuss outdated sales motions, social selling teams, the importance of insight development at an organizational level, and what entry-level positions might look like in the future. Get ready for a deep dive into modern go-to-market strategies. Connect with Chris WalkerWebsiteLinkedInIn this episode, we cover:Dark social's origins (1:25)Independent buying in dark social (3:00)Using insights to drive go-to-market (5:50)Sales and selling in modern GTM (10:35)Changing demand engines on the fly (15:35)Importance of demand gen in the sales process (18:40)Will sellers just be “catchers”? (20:30)Can sellers be social sellers? (26:55)Does realigning incentives matter? (29:01)New vs. old hiring & training motions (32:20)Entry-level positions (35:50)Sales in a product-led world (39:15)Refine Lab's upcoming experiments (43:00)Chris' Power Hour (45:35)Follow Nicholas Thickett on LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/nicholasthickettFollow Morgan Smith on LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/morganjsmithVisit our site b2bpowerhour.com to learn more about our upcoming live shows, events, and more.
Do you huddle or helicopter when it comes to managing devices and social media for your kids? Our special guest, Laura Tierney, founder of The Social Institute shares why and how we must empower our children to navigate a digital social world!Laura Tierney, founder of The Social Institute, a social media expert who previously manage social media for ESPN, Nike, Disney, P & G, and Duke Men's Basketball. The Social Institute provides a gamified, online learning platform that empowers students to navigate their social world, social media and technology like a pro. The platform empowers students to fuel their health, happiness and future success! To learn more about Laura Tierney or The Social Institute Visit, https://thesocialinstitute.com
Social media marketing doesn't work. There is no data that supports the effectiveness of social media marketing and the value that it generates. Marketers are all biased in believing that it does. However, according to Aaron Templar, Brand Strategist and Founder of Three over Four, what really generates value is social capital. Aaron Templer is an unapologetic polymath. A 25-year marketing leader, a marketing firm owner, professional instructor for the American Marketing Association, occasional speaker and professor, and hobby percussionist. His firm, speaking engagements, teachings, and writings are at the intersection of strategy, creativity, brand, influence, and leadership. Some call him the Gora Dhol Wallah. In our conversation, Aaron talks about his book, Leading in the Social World, and the difference between social media marketing and social capital. Things you will learn in this episode: Why marketers need to be leaders Leadership through authenticity What is Social Capital How the Covid-19 pandemic is similar to the great recession of 2008 Aaron's influences and connection to music Quotes “A leader's real work is looking for opportunities for connection and marketing looks for opportunities for conversion.” - Aaron Templer “You can't be credible unless you're present in the situation with a clear sense of who you are.” - Aaron Templer “When you lead in a way that builds people as opposed to using people, that becomes life affirming. It affirms our humanity” - Aaron Templer “When your identity gets torn away from you, not only are you re-evaluating yourself but re-evaluating others around you.” - Aaron Templer “Leaders let their actions speak for their words. They walk the talk and they do what they say.” - Aaron Templer Resources Leading in a Social World - Debut Book Aaron (Again) Published In Marketing Profs Aaron on Linkedin Aaron on Twitter Three Over Four Three Over Four on Linkedin Three Over Four on Twitter Three Over Four on Facebook
Beth and Allison's new book comes out today! Get your copy on Amazon or ask at your local bookstore. The use of smart tech by nonprofits exploded during the pandemic. Smart tech is becoming integrated into internal workflows, fundraising, communications, finance operations, and service delivery efforts, freeing up staff to focus on deeper societal changes that need to be made. The hope is that smart tech may also enable us to turn the page on an era of frantic busyness and scarcity mindsets to one in which we have the time to think and plan — and even dream. I sat down with Beth Kanter and Allison Fine to talk about their new book, and what it means to stay human-centered in an automated world.Allison Fine is among the nation's preeminent writers