Podcasts about Stephen Hawking

English theoretical physicist, cosmologist and author

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Stephen Hawking

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Latest podcast episodes about Stephen Hawking

Holmberg's Morning Sickness
12-31-25 - Super Genius - Loses 3 Times - May 2002 - Stephen Hawking Trivia - Sept 2015 - BO

Holmberg's Morning Sickness

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2025 25:21


12-31-25 - Super Genius - Loses 3 Times - May 2002 - Stephen Hawking Trivia - Sept 2015 - BOSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Arizona
12-31-25 - Super Genius - Loses 3 Times - May 2002 - Stephen Hawking Trivia - Sept 2015 - BO

Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Arizona

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2025 25:21


12-31-25 - Super Genius - Loses 3 Times - May 2002 - Stephen Hawking Trivia - Sept 2015 - BOSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Continuum Audio
Neuropalliative Care in Neuromuscular Disorders With Dr. David J. Oliver

Continuum Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2025 23:47


Careful assessment and individualized care, provided by a skilled multidisciplinary care team, are emphasized in the holistic approach to neuropalliative care, which considers physical, psychological, social, spiritual, and existential aspects for people with neuromuscular diseases. In this episode, Gordon Smith, MD, FAAN, speaks with David J. Oliver, PhD, FRCP, FRCGP, FEAN, author of the article "Neuropalliative Care in Neuromuscular Disorders" in the Continuum® December 2025 Neuropalliative Care issue. Dr. Smith is a Continuum® Audio interviewer and a professor and chair of neurology at Kenneth and Dianne Wright Distinguished Chair in Clinical and Translational Research at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Virginia. Dr. Oliver is an honorary professor of Tizard Centre at the University of Kent in Canterbury, United Kingdom. Additional Resources Read the article: Neuropalliative Care in Neuromuscular Disorders Subscribe to Continuum®: shop.lww.com/Continuum Earn CME (available only to AAN members): continpub.com/AudioCME Continuum® Aloud (verbatim audio-book style recordings of articles available only to Continuum® subscribers): continpub.com/Aloud More about the American Academy of Neurology: aan.com Social Media facebook.com/continuumcme @ContinuumAAN Host: @gordonsmithMD Full episode transcript available here Dr Jones: This is Dr Lyell Jones, Editor-in-Chief of Continuum. Thank you for listening to Continuum Audio. Be sure to visit the links in the episode notes for information about earning CME, subscribing to the journal, and exclusive access to interviews not featured on the podcast. Dr Smith: Hello, this is Dr Gordon Smith. Today I've got the great pleasure of interviewing Dr David Oliver about his article on neuropalliative care and neuromuscular disorders, which appears in the December 2025 Continuum issue on neuropalliative care. David, welcome to the Continuum podcast, and please introduce yourself to our audience. Dr Oliver: Thank you. It's a pleasure and a privilege to be here. I'm a retired consultant in palliative medicine in the UK. I worked at the Wisdom Hospice in Rochester for over thirty years, and I'm also an honorary professor at the University of Kent in Canterbury in the UK. I've had a long interest in palliative care in neurological diseases. Hopefully we can talk about a bit later. Dr Smith: I really look forward to learning a little bit more about your path and experiences. But I wonder if, before we get into the meat of neuropalliative care with a focus on neuromuscular, if maybe you can kind of set the stage by just defining palliative care. I mean, my experience is that people think of this in different ways, and a lot of folks think- hear palliative care, and they immediately go to end-of-life care or comfort care. So, what- how should we think about maybe the discipline of palliative care or neuropalliative care? Dr Oliver: I see palliative care as very much responding to people's needs, whether that's physical needs, psychological needs, social or spiritual or existential. So, it can be much earlier in the disease progression. And I think particularly for neurological diseases, early involvement may be very important. Dr Smith: That was actually going to be my first substantive question, really, was when to begin the conversation and what does that look like and how does it evolve over time. You have a really great figure in the article that kind of emphasizes the various stages within a patient's journey that, you know, palliative care can become involved. But I wonder if you could use ALS as a good example and describe what that looks like from when a patient is first diagnosed with ALS through their course? Dr Oliver: I think particularly in ALS at the beginning, soon after diagnosis, someone may have a lot of distress and a lot of questions that they need answering. This is a disease they've not had any contact with before. And they don't understand what's going on, they don't understand the disease. So, there may be a great need to have the opportunity to talk about the disease, what may happen, what is happening, how it's going to affect them and their family. As think time goes on, there may be later they develop swallowing problems, and that will need to be talking about a feeding tube and gastrostomy. And again, there may be a lot of issues for the person and their family. As they deteriorate, they may have respiratory problems and need to have discussion about ventilatory support, either by PAP, noninvasive ventilation, or even tracheostomy. And again, I think that's a big issue that needs wide discussion. And then it may be at the final few months of the disease, where they are deteriorating, that they may have increased needs, and their families may have those needs after the death. And I think often families bereaved from someone with a neurological disease such as ALS need a great deal of support, having many mixed emotions. There may be a feeling of relief that they're not involved in that caring, but then a feeling of guilt that they shouldn't be having those feelings. So, I think that can happen over a period of… what with ALS it may be two, three, four years, but it may be similar changes over time with any patient with a neurological disease. It may be ten or fifteen years with Parkinson's or five to ten years with a progressive supranuclear palsy, but there'll be this similar need to look at palliative care during their disease progression. Dr Smith: So, I'm curious at the time of diagnosis of ALS, how far out in the future do you provide information? So a specific question would be, do you talk about end-of-life management? In my experience, ALS patients are sometimes interested in knowing about that. Or do you really focus on what's in front of you in the next three to six months, for instance? Dr Oliver: I think it's both. Obviously, we need to talk about the next three to six months, but often giving patients the opportunity to talk about what's going to happen in the future, what may happen at the end of life, I think is important. And I think a disease like ALS, if they look it up on the Internet, they may have a lot of very distressing entries there. There's a lot about how distressing dying with ALS is. And actually confront those and discuss those issues early is really important. Dr Smith: So of course, the other thing that comes up immediately with an ALS diagnosis---or, for that matter, with any other neurodegenerative problem---is prognosis. Do you have guidance and how our listeners who are giving a diagnosis of ALS or similar disorder should approach the prognostication discussion? Dr Oliver: It's often very difficult. Certainly in the UK, people may have- be a year into their disease from their first symptoms before they're diagnosed, and I've seen figures, that's similar across the world. So, people may be actually quite way through their disease progression, but I do think we have to remember that the figures show that at five years, 25% of people are still alive, and 5 to 10% are still alive at ten years. We mustn't say you are going to die in the next two or three years, because that may not be so. And I think to have the vagueness but also the opportunity to talk, that we are talking of a deterioration over time and we don't know how that will be for you. I always stress how individual I think ALS is for patients. Dr Smith: One of the other concepts that is familiar with anyone who does ALS and clearly comes through in your article---which is really outstanding, by the way. So, thank you and congratulations for that---is the importance of multidisciplinary teams. Can you talk a little bit about how neuropalliative care sits within a multidisciplinary care model? Dr Oliver: I think the care should be multidisciplinary. Certainly in the UK, we recommended multidisciplinary team care for ALS in particular, from the time of diagnosis. And I think palliative care should be part of that multidisciplinary team. It may be a member of the team who has that palliative care experience or someone with specialist experience. Because I think the important thing is that everyone caring for someone with ALS or other neuromuscular diseases should be providing palliative care to some extent: listening to people, discussing their goals, managing their symptoms. And a specialist may only be needed if those are more complicated or particularly difficult. So, I think it is that the team needs to work together to support people and their families. So, looking at the physical aspects where the physiotherapist or occupational therapist may be very important, the psychologicals are a counsellor or psychologist. The social aspects, most of our patients are part of wider families, and we need to be looking at supporting their carers and within their family as well as the person. And so that may involve social work and other professionals. And the spiritual, the why me, their fears about the future, may involve a spiritual counsellor or a chaplain or, if appropriate, a religious leader appropriate to that- for that person. So, I think it is that wider care provided by the team. Dr Smith: I'm just reflecting on, again, your earlier answers about the Continuum of neuropalliative care. Knowing your patient is super valuable here. So, having come to know someone through their disease course must pay dividends as you get to some of these harder questions that come up later during the disease progression. Dr Oliver: I think that's the very important use of palliative care from early on in the diagnosis. It's much easier to talk about, perhaps, the existential fears of someone while they can still talk openly. To do that through a communication aid can be very difficult. To talk about someone's fear of death through a communication aid is really very, very difficult. The multidisciplinary team, I think, works well if all the members are talking