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Adam Galinsky reveals the core skills anyone can master for more inspiring leadership. — YOU'LL LEARN — 1) The easiest way to uplift the people around you 2) The 15-minute exercise that makes you visionary 3) The quick trick to feeling more confident and powerful Subscribe or visit AwesomeAtYourJob.com/ep1020 for clickable versions of the links below. — ABOUT ADAM — Adam Galinsky is a celebrated social psychologist at Columbia Business School known for his research on leadership, decision-making, teams and ethics. His scientific research—consisting of over 1000 studies published in over 200 scientific articles—has been cited more than 64,000 times. In Galinsky's latest book, Inspire, he weaves together his decades of research and global consulting experience to reveal the science of how to become more inspiring. His TED Talk, “How to Speak Up For Yourself,” has been viewed more than 7.5 million times and his book Friend and Foe, was an audible and eBook bestseller. • Book: Inspire: The Universal Path for Leading Yourself and Others • Study: “The Vicious Cycle of Status Insecurity” • Website: AdamGalinsky.com — RESOURCES MENTIONED IN THE SHOW — • Study: “Considerations of Some Problems of Comprehension” by John D. Bransford and Marcia K. Johnson • Past episode: 279: How to Feel More Alive at Work with Dan Cable — THANK YOU SPONSORS! — • Acorns. Start saving and investing for your future today with Acorns.com/awesomeSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
In Mark 9: 14-29, Pastor Ben Nistor preaches on the stark difference between the disciples and the man seeking help when it comes to belief in the sovereign authority of Christ. It is not the man seeking help that lacks faith, but the disciples. Belief in Christ is the vehicle for unleashing the infinite power of God for His purposes in the world. Prayerlessness is a sign of unbelief, which prevents the unleashing of God's infinite power for His purposes. ________________________________________ Links to Sermon Notes & Answers: ➤Sermon Notes (Blank): https://30fec278-856b-40f1-92a2-65e62d11d067.usrfiles.com/ugd/30fec2_8efae1b3f794486da4c00b5bc786acd2.pdf ➤Sermon Notes (Answers): https://30fec278-856b-40f1-92a2-65e62d11d067.usrfiles.com/ugd/30fec2_1406acf6de1b4acd9546b70cdd59e76f.pdf ________________________________________ In this video: 4:10 Reading of Mark 9: 14-29 7:14 Review 11:54 The Point of Mark 9: 14-29 14:00 Some Problems in Mark 9: 14-29 19:41 Some Principles from Mark 9: 14-29 ________________________________________ Subscribe to this channel to catch weekly expositional sermons from the Bible. ________________________________________ Explore more sermons and information: https://www.sheridanhills.org/watch-new ________________________________________ Follow us: ➤Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sheridanhills/ ➤Twitter: https://twitter.com/sheridanhills01 ➤Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sheridanhills/
Hasekura Rokuemon Tsunenaga was a samurai who led a diplomatic delegation to New Spain, Spain and Rome in the 17th century. But many of the Japanese records about their mission were lost or destroyed after they returned. Research: Carl, Katy. “Aiming for Japan and Getting Heaven Thrown In.” Genealogies of Modernity. 12/2/2020. https://genealogiesofmodernity.org/journal/2020/11/25/scales-of-value-shusaku-endos-the-samurai Christensen, Thomas. “1616: The World in Motion.” Counterpoint. 2012. https://archive.org/details/1616worldinmotio0000chri/ Corradini, Piero. “Some Problems concerning Hasekura Tsunenaga's Embassy to the Pope." From Rethinking Japan Vol. 2. Routledge. 