and strategists on the use of technology for social good. She is the author of the award winning Momentum: Igniting Social Change in the Connected Age, and Matterness: Fearless Leadership for a Social World. She speaks to social change makers around the world, regularly keynotes conferences, is a founding board member of Civic Hall, and is a member of the national board of Women of Reform Judaism.Beth Kanter is an internationally recognized thought leader in digital transformation and well-being in the nonprofit workplace, a trainer & facilitator, and a sought-after keynote speaker. She is the co-author of the award-winning Happy Healthy Nonprofit: Impact without Burnout. Named one of the most influential women in technology by Fast Company, she has over three decades of experience in designing and delivering training programs for nonprofits and foundations. Allison and Beth co-authored The Networked Nonprofit in 2010. Their new book, The Smart Nonprofit: Staying Human Centered in an Automated World is available right now wherever books are sold. Here are some of the topics we discussed: What exactly is smart tech - and how nonprofits can leverage it to free up timeHow smart tech can make our workflow easierWays that we can be intentional and ethical in our use of smart tech at our organizationsWhat do we need to consider when we are just starting out Connect with Beth and Allison: https://twitter.com/kanter https://twitter.com/afinehttps://www.linkedin.com/in/bethkanterhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/allison-fine-a07132/ Do me a favor? Rate, Review, & Follow on Apple Podcasts (or your podcast player of choice) - it helps this podcast get seen by more people that would enjoy it!Named as a top thought leader by Forbes and BizTech Magazine, Julia Campbell (she/hers) is an author, coach, and speaker on a mission to make the digital world a better place.Learn more about Julia and how to work with her at her website: www.jcsocialmarketing.com
After 2 years of enforced isolation… it took me a hot min (and traveling across the world to a new country on my own) to get back to a place where I felt comfortable, excited and energised being sociable. I got so used to spending time alone that I was so reluctant to open up again! But my question is… how much time alone is too much? We're social beings after all. Isn't that how we learn from one another? Isn't that how we become inspired? In today's episode we explore how to find a happy medium between finding time to sit with yourself and your own mind body and soul, and integrating with the world around you.
Find out more about Dr. Lynn Cohick HERE Explore her Ephesians Commentary HEREBuy the book Women in the World of the Earliest Christians HEREKeep an eye out for her soon to be released series on Women in the Bible on Seminary Now!Contact Cyndi Parker through Narrative of Place.Learn more about me and sign up for upcoming tours of Israel/Palestine.Join Cyndi Parker's Patreon Team!
Billings Learned Hand was one of the most accomplished and eloquent speakers in US court history, serving for more than 50 years as both a District and Circuit Court judge. He spoke and wrote in a way that compels us, the listener and reader to internalize, think on, and act upon his words. Today's quote was spoken by Hand, originally, during an address to the students of Yale Law in 1931. It's as true today as ever.
In this podcast, Nicholeen and Paije discuss social skills: how and where are they learned? What social skills should be avoided? What if you're anti-social as the parent, but still want to teach your children good social skills? Listen in for great tips and inspiration!
Aaron Templer, founder of Three Over Four marketing agency and author of Leading in a Social World, joins us this week to discuss social media marketing and the intersection of marketing and leadership. While Three Over Four focuses on bias-free marketing and branding strategies, Aaron's book, Leading in a Social World, breaks down the science and data around engaging in social media and generating value in social media content. Aaron believes that marketers have so much bias built up around the data they're given and strives to challenge marketers to take advantage of social spaces from a leadership perspective. Using multiple studies and marketing examples, Aaron's book draws new conclusions around social disconnection, leadership ideologies, and influential content marketing. In our conversation with him, Aaron sheds new light on how marketing affects our brains and how to engage with consumers on a scientific level.