together. So that perhaps the speech therapist has been to see someone and has noticed their breathing is more difficult, comes back and talks to the doctor and the physiotherapist. The social worker notices the speech is more difficult and comes back and speaks to the speech therapist. So, I think that sort of team where people are working very closely together can really optimize the care. And as you said, knowing the person, and for them to know you and to trust you, I think that's important. Those first times that people meet is so important in establishing trust. And if you only meet people when they're very disabled and perhaps not able to communicate very easily, that's really difficult. Dr Smith: I think you're reading my mind, actually, because I was really interested in talking about communication. And you mentioned a few times in your article about voice banking, which is likely to be a new concept for many of our listeners. And I would imagine the spectrum of tools that are becoming available for augmented communication for patients who have ALS or other disorders that impair speech must be impressive. I wonder if you could give us an update on what the state of the art is in terms of approaching communication. Dr Oliver: Well, I think we all remember Stephen Hawking, the professor from Cambridge, who had a very robotic voice which wasn't his. Now people may have their own voice on a communication aid. I think the use of whether it's a mobile phone or iPad, other computer systems, can actually turn what someone types into their own voice. And voice banking is much easier than it used to be. Only a few years ago, someone would have to read for an hour or two hours so the computer could pick up all the different aspects of their voice. Now it's a few minutes. And it has been even- I've known that people have taken their answer phone off a telephone and used that to produce a voice that is very, very near to the person. So that when someone does type out, the voice that comes out will be very similar to their own. I remember one video of someone who'd done this and they called their dog, and the dog just jumped into the air when he suddenly heard his master's voice for the first time in several months. So, I think it's very dramatic and very helpful for the person, who no longer feels a robot, but also for their family that can recognize their father, their husband, their wife's speech again. Dr Smith: Very humanizing, isn't it? Dr Oliver: There is a stigma of having the robotic voice. And if we can remove that stigma and someone can feel more normal, that would be our aim. Dr Smith: As you've alluded to, and for the large majority---really all of our ALS patients, barring something unexpected---we end up in preparing for death and preparing for end of life. I wonder what advice you have in that process, managing fear of death and working with our patients as they approach the end of their journey. Dr Oliver: I think the most important thing is listening and trying to find what their particular concerns are. And as I said earlier, they may have understood from what they've read in books or the Internet that the death from ALS is very distressing. However, I think we can say there are several studies now from various countries where people have looked at what happens at the end of life for people with ALS. Choking to death, being very distressed, are very, very rare if the symptoms are managed effectively beforehand, preparations are made so that perhaps medication can be given quickly if someone does develop some distress so that it doesn't become a distressing crisis. So, I think we can say that distress at the end of life with ALS is unusual, and probably no different to any other disease group. It's important to make sure that people realize that with good symptom control, with good palliative care, there is a very small risk of choking or of great distress at the end of life. Dr Smith: Now, I would imagine many patients have multiple different types of fear of death; one, process, what's the pain and experience going to be like? But there's also being dead, you know, fear of the end of life. And then this gets into comments you made earlier about spirituality and psychology. How do you- what's your experience in handling that? Because that's a harder problem, it seems, to really provide concrete advice about. Dr Oliver: Yeah. And so, I think it's always important to know when someone says they're frightened of the future, to check whether it is the dying process or after death. I've got no answer for what's going to happen afterwards, but I can listen to what someone may have in their past, their concerns, their experience. You know, is their experience of someone dying their memories of someone screaming in pain in an upstairs bedroom while they were a child? Was their grandfather died? Trying to find out what particular things may be really a problem to them and that we can try and address. But others, we can't answer what's going to happen after death. If someone is particularly wanting to look at that, I think that may be involving a spiritual advisor or their local spiritual/religious leader. But often I think it's just listening and understanding where they are. Dr Smith: So, you brought up bereavement earlier and you discussed it in the article. In my experience is that oftentimes the families are very, very impacted by the journey of ALS. And while ALS patients are remarkably resilient, it's a huge burden on family, loved ones, and their community. Can you talk a bit about the role of palliative care in the bereavement process, maybe preparing for bereavement and then after the loss of their loved one? Dr Oliver: Throughout the disease progression, we need to be supporting the carers as much as we are the patient. They are very much involved. As you said, the burden of care may be quite profound and very difficult for them. So, it's listening, supporting them, finding out what their particular concerns are. Are they frightened about what's going to happen at the end of life as well? Are they concerned of how they're going to cope or how the person's going to cope? And then after the death, it's allowing them to talk about what's happened and how they are feeling now, cause I think having had that enormous input in care, then suddenly everything stops. And also, the support systems they've had for perhaps months of the carers coming in, the doctor, the nurse, the physiotherapist, everyone coming in, they all stop coming. So, their whole social system suddenly stops and becomes much reduced. And I'm afraid certainly in the UK if someone is bereaved, they may not have the contact with their friends and family because they're afraid to come and see them. So, they may become quite isolated and reduced in what they can do. So, I think it's allowing them to discuss what has happened. And I think that's as important sometimes for members of the multidisciplinary team, because we as doctors, nurses and the wider team will also have some aspects of bereavement as we face not seeing that person who we've looked after for many years and perhaps in quite an intensive way. So, we need to be looking at how we support ourselves. And I think that's another important role of the multidisciplinary team. I always remember in our team, sometimes I would say, I find this person really difficult to cope with. And the rest of the people around the team would go have a sigh of relief because they felt the same, but they didn't like to say. And once we could talk about it, we could support each other and work out what we could do to help us help the patient in the most effective way. Dr Smith: Well, David, I think that's a great point to end on. I think you've done a really great job of capturing why someone would want to be a palliative care specialist or be involved in palliative care, because one of the themes throughout this conversation is the very significant personal and care impact that you have on patients and families. So, I really appreciate your sharing your wisdom. I really encourage all of our listeners to check out the article, it's really outstanding. I wonder if maybe you might just briefly tell us a little bit about how you got into this space? It's obviously one for which you have a great deal of passion and wisdom. How did you end up where you are? Dr Oliver: I became interested in palliative care as a medical student, and actually I trained as a family doctor, but I went to Saint Christopher's Hospice following that. I had actually had contact with them while I was a medical student, so I worked Saint Christopher's Hospice in South London when Dame Cecily Saunders was still working there. And at that time Christopher's had sixty-two beds, and at least eight of those beds were reserved for people with ALS or other neurological diseases. And I became very involved in one or two patients and their care. And Dame Sicily Saunders asked me to write something on ALS for their bookshelf that they had on the education area. So, I wrote, I think, four drafts. I went from sort of C minus to just about passable on the fourth draft. And that became my big interest in particularly ALS, and as time went on, in other neurological diseases. When I went to the Wisdom Hospice as a consultant, I was very keen to carry on looking after people with ALS, and we involved ourselves with other neurological patients. That's how I got started. Having that interest, listening to patients, documenting what we did became important as a way of showing how palliative care could have a big role in neurological disease. And over the years, I've been pressing again and again for the early involvement of palliative care in neurological diseases. And I think that is so important so that there can be a proper holistic assessment of people, that they can build up the trust in their carers and in the multidisciplinary team so that they can live as positively as possible. And as a result of that, that their death will be without distress and with their family with them. Dr Smith: Well, David, you've convinced and inspired me, and I'm confident you have our listeners as well. Thank you so much for a really informative, enjoyable, inspiring conversation. Dr Oliver: Thank you for inviting me. Dr Smith: Again, today I've been interviewing Dr David Oliver about his article on neuropalliative care and neuromuscular disorders, which appears in the December 2025 Continuum issue on neuropalliative care. Be sure to check out Continuum Audio episodes from this and other issues, and thanks to our listeners for joining us today. Dr Monteith: This is Dr Teshamae Monteith, Associate Editor of Continuum Audio. If you've enjoyed this episode, you'll love the journal, which is full of in-depth and clinically relevant information important for neurology practitioners. Use the link in the episode notes to learn more and subscribe. AAN members, you can get CME for listening to this interview by completing the evaluation at continpub.com/audioCME. Thank you for listening to Continuum Audio.