1995. Frederic, Louis. “Japan Encyclopedia.” Translated by Käthe Roth. 2002. https://archive.org/details/japanencyclopedi0000loui/mode/1up Fujikawa, Mayu. “Pope Paul V's global design.” Renaissance Studies, APRIL 2016, Vol. 30, No. 2 (APRIL 2016). Via JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/26618847 Gessel, Van C. “Historical Background.” From The Samurai by Shusaku Endo. Gutierrez, Ed. “Samurai in Spain.” Japan Quarterly, Jan. 1, 2000. Jones, Josh. “The 17th Century Japanese Samurai Who Sailed to Europe, Met the Pope & Became a Roman Citizen.” Open Culture. 11/29/2021. https://www.openculture.com/2021/11/the-17th-century-japanese-samurai-who-sailed-to-europe-met-the-pope-became-a-roman-citizen.html Kamens, Edward. “'The Tale of Genji' and ‘Yashima' Screens in Local and Global Contexts.” Yale University Art Gallery Bulletin , 2007, Japanese Art at Yale (2007). Via JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/40514681 KCP International. “Hasekura Tsunenaga and his Travels.” KCP International Japanese Language School. 9/6/2017. https://www.kcpinternational.com/2017/09/hasekura-tsunenaga-and-his-travels/ Lee, Christina H. “The Perception of the Japanese in Early Modern Spain: Not Quite ‘The Best People Yet Discovered'.” eHumanista: Volume 11, 2008. Massarella, Derek. “The Japanese Embassy to Europe (1582–1590).” The Japanese Embassy to Europe (1582–1590). February 2013. https://www.hakluyt.com/downloadable_files/Journal/Massarella.pdf Mathes, W. Michael. “A Quarter Century of Trans-Pacific Diplomacy: New Spain and Japan, 1592-1617.” Journal of Asian History , 1990, Vol. 24, No. 1 (1990). Via JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/41925377 Musillo, Marco. “The Borghese papacy's reception of a samurai delegation and its fresco image at Palazzo del Quirinale, Rome.” From Western visions of the Far East in a transpacific age, 1522-1657. Ashgate, 2012. Pasciuto, Greg. “Hasekura Tsunenaga: The Adventures of a Christian Samurai.” The Collector. 12/7/2022. https://www.thecollector.com/hasekura-tsunenaga-christian-samurai/ Sanabrais, Sofia. “'Spaniards of Asia': The Japanese Presence in Colonial Mexico.” Bulletin of Portuguese Japanese Studies. 2009, 18/19. https://www.redalyc.org/pdf/361/36129851009.pdf Shigemi, Inaga. “Japanese Encounters with Latin America and Iberian Catholicism (1549–1973): Some Thoughts on Language, Imperialism, Identity Formation, and Comparative Research.” The Comparatist, Vol. 32 (MAY 2008). Via JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/26237176 Strusiewicz, Cezary Jan. “The Samurai Who Met the Pope.” Tokyo Weekender. 4/26/2021. https://www.tokyoweekender.com/art_and_culture/japanese-culture/the-samurai-who-met-the-pope/ Theroux, Marcel. “The samurai who charmed the courts of Europe.” The Guardian. 6/7/2020. https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2020/jun/07/hasekura-rokuemon-tsunenaga-japan-samurai-charmed-courts-europe Tucci, Giuseppe. “Japanese Ambassadors as Roman Patricians.” East and West , JULY 1951, Vol. 2, No. 2. Via JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/29757935 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Nem só de consensos vive o pensamento trinitário. E hoje vamos ver como Stephen Holmes busca um consenso antigo para deslocar uma noção comum dos modernos. Em vez de procurar analogias para família, igreja ou sociedade na Trindade, nosso amigo batista ressalta como essa ansiedade de procurar aplicações prontas para o dogma trinitário acabaram por distorcer o que a igreja ocidental e oriental, católica romana, protestante ou ortodoxa oriental, confessa em seus credos