The Social World, Reexamined is based on an in-depth filmed conversation between Howard Burton and Brian Epstein, Associate Professor of Philosophy at Tufts University. Brian Epstein's career as a management consultant piqued his interest and his later research into the reasons why our current models of economics, politics and other areas of social science so often go terribly wrong. The conversation explores how we can dramatically improve our current economic and political models by reexamining our assumptions about the nature of the social world. Howard Burton is the founder of the Ideas Roadshow, Ideas on Film and host of the Ideas Roadshow Podcast. He can be reached at howard@ideasroadshow.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode, Jamie and Maddie talk about redefining engagement and culture, the challenges of returning to the office, the critical importance of metrics and measurement, and the value of technology in creating collaboration, transparency, inclusion, and innovation.Jamie Notter helps leaders create stronger cultures and upgrade their workplaces, based on a deeper understanding of their organizational genetic code. He brings twenty-five years of experience in conflict resolution, generational differences, leadership, and culture change to his work with leaders around the world. A sought-after keynote speaker, Jamie also serves as adjunct faculty at Georgetown University. Maddie Grant is an expert digital strategist and culture designer whose superpower is skillful shepherding of organizations through cultural and digital transformation. Maddie was the founder of SocialFish, a successful digital strategy consulting firm and home of one of the most visited and respected blogs written for nonprofit and association executives. Together Jamie and Maddie run PROPEL, a coaching and consulting company that helps companies achieve culture-driven growth, impact, and success. They have written three books together: Humanize: How People Centric Organizations Succeed in a Social World (2011)When Millennials Take Over: Preparing for the Ridiculously Optimistic Future of Business (2015)The Non-Obvious Guide to Employee Engagement (2019).Silicon Valley based company Innovation Minds takes a crucial step in helping solve the new challenges of the post-pandemic global workplace by launching this podcast, in which we interviews a diverse offering of business leaders from around the planet on how to use innovation to engage the workforce, as well as how to innovate engagement using technologies like artificial intelligence and machine learning to humanize relationships in the new distributed workplace.Innovation Minds is a leader in using AI-driven technology to engage employees through their philosophy of Innovation At the Edge, and decided to launch this podcast to promote the urgent need for engagement at this delicate time.Guests for our first season include corporate HR leads, world-class consultants, best-selling authors, and employee engagement and innovation experts working across a wide range of industries: Clint Pulver, Themba Chakela Jamie NotterMaddie Grant Delano Johnson Shawn Nason Luke Jamieson Coonoor Behal Jeff Tobe Niven Postma Adriana Bokel Herde Sindhu Joseph and Dickson TangYou can read more about our season one guests at our website, and sign up for reminders to make sure you never miss an episode.
Queering Wesley, Queering the Church is a book written by Keegan Osisnki. Quite a title right!?! If you haven't seen the cover, click the link below to catch a glimpse. However, before you literally judge a book (or it's author) by it's cover, take a second to hear a little about Keegan. She shares a little about her life, her convictions and why she took on a project like this that is giving the Wesleyan Holiness Church world quite a lot to think about! Here is here book! Also, Keegan is a librarian and wanted to be sure that everyone had resources for getting started with thinking about Christianity and LGBTQ+ issues. Here are her suggested reading materials: Cheng, Patrick S. Radical Love: An Introduction to Queer Theology. 1 edition. Seabury Books, 2011. DeFranza, Megan K. Sex Difference in Christian Theology: Male, Female, and Intersex in the Image of God. Eerdmans, 2015. Fausto-Sterling, Anne. Sex/Gender: Biology in a Social World. 1 edition. New York: Routledge, 2012. Gushee, David P. Changing Our Mind: Definitive 3rd Edition of the Landmark Call for Inclusion of LGBTQ Christians with Response to Critics. 3 edition. Read the Spirit Books, 2017. Lee, Justin. Torn: Rescuing the Gospel from the Gays-vs.-Christians Debate. Jericho Books, 2012. McCleneghan, Bromleigh. Good Christian Sex: Why Chastity Isn't the Only Option-And Other Things the Bible Says About Sex. San Francisco: HarperOne, 2016. Soughers, Tara K. Beyond a Binary God: A Theology for Trans* Allies. Church Publishing, 2018. Vines, Matthew. God and the Gay Christian: The Biblical Case in Support of Same-Sex Relationships. Convergent Books, 2014. --- 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/millennial-pastors/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/millennial-pastors/support