Holmberg's Morning Sickness
12-24-25 - The Story Of The Baby Funeral Brady Attended - Stephen Hawking Was On The Epstein List - Dec/Jan 2024 - BO

Holmberg's Morning Sickness

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2025 22:21


12-24-25 - The Story Of The Baby Funeral Brady Attended - Stephen Hawking Was On The Epstein List - Dec/Jan 2024 - BOSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Arizona
12-24-25 - The Story Of The Baby Funeral Brady Attended - Stephen Hawking Was On The Epstein List - Dec/Jan 2024 - BO

Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Arizona

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2025 22:21


12-24-25 - The Story Of The Baby Funeral Brady Attended - Stephen Hawking Was On The Epstein List - Dec/Jan 2024 - BOSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

GUTE NACHT GEEK
#194 The Big Bang Theory Staffel 7 (Folge 20 - Klozilla)

GUTE NACHT GEEK

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2025 19:21 Transcription Available


#194 The Big Bang Theory Staffel 7 (Folge 20 - Klozilla) Von Theorien, Trennungen und legendärer Fremdscham Sheldon steckt in einer tiefen Sinnkrise: Hat er sein Leben der STRING-Theorie geopfert, die niemals bewiesen werden kann? Inspiriert von Penny und der Cosmopolitan trennt er sich dramatisch von der STRING-Theorie. Auch ein Umstyling, Alkohol und peinliche Anrufe bei Stephen Hawking gehören dazu. Parallel sorgt Rajs Dating-Leben für Chaos, als Emily auf Howard trifft und dessen legendärer Toilettenunfall ans Licht kommt: Klozilla ist geboren.

MÅNDAG
439. Stephen Hawking-glidmedel

MÅNDAG

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2025 61:31


Det är MÅNDAG! Petrina, Armann, och en krasslig Jofi snackar om utrop på tåg, politisk läsk, råttor som pissar på din grav, att gå runt med shorts i december, de nysläppta Epstein-filerna, Diddy-dokumentären, onda och goda vargar, hur man håller uppe stämningen i Skellefteå, och lite annat smått och gott. Jofi (eller Johannes Finnlaugsson om man ska vara formell) gör sin årkrönika i form av lide ball ståupp, ÅRET ÄR 2025, i olika städer! Samtliga shower det finns platser kvar till är efter jul, så biljetten funkar toppen som julklapp! fredag 26/12: MALMÖ SLUTSÅLD lördag 27/12: MALMÖ SLUTSÅLD lördag 3/1: UMEÅ söndag 4/1: UPPSALA fredag 9/1: MALMÖ SLUTSÅLD lördag 10/1: MALMÖ extra extra extra! Biljetter till detta köper du på https://underjord.nu/biljetter/aret-ar-2025/ och du gör det nu!   Världens ballaste ståuppklubb som kör varannan onsdag i Malmö heter UNDER JORD och är klar för säsongen, men du bör redan nu göra dig reda för vårsäsongen genom att konstant uppdatera toppensajten http://underjord.nu!   Följ grejer Petrina gör på http://petrina.se   Stötta MÅNDAG på http://patreon.com/mandag så är du bäst!

Astronomy Daily - The Podcast
Hawking's Triumph, Balloon Telescopes, and a Tilted Exoplanet

Astronomy Daily - The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2025 13:50 Transcription Available


Hawking and Einstein Confirmed: In a groundbreaking cosmic event, the collision of two black holes has validated predictions made by both Stephen Hawking and Albert Einstein. Observations from gravitational wave observatories confirmed Hawking's area theorem, showing that the surface area of the resulting black hole increased, and matched Einstein's predictions regarding the black hole's ring down, revealing a new Kerr black hole.Moss Survives in Space: Astonishingly, moss spores exposed to the harsh conditions of space on the International Space Station for nine months were able to germinate upon their return to Earth. This remarkable resilience of extremophiles supports theories like panspermia, suggesting that life's building blocks could survive interplanetary journeys.Balloon-Based Astronomy: The Excalibur mission is revolutionizing observational astronomy by utilizing a telescope suspended from a high-altitude balloon. Operating above 99% of Earth's atmosphere, it measures high-energy X-ray polarization from cosmic objects like the Crab Nebula and Cygnus X1, providing unprecedented insights into their magnetic fields and structures.Mystery of the Misaligned Exoplanet: Astronomers are puzzled by TOI 3884, a super Neptune with a bizarrely tilted orbit of 62 degrees. Lacking any nearby massive objects to explain its unusual trajectory, scientists are left with unconventional theories about its formation, highlighting the chaotic nature of planetary systems.Is the Universe Infinite? The question of whether the universe is infinite remains unresolved. While measurements of the cosmic microwave background suggest a flat geometry, which implies infinity, our observable horizon limits our ability to confirm this. The potential for a finite universe with complex topology adds further complexity to this profound inquiry.For more cosmic updates, visit our website at astronomydaily.io. Join our community on social media by searching for #AstroDailyPod on Facebook, X, YouTubeMusic, TikTok, and our new Instagram account! Don't forget to subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.Thank you for tuning in. This is Anna and Avery signing off. Until next time, keep looking up and exploring the wonders of our universe.✍️ Episode ReferencesBlack Hole Collision Insights[NASA](https://www.nasa.gov/)Moss in Space Study[International Space Station](https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/main/index.html)Excalibur Mission Overview[NASA](https://www.nasa.gov/)TOI 3884 Exoplanet Research[NASA Exoplanet Archive](https://exoplanetarchive.ipac.caltech.edu/)Cosmic Microwave Background Studies[NASA](https://www.nasa.gov/)Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/astronomy-daily-space-news-updates--5648921/support.Sponsor Details:Ensure your online privacy by using NordVPN. To get our special listener deal and save a lot of money, visit www.bitesz.com/nordvpn. You'll be glad you did!Sponsor Details:Ensure your online privacy by using NordVPN. To get our special listener deal and save a lot of money, visit www.bitesz.com/nordvpn. You'll be glad you did!Become a supporter of Astronomy Daily by joining our Supporters Club. Commercial free episodes daily are only a click way... Click HereThis episode includes AI-generated content.