ecumênicos. Veja uma transcrição deste episódio em nosso blog. Na Pilgrim você também pode ler o que Holmes considera o principal resumo da doutrina clássica da Trindade (sem uma oposição entre Ocidente e Oriente): o tratado de Agostinho sobre ela. Se você gostou deste episodio, compartilhe o Em Suma, um produto gratuito da Pilgrim, para que possamos continuar financiando este trabalho. _____ PARA SE APROFUNDAR Stephen R. Holmes. “Triune Creativity: Trinity, Creation, Art and Science” In: Trinitarian Sounding in Systematic Theology. Stephen R. Holmes. “ Three Versus One? Some Problems of Social Trinitarianism". Journal of Reformed Theology 3(1):77-89 Stephen R. Holmes. The Quest for the Trinity. Mark Husbands. “The Trinity is not our social program” In: Daniel Treier (ed.) Trinitarian Theology for the Church. _____ JÁ CONHECE A PILGRIM? A nossa plataforma oferece acesso a conteúdos cristãos de qualidade no formato que você preferir. Na Pilgrim você encontra audiolivros, ebooks, palestras, resumos, livros impressos e artigos para cada momento do seu dia e da sua vida: https://thepilgrim.com.br/ _____ SEJA PILGRIM PREMIUM Seja um assinante da Pilgrim e tenha acesso a mais de 10.000 livros, cursos, artigos e muito mais em uma única assinatura mensal: https://thepilgrim.com.br/seja-um-assinante Quais as vantagens? Acesso aos originais Pilgrim + Download ilimitado para ouvir offline + Acesso a mais de 10.000 títulos! + Frete grátis na compra de livros impressos em nossa loja _____ SIGA A PILGRIM No Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pilgrim.app/ no Twitter: https://twitter.com/AppPilgrim no TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@pilgrimapp e no YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCy1lBN2eNOdL_dJtKnQZlCw Entre em contato através do contato@thepilgrim.com.br. Em suma é um podcast original Pilgrim. Todos os direitos reservados. O ponto de vista deste texto é de responsabilidade de seu(s) autor(es) e colaboradores diretos, não refletindo necessariamente a posição da Pilgrim ou de sua equipe de profissionais. _____ SIGA-ME NAS REDES SOCIAIS No Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theolo.gui/ No Twitter: https://twitter.com/GCPdf
Adam Kirsch & James Panero discuss the April poetry issue, the New Criterion Poetry Prize, and more. Brian Brodeur reads selections from his winning book, Some Problems with Autobiography (Criterion Books).
0:00 Intros 3:16 MORE Star Wars Animation! 13:07 CameoFest??? 20:35 Some Problems... 29:30 Surprise Question! In this episode, we revisit The Bad Batch Season 1 right before Season 2 drops! What did we like about the show? How does it fit in with other animated Star Wars??? And, importantly, what did we NOT like about The Bad Batch? Let us know what you thought of The Bad Batch season AND what animated Star Wars would you like to make?! Find us here: Twitter: @kryptonalderaan IG: @kryptontoalderaan Facebook: @kryptontoalderaan Email: kryptontoalderaan@gmail.com Please, also share this show and leave us a rating or review on Apple Podcasts or wherever you're listening! It would really help us and help people find us! Thanks for listening! We would really like to know how people who are listening feel about the show so, if you could/want to, drop us a line on Twitter, Facebook, and/or Instagram, or at kryptontoalderaan@gmail.com. Give us a like, follow, comment, quick email, tweet, whatever and let us know how we're doing. We'd really appreciate the feedback and it would help us to understand this whole podcasting thing going forward. If you want to take it to the next level, leave us a review wherever you're listening to this.