Are you looking to gain a deeper understanding of how to turn a passion for social media into a career? Robin Radomski, social media manager and founder of RAD Digital, discusses why utilizing micro-influencers can be successful for a company, how you can connect with people and brands, and what self-care routine works for her. Subscribe here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwKZ... -----------------------KEEP UP WITH US--------------------- http://www.dimevents.com/ https://www.instagram.com/dimevents/ https://twitter.com/dimevents_ https://www.instagram.com/orgarchitectmo/ -----------------------KEEP UP WITH ROBIN RADOMSKI--------------------- https://www.instagram.com/blondeats/ #dimevents --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/dim-university/support
In which John and David discuss how Jesus tells a somewhat controversial story. The parable of the Pharisee and the Tax-Collector is often told as an instruction to stay humble, but what if Luke wanted to make sure that we saw something more fundamental that Jesus was hinting at?Click Here to read the text from Luke 18:9-14Click Here to read the text from Romans 3:21-28Click Here to see some of Robert Farrar Capon's Kingdom, Grace and Judgment which David really wants you to read.Click Here if you're interested in the book that informed some of David's comments about "world upside-down" and "temple to house". The Social World of Luke-Acts is an academic level exploration of some of the contextual realities in this gospel.Click Here for Miroslav Volf's Exclusion and Embrace where he discusses Jesus' ministry "against exclusion". This book isn't an easy read, but a google of the reviews online will give you an idea of what Volf's pursuing.Click Here for the T.S. Elliot poem that concluded the episodeEpisode 11 of the Two Texts Podcast | Parables of Jesus Series 11If you want to get in touch about something in the podcast you can reach out on podcast@twotexts.com or by liking and following the Two Texts podcast on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. If you enjoy the podcast, we'd love it if you left a review or comment where you're listening from – and if you really enjoyed it, why not share it with a friend?Music by Woodford Music (c) 2021Support the show
This year Elon Musk and Clubhouse burst onto the scene. The Google Trends data on Clubhouse speaks volumes about the hype. After Clubhouse comes Linkedin, Reddit, Facebook and Twitter. Then there's Discord, of course, the audio first dark horse app hit chugs away in the background with 120 million users. (a more detailed trend comparison of Clubhouse vs Discord) And Podcasts. 1 Billion Weekly Listeners. All of this is not going without Mainstream attention. Washington Post this week wrote an article headlined: Video is so 2020. Now Instagram, Facebook and Twitter are going all in on audio. Why? Audio 2.0 is on the rise in 2021 because of 2021, not as a coincidence. 2021 has been one of the most disconnected eras of our modern history and with that we have collectively sought out ways to connect. If we consider disconnection as the pain point of the modern consumer, we as audio professionals need to deliver. This means a) acknowledging that the core power of audio is connection and b) building connection into our audio content. If there's one thing we've learned that makes us happy from its absence in the last 18 months - it's Community. More than anything, we crave the contact of other people. That's why Audio is enjoying a resurgence. It's audio's ability to connect and create community that we are attracted to. In Season 3 of Podcast Maps I discuss the backstory to the rise of Audio 2.0 and share examples of how technologies and audio content creators and engaging communities. I hope this helps you see audio for what it really can be - not as another content channel but as a powerful medium for us to create authentic connection in a very disconnected era.
In this final episode of the series on power we consider the power of the individual. We explore Nietzsche's 'will to power', Adler's theories of individual psychology and the social contract of Rousseau. We bring French and Raven's power bases back to the conversation and consider the ways in which power traits vary in individuals. We conclude by linking the individual and the group through the need to belong as theorised by social identity theory. This journey through various philosophical and psychological conceptualisations of power ultimately asks you to question your own worldview and to look for the unseen in the social worlds we inhabit. Show notesNietzsche's Concept of the Will to PowerAlfred Adler – Power and Social FeelingIntroduction to Rousseau – The Social ContractThe Bases of Social Power – French & Raven (1959)Social Identity Theoryhttps://www.facebook.com/thehereandnowpodcast/ https://twitter.com/herenowpodcast emailthehereandnow@gmail.comSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/thehereandnowpodcast)
Psychology Short Lecture 11 Theories and approaches in psychology from our Social World to Our Brain. Lecture series for Dr. Peterson's Introduction to Psychology course.
The GRAMMY-Nominated woodwind quintet, Imani Winds, has been at the forefront of a creative revolution in the performing arts. The ensemble frequently commissions new works from a diverse body of composers to reflect historical events and the times in which we currently live. Imani Winds regularly performs in top concert venues, including Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, the Kennedy Center, and the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts. Their touring schedule has taken them throughout the Asian continent, Brazil, Australia, England, New Zealand, and across Europe. --- 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/thefortepodcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thefortepodcast/support