This Sustainable Life: Solve For Nature
100 Years to Extinction w/ Peter Solomon

This Sustainable Life: Solve For Nature

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2025 37:38


What if Stephen Hawking was right—that humanity has less than 100 years left? Physicist and tech entrepreneur Peter Solomon, Ph.D., believes the clock is ticking. With five existential threats accelerating—AI, climate change, genetic engineering, nuclear risk, and social media manipulation—he's using science and storytelling to wake us up. His new novel 100 Years to Extinction paints a future we must avoid—and shows how we can still change course.Find Peter Solomon, Ph.D and 100 Years to Extinction online:Peter Solomon, Ph.D - About PagePeter Solomon - InstagramPeter Solomon, Ph.D Book - 100 Years to Extinction100 Years to Extinction - Facebook100YearsToExtinction - X100yearstoextinction - LinkedIn100YearsToExtinction - Youtube100YearsToExtinction - Reddit100yearstoextiction - TiktokFind me online:This Sustainable Life: Solve For Nature Podcast: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://shows.acast.com/solvefornatureBlog: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://verdantgrowth.blog/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠YouTube: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.youtube.com/c/verdantgrowth⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/verdantgrowth.bsky.socialFacebook: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.facebook.com/realverdantgrowth⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Instagram: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠http://instagram.com/verdant.growth ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠or ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠http://instagram.com/verdantgrowthofficial Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

A Brief History of Time by Stephen Hawking - Book Summary

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2025 26:02


Show notes / PDF & Infographic / Free Audiobook / A Brief History of Time is a concise summary of the origins and nature of our universe. Stephen Hawking guides readers through the evolution of our scientific understanding. He starts with Newton's law of gravity in the 1600s right through to the modern theories of the universe's beginning. This book is a clear and understandable guide to the universe. From black holes to time travel, Stephen Hawking explains some of our universe's most essential mysteries.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

People I (Mostly) Admire
170. Finding the God Particle

People I (Mostly) Admire

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2025 59:10


Physicist and former pop star Brian Cox tells Steve about discovering the Higgs boson, having a number-one hit, and why particle physics research will almost certainly not create a black hole that destroys all life on earth. SOURCES:Brian Cox, physicist at the University of Manchester. RESOURCES:Black Holes: The Key to Understanding the Universe, by Brian Cox and Jeff Forshaw (2023)."Higgs10: The Higgs boson and the rise of the Standard Model of Particle Physics in the 1970s," by John Ellis (CERN, 2022).Out of Silence, by Dare (2004)."WW scattering at the LHC," by J. M. Butterworth, Brian Cox, and J. R. Forshaw (CERN, 2002).A Brief History of Time, by Stephen Hawking (1998)."Gravitational Collapse and Space-Time Singularities," by Roger Penrose (Physical Review Letters, 1965)."The Value of Science," by Richard P. Feynman (Internet Archive, 1955)."Brian Cox Live." Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

The Chris Moyles Show on Radio X Podcast
Sir Gareth Southgate, Russell Howard, Kate Garraway, Alex James & Edgar Wright #520

The Chris Moyles Show on Radio X Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2025 104:28


Go and vote for Po-ol-lyWhat a guest bonanza it was this week! We had five guests come in this week to chat about all kinds of things from making Stephen Hawking laugh, to being on the Traitors, to y'know… being the England football manager.That's right, Gareth Southgate was in to talk about his new book Dear England: Lessons in Leadership. He gave us some insights into what his career really looked like behind the scenes, from being a young inexperienced manager at Middlesbrough F.C., to facing the pressure of taking England to the finals.We also had Kate Garraway in the studio chatting about all things Celebrity Traitors. She spoke about how much trickier it was actually being on compared to being a fan and watching the show at home. She also spoke on how helpful it was for her mentally, being able to throw herself fully into the show after going through such challenging times recently.Friend of the show, Alex James from Blur was also in to chat about his upcoming slew of dates for his incredible Britpop Classical. Russell Howard also spoke about his upcoming dates and the thrill he gets from seeing his friends succeed in their own varied careers. Edgar Wright was also in this week, promoting his upcoming film The Running Man. He spoke about the process of his film's creation, from his inception of the idea when he was fourteen, to the film's eventual release. He also told of a curious superstition he has regarding his movies's premieres. Keep an ear out for loads of other silly bits in this week's episode:Polly's student radio videoChris and Dom's wee adventures Dom's uncle's rifle polishingEnjoy!The Chris Moyles Show on Radio XWeekdays 6:30am - 10am

El sueño de Laika
Episodio 245. Stephen Hawking, Profeta de los Universos Múltiples.

El sueño de Laika

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2025 15:48


Conoce el modo en que el gran astrónomo británico concebía el cosmos que habitamos. Escucha la anécdota de la Kepler astrólogo, la cultura espacial del analema, y el desafío de este episodio.Escríbeme a: laika.podcast@gmail.comSígueme en instagram: @laika.podcast

The Bomb Squad Pod
Ep. 135: ANTHONY ORDAINED!

The Bomb Squad Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2025 69:07


This week: The Voicenote Confessionals: Part III - Sora x Paisley, Stephen Hawking, polyamory, the greatest day ever ft. Ju Jitsu, ice baths and Flout pizza, illegal fat people behaviours, burrito stout bokes, the ultimate guide to break ups, catholic mass antics, McCann is getting ordained, peanut allergies, toilet break nightmares, chef tales, the culchie sopranos & much more.Sign up to Patreon⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ for access to exclusive episodes out every Thursday.⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠patreon.com/TheBombSquadPod⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Follow @TheBombSquadPod on ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠YouTube⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Instagram⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠TikTok⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ & ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠X⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.Hosted by:⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Colin Geddis⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ &⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Aaron McCann⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Produced & Edited by:⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Niall Fegan

I Thought You'd Like To Know This, Too
ITEST Webinar Challenges and Opportunities of Artificial Intelligence: The MagisAI App (October 18, 2025)

I Thought You'd Like To Know This, Too

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2025 122:11 Transcription Available