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: A Quick List of Some Problems in AI Alignment As A Field, published by NicholasKross on June 21, 2022 on LessWrong. 1. MIRI as central point of failure for... a few things... For the past decade or more, if you read an article saying "AI safety is important", and you thought, "I need to donate or apply to work somewhere", MIRI was the default option. If you looked at FLI or FHI or similar groups, you'd say "they seem helpful, but they're not focused solely on AI safety/alignment, so I should go to MIRI for the best impact." 2. MIRI as central point of failure for learning and secrecy. MIRI's secrecy (understandable) and their intelligent and creatively-thinking staff (good) have combined into a weird situation: for some research areas, nobody really knows what they've tried and failed/succeeded at, nor the details of how that came to be. Yudkowsky did link some corrigibility papers he labels as failed, but neither he nor MIRI have done similar (or more in-depth) autopsies of their approaches, to my knowledge. As a result, nobody else can double-check that or learn from MIRI's mistakes. Sure, MIRI people write up their meta-mistakes, but that has limited usefulness, and people still (understandably) disbelieve their approaches anyway. This leads either to making the same meta-mistakes (bad), or to blindly trusting MIRI's approach/meta-approach (bad because...) 3. We need more uncorrelated ("diverse") approaches to alignment. MIRI was the central point for anyone with any alignment approach, for a very long time. Recently-started alignment groups (Redwood, ARC, Anthropic, Ought, etc.) are different from MIRI, but their approaches are correlated with each other. They all relate to things like corrigibility, the current ML paradigm, IDA, and other approaches that e.g. Paul Christiano would be interested in. I'm not saying these approaches are guaranteed to fail (or work). I am saying that surviving worlds would have, if not way more alignment groups, definitely way more uncorrelated approaches to alignment. This need not lead to extra risk as long as the approaches are theoretical in nature. Think early-1900s physics gedankenexperiments, and how diverse they may have been. Or, if you want more hope and less hope at the same time, look at how many wildly incompatible theories have been proposed to explain quantum mechanics. A surviving world would have at least this much of a Cambrian explosion in theories, and would also be better at handling this than we are in real-life handling the actual list of quantum theories (in absence of better experimental evidence). Simply put, if evidence is dangerous to collect, and every existing theoretical approach is deeply flawed along some axis, then let schools proliferate with little evidence, dammit! This isn't psych, where stuff fails to replicate and people keep doing it. AI alignment is somewhat better coordinated than other theoretical fields... we just overcorrected to putting all our eggs in a few approach baskets. (Note: if MIRI is willing and able, it could continue being a/the central group for AI alignment, given the points in (1), but it would need to proliferate many schools of thought internally, as per (5) below.) One problem with this [1], is that the AI alignment field as a whole may not have the resources (or the time) to pursue this hits-based strategy. In that case, AI alignment would appear to be bottlenecked on funding, rather than talent directly. That's... news to me. In either case, this requires either more fundraising, and/or more money-efficient ways to get similar effects to what I'm talking about. (If we're too talent-constrained to pursue a hits-based approach strategy, it's even more imperative to fix the talent constraints first, as per (4) below.) Another problem is whether the "winning" approach mi...
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: A Quick List of Some Problems in AI Alignment As A Field, published by NicholasKross on June 21, 2022 on LessWrong. 1. MIRI as central point of failure for... a few things... For the past decade or more, if you read an article saying "AI safety is important", and you thought, "I need to donate or apply to work somewhere", MIRI was the default option. If you looked at FLI or FHI or similar groups, you'd say "they seem helpful, but they're not focused solely on AI safety/alignment, so I should go to MIRI for the best impact." 2. MIRI as central point of failure for learning and secrecy. MIRI's secrecy (understandable) and their intelligent and creatively-thinking staff (good) have combined into a weird situation: for some research areas, nobody really knows what they've tried and failed/succeeded at, nor the details of how that came to be. Yudkowsky did link some corrigibility papers he labels as failed, but neither he nor MIRI have done similar (or more in-depth) autopsies of their approaches, to my knowledge. As a result, nobody else can double-check that or learn from MIRI's mistakes. Sure, MIRI people write up their meta-mistakes, but that has limited usefulness, and people still (understandably) disbelieve their approaches anyway. This leads either to making the same meta-mistakes (bad), or to blindly trusting MIRI's approach/meta-approach (bad because...) 