In this webinar hosted by the Institute for Theological Encounter with Science and Technology and the Magis Center, Fr. Robert J. Spitzer introduces the Magis AI app. Fr. Robert J. Spitzer, SJ, PhDChallenges and Opportunities of Artificial Intelligence: The MagisAI AppFr. Robert J. Spitzer, S.J., Ph.D. is President of the Magis Center of Reason and Faith (magiscenter.com), one of the largest science, faith, and reason apologetics institutes in the world. He was President of Gonzaga University from 1998 to 2009, where he increased the student body by 75%, oversaw the construction of 20 new facilities, and raised $200+ million for scholarships and buildings. He is the author of nineteen books, including the award-winning books New Proofs for the Existence of God and Science, Reason, and Faith: Discovering the Bible. He has also authored many scholarly articles on faith and science, metaphysics, and happiness and ethics.Father Spitzer has his own weekly EWTN television show called Fr. Spitzer's Universe. He has appeared on the Larry King Show (in discussion with Stephen Hawking and Deepak Chopra), the History Channel, the Today Show, and a PBS series. He started seven institutes dedicated to faith and reason and happiness/purpose in life. He was a professor at Georgetown University, Seattle University, and Gonzaga University and was awarded the teaching medal at both Georgetown University and Seattle University. He has held two major academic chairs—the Frank Shrontz Endowed Chair in Professional Ethics (Seattle University) and the John L. Aram Chair of Business Ethics (Gonzaga University), and has won multiple academic and professional awards including the DeSmet Medal (Gonzaga University's highest award), the Aquinas Medal (for Catholic philosophical scholarship), honorary doctorates, Phi Beta Kappa (honorary), and professional society awards.AbstractArtificial Intelligence, no doubt, presents many challenges – hallucinations, fraud, privacy issues, skewing of truth, and even the “dumbing” of America. Furthermore, there is considerable confusion about whether AI will become sentient, self-conscious, and intelligent. Fr. Spitzer will discuss these challenges and confusing issues, and will then examine the opportunities that AI presents for evangelization, noting specifically his MagisAI App which can help young people to maintain and defend their faith. This App is capable of answering literally thousands of questions about the confluence between science, reason, faith, scripture, and morality for a modern secular audience. With rapid distribution, it could become a premiere tool of evangelization for Christianity and the Catholic Church.Thomas P. Sheahen, PhDAI Comprehension: Sure Things, No-Chance Topics, and MaybesDr. Thomas P. Sheahen, director emeritus of ITEST, earned BS and PhD degrees in physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. During his 45-year career as a research physicist, predominantly in energy sciences, he worked for various industrial and national laboratories. In the 1990s, Sheahen wrote the textbook Introduction to High-Temperature Superconductivity. More recently, he wrote the book Everywhen: God, Symmetry and Time, which stands at the intersection of faith and science, and explains how mankind's limited capabilities have led to a deficient and weak perception of God.AbstractArtificial Intelligence is rapidly improving and expanding into many fields, and the AI App of the Magis Center is part of that. As a search-aide to locating information about the Catholic Church, especially for persons conflicted about the alleged struggle between faith and science, it will be hard to beat. But creative thinking and the transcendental characteristics that make us truly humans won't fit into even very advanced machine learning. The question is about where the boundary (however foggy and ill-defined) lies. Can we expect to reach an asymptotic limit of AI content? Will AI no longer be helpful beyond some level? This presentation explores some parameters of such uncertainties.Christopher M. Reilly, ThDAI as a Medium for TruthChristopher Reilly, Th.D. is editor of the journal for ITEST and a board member. He writes and speaks about a Christian response to technology, bioethics, moral theology, and philosophy, and is author of the book AI and Sin: How Today's Technology Motivates Evil.     AbstractMagisAI is an extraordinary vehicle for teaching the Christian truth. AI, however, poses broader challenges to our understanding and expression of truth. How can we best meet these challenges with the help of such tools?

Sacred Wisdom
KAIROS | Bernard Carr on Black Holes as Portals to Other Universes, and a New Physics of Time

Sacred Wisdom

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2025 68:39


In this episode of Cosmic Codex, I have the immense privilege of sitting down with Professor Bernard Carr, one of the world's most esteemed cosmologists, a longtime collaborator of Stephen Hawking, and a dear friend. Together, we embark on a sweeping exploration of the nature of time, the mysteries of black holes, the role of consciousness in the cosmos, and the tantalizing possibility of higher dimensions.Our conversation doesn't shy away from the big questions: Is consciousness fundamental to reality? Can physics ever truly account for subjective experience? What does it mean to talk about “Kairos”—meaningful, qualitative time—versus “Kronos,” the linear ticking of the cosmic clock? Bernard shares his own bold ideas about the need for new dimensions of time to accommodate mind and meaning, and we reflect on the intersection of science, philosophy, and the spiritual quest.Chapters:00:00 – Black Holes as Portals: Introduction00:30 – Welcoming Professor Bernard Carr02:34 – Bernard's Journey: Hawking, Cambridge, and Beyond04:15 – What Is Time? Newton, Einstein, and the Arrows of Time07:45 – Entropy, Order, and the Meaning of Life10:00 – How Astronomy Shapes Our Sense of Time13:00 – Gravity, Relativity, and the Curvature of Space-Time17:00 – Black Holes: From Theory to Observation20:44 – The Event Horizon and the Flow of Time23:35 – Light, Photons, and Timelessness25:12 – Falling Into a Black Hole: Time Dilation and Paradoxes29:00 – Black Holes, Wormholes, and the Possibility of Other Universes32:30 – Closed Timelike Curves and Time Travel35:00 – Quantum Entanglement, Nonlocality, and Retrocausality38:45 – Consciousness, Mind, and the Limits of Physics41:00 – Kairos vs. Kronos: Two Kinds of Time44:00 – Higher Dimensions: String Theory, M-Theory, and Beyond48:00 – The Final Theory: Mind, Matter, and the Universal Tapestry51:00 – Reflections, Takeaways, and Closing ThoughtsFurther Resources:For a visual explanation of light cones (which Bernard references in our discussion), I highly recommend this resource:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light_coneFor more on Bernard Carr's work, visit his faculty page:https://www.qmul.ac.uk/maths/profiles/carrb.htmlIf you'd like to explore the concept of Kairos and Kronos, this article is a great starting point:https://www.templeton.org/news/kairos-and-kronosFor diagrams and further reading on black holes, event horizons, and time dilation, see:https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration/Space_Science/Black_holes_and_time_dilationJoin my school of consciousness & metaphysics -->The Temple

Ci vuole una scienza
Acchiappafantasmi fioriti e floppy disk da salvare

Ci vuole una scienza

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2025 7:52


A scuola impariamo che le piante vivono grazie alla fotosintesi clorofilliana, ma ce ne sono alcune che ne fanno tranquillamente a meno per tutta la loro vita. Sono le piante micoeterotrofe e il loro studio sta portando a nuove e sorprendenti scoperte sul regno vegetale. Ci spostiamo poi all'Università di Cambridge, nel Regno Unito, per scoprire come si recuperano e salvano vecchissimi floppy disk, per esempio per ricostruire l'archivio digitale di Stephen Hawking. Infine, un rapido ripasso sul vaccino antinfluenzale, adesso che è stagione. ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Il link per abbonarti al Post e ascoltare la puntata per intero. Leggi anche: – Alla ricerca dei fantasmi – Il sito di Suetsugu Kenji – La torbida vita delle formiche – Future Nostalgia – Un'età oscura digitale? Le persone che salvano la conoscenza dimenticata intrappolata nei vecchi floppy disk – Come nascono i vaccini Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Bright Side
Smartest Man Ever Lived You Probably Haven't Heard Of

Bright Side

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2025 11:50


If I ask you who the smartest person to ever live on Earth was, you'll probably name Isaac Newton or Stephen Hawking or some other outstanding scientist. But what if I tell you there was someone really smart but no one's really heard about him? He was a child prodigy and an exceptional mathematician. Why didn't he get rich or famous? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Get Around Me
Ep. 354 - Stephen Hawking's At Mad Monday?

Get Around Me

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2025 54:01


Praying for old blokes using the stairs at Clovelly Got a skin check (it's funny I swear?) Week at the Store with Rohan and Wolfey Taxi incident The craziest Mad Monday yet - Osborne Park Football Club Honourable mention South Bunbury Football club president Politicians say David Pocock doesn't know anything about sport Listener shout outs including the Aussie women's cricket team, Charles Oliveira, rugby league conspiracies and Perth booing the American national anthem New Episode every Thursday! Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJscnfTTW_-aO5D81Xi22yw? Facebook: www.facebook.com/billydarcy1 Instagram: www.instagram.com/billy.darcy Music: 'In the Clouds' by RENNANSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Kick it Forward Podcast
SPORT | Josh's Basketball OUTBURST, AFL Trade Week Nuffs, How To WIN On The Pokies, & Zak Brown At Bathurst?!

The Kick it Forward Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2025 75:22


⁠PLANE & BEER HATS HERE SPORT ALERT: Harry reveals how to win big on the Pokies. Giorgio blind ranks karaoke songs. Josh started another fight at a social game of pick up basketball. AFL Trade Week is... BORING. Nuffies: Sam Newman, Stephen Hawking, and Pat Cummins' back injury. BATHURST: Beers, planes, and beers.

Back in the Day with John and Jay
Episode 193: Stephen Hawking off the top rope? Michael Jackson cuts a promo? AI Slop?

Back in the Day with John and Jay

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2025 71:00 Transcription Available


Ever watch a deepfake so convincing you laugh first and worry second? We jump straight into the surreal boom of AI-generated videos—celebs cutting promos, impossible wrestling spots, and the increasingly thin line between parody and manipulation. It's hysterical and a little terrifying, and we unpack both sides: why the tech hooks us, how misinformation exploits it, and what we can do to stay sharp when our feeds blur reality.From there, we get real about the grind of opening a storefront. Loan approved, inventory ready, and then everything stalls over who pays to knock down a few interior walls. We walk through the play-by-play of chasing leases, wrangling owners, and setting deadlines so momentum doesn't die in someone else's inbox. If you're building something right now, you'll feel the frustration—and the strategy: control what you can, force clarity, and keep backup locations warm.We also share a quick run-in with expired tags and a surprisingly decent cop interaction that becomes a reminder to handle the small stuff before it becomes expensive stuff. Then we refuel with Metal Roulette, a fast tour through heavy hitters and fresh finds—from bounce-laden breakdowns to deathcore precision—proof that smaller venues still deliver the biggest punch. Along the way we hit ethics of AI art, the value of real musicianship, and why mid-size rooms beat bloated festivals when you want sound that moves your ribs.If you're into AI culture, small-business battles, and discovering heavy bands that actually slap, this one's your ride. Follow the show, share it with a friend who loves riffs and hot takes, and drop us the next band we should spin on Metal Roulette. And if you enjoyed it, subscribe and leave a review so more people can find the chaos and the clarity.Send us a text message and let us know how awesome we are! (Click the link)!Support the show'Beavis and Butt-head' Cover art created by Joe Crawford

The Robin Smith Show
#198 Matt Dowling

The Robin Smith Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2025 92:27


Matt Dowling is the Chief Scientific Officer and Director at Medcura Team. Matt completed his graduate work at the Fischell Department of Bioengineering at the University of Maryland (UMD), after completing his undergrad in Chemical Engineering from the University of Notre Dame. At UMD, he was awarded the Fischell Fellowship in Biomedical Engineering for his innovative ideas in drug delivery systems. Matt then co-created gel-e, a novel biomaterial platform, raising several initial grants to develop the technology and to launch Medcura as a corporate entity. Matt was the recipient of the Dean's Doctoral Research Award from the UMD Clark School of Engineering for his work on chitosan-based self-assembled soft materials for use in wound treatment. He has been the Principal Investigator on $10 million in non-dilutive grant awards to Medcura; these have been used to achieve 5 FDA clearances, 2 Breakthrough Device Designations, 28 issued patents, and 10+ peer-reviewed publications in high-impact journals. Matt's work has been featured on several US and international media outlets including the BBC TV program, Brave New World with Stephen Hawking. He's also the lead vocalist in the band, Swoll.Swollhttps://www.swollmusic.com/Light the NightLLS is on a mission to cure blood cancers and improve quality of life for the nearly 1.7 million people in the U.S. living with or in remission from blood cancer.Help Team Zavadowski reach our fundraising goal! Thank you for your generous donations:https://pages.lls.org/ltn/fdk/Montcomd25/rsmith--Get in touch: robinsmithshow@gmail.comCall the hotline: +1 (301) 458-0883Follow Robin on Insight Timer: https://insighttimer.com/robinsmithBecome a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/therobinsmithshowGot a question? We'd love to hear from you!

The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk
657: Helen Lewis - Why Genius Is a Myth, Edison Needed Teams, Self-Promoters Are Overrated, Conspiracy Theories, Shakespeare Needed Luck, and How To Build an Excellent Career

The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2025 57:54


Go to www.LearningLeader.com for full show notes This is brought to you by Insight Global. If you need to hire one person, hire a team of people, or transform your business through Talent or Technical Services, Insight Global's team of 30,000 people around the world has the hustle and grit to deliver. My Guest: Helen Lewis is a staff writer at The Atlantic and author of The Genius Myth: Great Ideas Don't Come from Lone Geniuses.  Notes: Shakespeare: Talent + Luck + Timing - William Shakespeare died in 1616 at age 52, celebrated but not yet immortal. His icon status required massive luck: friends published the First Folio (saving King Lear), then 50 years later, Charles II reopened England's theaters after Puritan closures and needed content. Companies turned to Shakespeare's IP, adapting his work (including changing tragedies to happy endings). Helen: "If anyone deserves to be called a genius, it's him. But he died as a successful man of his age. Scenius Over Genius - Brian Eno coined "scenius" - places that are unusually productive and creative. Shakespeare moved from Warwickshire to London for the theaters and playwrights. Helen: "You don't just have to be Leonardo, you also need Florence... Where do you find the coolest, most interesting bleeding edge of your field?" Modern example: Joe Rogan's Comedy Mothership in Austin created an alternative to LA/NYC for comedians like Shane Gillis and Tony Hinchcliffe. Ryan: "Put yourself in rooms where you feel like the dumbest person... force you to rise up, think differently, work harder." Tim Berners-Lee vs. Elon Musk - Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web. Has knighthood, lives an ordinary life, kids named Alice and Ben. Most people have never heard of him. Elon Musk has a lot of children, talks about his genes needing to live on, and lives a very public life. Helen: "We overrate the self-promoters, the narcissists. We demand oddness and specialness... We don't call modest people geniuses because they're too normal." Elizabeth Holmes (Theranos) and Sam Bankman-Fried (FTX) exploited this - looked like a genius (Steve Jobs cosplay, messy math prodigy) but stood on houses of cards. Trauma and the "I'll Show You" Engine - Matthew Parris wrote Fracture after noticing how many "great lives" had traumatic childhoods - loss of parents, being unloved, bullied. Helen: "I don't think that's necessarily genius in objective achievement. It's more like a hunger for recognition or fame... a kind of 'I'll show all of you' engine." Stephen Hawking on IQ - Stephen Hawking: "I have no idea. People who boast about their IQ are losers." The Flynn Effect shows average IQ rose over the 20th century through better nutrition, schooling, and living conditions. Higher IQ correlates with better outcomes. But at the top end, every IQ point ≠ is one success point. Christopher Langan (the highest IQ guy) thinks he has a theory to overturn Einstein, and that Bush did 9/11 to cover it up. No history of achievement. Helen: "Smart people don't always prosper. You need the gears that connect the engine to the wheels on the road." Conspiracy Theories: Narcissism as Driver - Narcissism is the most correlated personality trait with conspiracy thinking. Helen: "The sheeple, the NPCs think this, but I alone have seen the truth. It positions you as the protagonist of reality." The Internet is a "confirmation bias engine." But conspiracies are sometimes true (Epstein's corrupt plea deal), which is why conspiracy thinking persists. Researcher Karen Stenner's solution: Get back to depoliticized conspiracies like Bigfoot, crop circles, Area 51 - harmless things that got people outside instead of "shoot up a pizza restaurant." The Beatles: Finiteness Creates Legend - Psychologist Han Isaac said geniuses should either die before 30 or live past 80. Middle is "eh." The Beatles had both: a short career that ended definitively, then John Lennon was shot at 40, frozen in time. Paul McCartney lives on, performs at Glastonbury with John's vocals. Craig Brown: "The Rolling Stones just go on and on, but there's never as much of the Beatles as you want." Quality Over Quantity - Helen: "Incentive now is producing constantly for algorithms... That's neither fun nor produces the best work." Early career: say YES. Later career: "The most important thing you can say is no." Her metric: "Can I say honestly, that was the best I could do? I didn't cut corners. That's the metric." Podcast: advised to do 2-3 episodes weekly for rankings, has been doing weekly for 10.5 years. Shows that went daily? He stopped listening. "I'm gonna increase the quality bar, not the quantity." Robert Greene: "Do not speak unless you can improve upon the silence." Improving the Silence - "My dad's not the loudest at family gatherings, doesn't have the most words, but when he speaks, we all stop and listen. That's who you want to be." Applies to meetings: people vomit garbage to show how smart they are instead of waiting for something valuable. When you speak, people should want to listen. Thomas Edison: Execution Over Ideas - The Light bulb wasn't Edison's conceptual innovation - the idea dated to Humphrey Davy. What was incredible: Edison made it work (vacuum seal, filament) and created the New York power grid. Helen: "Lots of people can have the idea that a man should be an ant. Not everybody can write the Ant-Man screenplay and have it produced." His Menlo Park lab lasted because he worked with brilliant people on problems they cared about. Logbook shows assistants' names on breakthroughs - collaborative. We underrate logistics and execution. Most "light bulb moments" are actually slow, incremental, contested creations. Why Helen Chooses Teams Over Independence - Could go independent on Substack for more money. Works at The Atlantic for: resources, legal support, editorial integrity, and colleagues she doesn't want to let down. Helen: "You must have people in your life, you think, I wanna do work that they like. Finding those people who make you your best version of yourself." Ryan connects to athletics: "Being surrounded by people better than me forces me to raise my game. That's why we want to be part of a great team." Sample First, Specialize Later - High achievers have "hot streak" later, but sample early - trying different things, learning transferable skills. Helen: "Take the first job at a publication you could learn from. Even if not wildly interested, if it's good and they'll hold you to high standards, do it. Your second job is infinitely easier to get than your first." Work Around People Who Care - Helen: "If you work somewhere where no one cares, it's very hard. You can't care on your own. You'll become infected by the apathy around you." Nothing is more boring than a job you don't care about. Don't Wait to Live - Some devote long hours to something for money, promising they'll retire at 30 and then live. Helen: "What if you spent all that time chasing something and then you get hit by a truck? Don't wait for it. Just try and enjoy what you're doing right now." Quotes: "You don't just have to be Leonardo, you also need Florence."  "We overrate the self-promoters and underrate the humble achievers."  "Smart people don't always prosper. You need the gears that connect the engine to the wheels."  "The most important thing you can say is no."  "Do not speak unless you can improve upon the silence." - Robert Greene "You can't care on your own. You'll become infected by the apathy around you."  It's funny that we have come to use the phrase ‘lightbulb moment' to describe a momentary flash of inspiration, because the birth of the lightbulb was slow, incremental, and highly contested.