3. We need more uncorrelated ("diverse") approaches to alignment. MIRI was the central point for anyone with any alignment approach, for a very long time. Recently-started alignment groups (Redwood, ARC, Anthropic, Ought, etc.) are different from MIRI, but their approaches are correlated with each other. They all relate to things like corrigibility, the current ML paradigm, IDA, and other approaches that e.g. Paul Christiano would be interested in. I'm not saying these approaches are guaranteed to fail (or work). I am saying that surviving worlds would have, if not way more alignment groups, definitely way more uncorrelated approaches to alignment. This need not lead to extra risk as long as the approaches are theoretical in nature. Think early-1900s physics gedankenexperiments, and how diverse they may have been. Or, if you want more hope and less hope at the same time, look at how many wildly incompatible theories have been proposed to explain quantum mechanics. A surviving world would have at least this much of a Cambrian explosion in theories, and would also be better at handling this than we are in real-life handling the actual list of quantum theories (in absence of better experimental evidence). Simply put, if evidence is dangerous to collect, and every existing theoretical approach is deeply flawed along some axis, then let schools proliferate with little evidence, dammit! This isn't psych, where stuff fails to replicate and people keep doing it. AI alignment is somewhat better coordinated than other theoretical fields... we just overcorrected to putting all our eggs in a few approach baskets. (Note: if MIRI is willing and able, it could continue being a/the central group for AI alignment, given the points in (1), but it would need to proliferate many schools of thought internally, as per (5) below.) One problem with this [1], is that the AI alignment field as a whole may not have the resources (or the time) to pursue this hits-based strategy. In that case, AI alignment would appear to be bottlenecked on funding, rather than talent directly. That's... news to me. In either case, this requires either more fundraising, and/or more money-efficient ways to get similar effects to what I'm talking about. (If we're too talent-constrained to pursue a hits-based approach strategy, it's even more imperative to fix the talent constraints first, as per (4) below.) Another problem is whether the "winning" approach mi...
In this deep conversation with Lars, we were able to speak to the key challenges that remain behind blockchain and crypto in gaming. Key problems discussed: 1. Degraded Blockchain Problem, 2. Some Problems with Play to Earn, and 3. The Problem with Land Sales. Links: - Lars Blog- The Fortress of Doors - Degraded Blockchain Article (Lars post from Fortress of Doors) - Land Speculators Will Kill Your Game's Growth (Game Developer) Also check out the original, full interview with Lars that has a wider ranged discussion on Bitcoin and cryptocurrency on Super Stonk Bros here Read about it in the GameMakers newsletter: https://gamemakers.substack.com/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/gamemakers/message
Some Problems can be solved with Power, but some others require wisdom. Jesus is declared to be the Wisdom and Power of God! This means there is a twofold dimension to the operations of Christ and His Body. This teaching explores the importance of the right balance of Wisdom and Power in the church today, and in witnessing to our generation. Listen to find out more.
So, I got a call last night from Eugene, who was working 12 hours at the office yesterday on our systems and processes that we have a bit of a problem that we have to address. It’s an interesting one, because it’s one of the problems that you want to have in a business. We’re […] The post SAP 079: Some Problems are Good to Have | Medicare Agent Training appeared first on Senior Agent Podcast.
So, I got a call last night from Eugene, who was working 12 hours at the office yesterday on our systems and processes that we have a bit of a problem that we have to address. It’s an interesting one, because it’s one of the problems that you want to have in a business. We’re […] The post SAP 079: Some Problems are Good to Have | Medicare Agent Training appeared first on Senior Agent Podcast.
It’s away! The Sta Wo cast is here! Episode VIII! We talk! Going to Watch The Last Jedi (0:00) “The Vistas were Gone” “Much more Comedic” (06:00) Movie Starts! (11:03) That Muppet (24:08) The Grass (33:22) Rebellion in Reverse (39:19) Some Problems (50:30) The Mary Poppins Moment (56:32) Some Flashbacks (1:02:53) Remember that Green Milk? […]
This is part 2 and the last message in this series titled:"Walking Through Some Solutions to Some Problems in Marriage"
This is part 2 and the last message in this series titled:"Walking Through Some Solutions to Some Problems in Marriage"
Series Title: "Walking Through Some Solutions to Some Problems in Marriage"
Series Title: "Walking Through Some Solutions to Some Problems in Marriage"