A Mediocre Time with Tom and Dan
844 - Horny Vanbucketdad

A Mediocre Time with Tom and Dan

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2025 112:00


• Fairvilla Megastore Halloween party and Grave Rave • Horny Dracula joke and costume talk • Shopping for lingerie, gifts, and costumes at Fairvilla • Store locations in Kissimmee, I-Drive, Palatka, and Sanford • Visit Fairvilla.com for info and events • Show intro and sponsor shoutouts • Reflection on show longevity and episode count • New Love Thy Neighbor podcast with Colette Fehr • Relationship focus with humor and Thursday schedule • Promo for free Bad at Business Beerfest on Nov 22 • THC seltzer trend and tolerance chat • Guest Amy LeCours on sobriety and quitting Adderall • Marriage dynamics and side-effect jokes • Beerfest planning and sponsor updates • Jeff's Bagel Run app and giveaways • Giant Recreational World RVs joining the fest • Camping trip to Jonathan Dickinson State Park • Camper luxury and marriage humor • Beerfest lineup with free beer, seltzers, food trucks, and giveaways • Gabriel Plants and Jeff's Bagel Run freebies • Silver Linings Band and DJ Sharp performing live • Family-friendly, all-ages street party • Limited gift bags, arrive early at noon • Pint-glass sales benefit Yellow Brick Road Foundation • Jokes about charity credit and validation • Sofas and Suds couch races promo before Thanksgiving • AI fatigue and Sora 2 video generator talk • SJ from St. Cloud as tech partner • AI videos: zombie chase and Stephen Hawking skateboarding • Digital afterlife and consent debate • A Boy Named Farts AI parody and artist-rights talk • Chris Stapleton concert canceled for bronchitis • Weekend plans ruined and weather debate • Defending a Monster segment on Columbus • Guns, disease, and morality in context • Regret over “Indian” label and Italian stereotypes • Columbus confusion and AI fatigue • Columbus Day regattas and nude boating nostalgia • 1980s parenting, drinking, and no seatbelts • Bucket Dad memories and reckless fun • Past vs modern child-safety contrast • Indoor-smoking nostalgia and car-feature talk • Tech-gap jokes about landlines and icons • New hair-growth study with minoxidil and stevia • Tugboat Clark beard experiment • Hollerbach's Oktoberfest food, beer, and stein-holding • Amy LeCours comedy shows at 12 Talons, Bull & Bush, Little Indies • NFL tush-push debate and rule predictions • Bucket Dad callback and email segment • Workplace story on covering coworker duties • Independent show model vs old iHeart system • Employees multitasking and ghost quitters • Caring exploited vs healthy boundaries • Accepting favors without guilt • Listener Joshua's dad-daughter Honda N600 build • Parenting and passing down skills • Bucket Dads vs absent dads motivation • Balancing trauma and success in kids • Using video proof for parenting memories • Flip-flops and professionalism debate • Florida casual culture vs business image • Comics dressing up out of respect • Tom's Pukes of Hazard tease and leg injury • Physical-therapy embarrassment and odor jokes • Avoidance humor and smell callback • Tugboat Clark storm call-in and 10-ft waves • Stevia-minoxidil patch results and mouse study • Crack vs Stevia confusion and Charlie Sheen story • Listener Concrete Mike 9/11 near-miss story • Fate, luck, and random survival themes • Dan's Sanford Cracker Barrel shooting story • Divine intervention vs chance debate • Other-shoe-to-drop mindset and entropy metaphor • Rant on pill shortages and Adderall panic • Wrap-up plugs for Amy LeCours and Pillow Fort podcast • Reminder to listen to Love Thy Neighbor • Upcoming November events and Fairvilla party • Attend Sofas and Suds and Beerfest • Colette Fehr confirmed for Beerfest • Pukes of Hazard premieres Monday for BDMs • Subscribe at TomandDan.com and join the fun ### **Social Media:**   [Website](https://tomanddan.com/) | [Twitter](https://twitter.com/tomanddanlive) | [Facebook](https://facebook.com/amediocretime) | [Instagram](https://instagram.com/tomanddanlive) **Where to Find the Show:**   [Apple Podcasts](https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/a-mediocre-time/id334142682) | [Google Podcasts](https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkLnBvZGJlYW4uY29tL2FtZWRpb2NyZXRpbWUvcG9kY2FzdC54bWw) | [TuneIn](https://tunein.com/podcasts/Comedy/A-Mediocre-Time-p364156/) **The Tom & Dan Radio Show on Real Radio 104.1:**   [Apple Podcasts](https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/a-corporate-time/id975258990) | [Google Podcasts](https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkLnBvZGJlYW4uY29tL2Fjb3Jwb3JhdGV0aW1lL3BvZGNhc3QueG1s) | [TuneIn](https://tunein.com/podcasts/Comedy/A-Corporate-Time-p1038501/) **Exclusive Content:** [Join BDM](https://tomanddan.com/registration) **Merch:** [Shop Tom & Dan](https://tomanddan.myshopify.com/)

Holmberg's Morning Sickness
10-10-25 - Guad Squares - Gene Simmons - Edgy Jimmy Fallon - Trump - Belichick And Holtz - Time Warp Brady - Stephen Hawking - Hugh Jackman

Holmberg's Morning Sickness

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2025 32:05


10-10-25 - Guad Squares - Gene Simmons - Edgy Jimmy Fallon - Trump - Belichick And Holtz - Time Warp Brady - Stephen Hawking - Hugh JackmanSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Arizona
10-10-25 - Guad Squares - Gene Simmons - Edgy Jimmy Fallon - Trump - Belichick And Holtz - Time Warp Brady - Stephen Hawking - Hugh Jackman

Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Arizona

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2025 32:05


10-10-25 - Guad Squares - Gene Simmons - Edgy Jimmy Fallon - Trump - Belichick And Holtz - Time Warp Brady - Stephen Hawking - Hugh JackmanSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

THShow
Stephen Hawking vs A INTERNET

THShow

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2025 31:46


Stephen Hawking e Stephen King são as mesmas pessoas?Só um tonto pensaria isso!Se tem uma pessoa eternizada pela internet, ela se chama Stephen Hawking... No surgimento dos memes, ele estava lá!Só que agora temos a IA e a coisa saiu um pouco do controle. Então vamos falar sobre isso.E sobre o surgimento da Elma Chips.

Holmberg's Morning Sickness
10-07-25 - Emailers Give Thoughts On Calendars - Thanking The General Public For All The New AI Created Gems Using Stephen Hawking, Hitler And Jesus On Skateboards And More

Holmberg's Morning Sickness

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2025 38:50


10-07-25 - Emailers Give Thoughts On Calendars - Thanking The General Public For All The New AI Created Gems Using Stephen Hawking, Hitler And Jesus On Skateboards And MoreSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Arizona
10-07-25 - Emailers Give Thoughts On Calendars - Thanking The General Public For All The New AI Created Gems Using Stephen Hawking, Hitler And Jesus On Skateboards And More

Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Arizona

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2025 38:50


10-07-25 - Emailers Give Thoughts On Calendars - Thanking The General Public For All The New AI Created Gems Using Stephen Hawking, Hitler And Jesus On Skateboards And MoreSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Carrie & Tommy Catchup - Hit Network - Carrie Bickmore and Tommy Little
Stephen Hawking Won't Return Rob Beckett's Calls

Carrie & Tommy Catchup - Hit Network - Carrie Bickmore and Tommy Little

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2025 49:40


Tommy’s Been Overlooked Again Honey Badger Is The Real Hero GUEST: Rob Beckett - Giraffe Cosmo Girl What Mystery Did You Solve? Pick The PitBull Tommy’s Car Music Quiz: Tommy - Heroes Chicago Collette Fashion Word Is Out Of TouchSubscribe on LiSTNR: https://play.listnr.com/podcasts/carrie-and-tommySee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Drew and Mike Show
Stephen Hawking Shreds the Internet – October 6, 2025

Drew and Mike Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2025 145:19


The Hawk is dominating AI Slop online, Mark Sanchez charged with felony, Rush returns, Charlize Theron v. Johnny Depp, David Montgomery's tough life, Trudi stalking Todd Rundgren, and Drew remains incurious. The Detroit Tigers blew game 2 as the Seattle Mariners tie series at 1 game apiece. Will Comerica Park change names now that they've been bought by Fifth Third Bank? Trudi remains hungry. Stephen Hawking AI videos are all the rage on the internet today thanks to Sora. Music: Rush is back! They have a new chick drummer now (no, it's not Nandi). Drew is loving some Poison Vine by Cast. Tay Tay's album is selling just fine. Swift's movie is doing ok as well. Former Lemonheads singer Evan Dando loves drugs. Ace Frehley cancels remaining tour… including his stop in Detroit on October 31st. Trudi is stalking Todd Rundgren. The Mark Sanchez stabbing incident is bizarre. We check out his WhosDatedWho (nice). TMZ stretched the story a little too long. Charlize Theron vs Johnny Depp. Total SNUB. Sports: Detroit Lions DB Terrion Arnold is injured “for a long time”. David Montgomery has had a lot of tough breaks. Angel Reese retired her mom. The Buffalo Bills failed on Sunday Night Football to the New England Patriots. Karl Hamburger and Shuli Egar have a GoFundMe going to battle Stuttering John's lawsuit. CBS News has hired Bari Weiss as Editor-In-Chief. Diddy might not be safe in prison. Chicago PD was told to stand down to assist ICE Agents under attack. There was an assassination attempt on Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh. 20/20 did a piece on the disappearance of the McStay family. Drew is going to the Detroit Tigers game tomorrow… Maz-free. If you'd like to help support the show… consider subscribing to our YouTube Channel, Facebook, Instagram and Twitter (Drew Lane, Marc Fellhauer, Trudi Daniels, Jim Bentley and BranDon).

Behind the Wings
How Black Holes Could Unlock the Mysteries of the Universe - Episode 62

Behind the Wings

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2025 38:44


Theoretical Physicist Andrew Strominger explains what exactly black holes are and how they could tell us about the beginning of the cosmos.In this episode, Andrew discusses the questions behind black holes, the strange physics at their event horizon, what they reveal about the nature of space and time, and how he, Stephen Hawking, and Malcolm Perry helped develop the theory that "soft hairs" may store information on black holes' surface. From leading minds like Einstein, Hawking, and Strominger, our understanding of these celestial bodies is constantly evolving, and we still have so much to learn. This one is going to be cool!Resources:Andrew's Bio (Harvard)The Event Horizon TelescopeHawking team updates soft hair theory to help solve black hole information paradox (Phys.org)What are black holes? (NASA)Einstein's Theory of General Relativity (Space.com)Chapters:(00:00) - Intro (01:59) - Andrew's Favorite Theories (04:11) - Aerospace Beginnings (05:53) - From Commune to Harvard (08:24) - What Is a Black Hole? (12:29) - The Different Types (14:17) - How They Form (15:52) - How Far Are They from Earth? (16:06) - Why Should We Study Black Holes? (17:38) - Why Doubt Is a Valuable Tool (19:37) - The Information Paradox (22:22) - Working Alongside Stephen Hawking (24:12) - Soft Hairs (26:29) - The Holographic Principle (30:31) - Can Black Holes Be Used for Travel? (31:19) - "Interstellar" Time Dilation (34:14) - Why Isn't a Black Hole Considered a Vacuum? (35:02) - The Future of Physics (36:15) - Andrew's Advice (37:04) - Outro

House of Mystery True Crime History
Peter Solomon - 100 Years to Extinction

House of Mystery True Crime History

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2025 27:39


What if Stephen Hawking was right—and we have less than a century to avoid extinction?When EMT Liz Arvad is shot while saving a life, her recovery sparks a deeper awakening. Maybe the world isn't just chaotic, it's unraveling. Alongside her genius sister, Aster, and politically charged cousin, Milo, Liz makes a vow—do something, anything, to help save humanity. It starts with a promise in a sunlit room, and becomes a mission that could change everything.In 100 Years to Extinction, physicist and award-winning STEM author Peter Solomon, Ph.D., blends heart-pounding fiction with scientific foresight. Inspired by Hawking's dire warning that humans may face extinction by 2117, this gripping novel explores the runaway threats we can no longer ignore: climate collapse, pandemics, war, gene editing, AI, disinformation, and more.But this story isn't just about what's going wrong—it's about what we can still do. Backed by decades of experience founding clean-tech companies, leading multimillion-dollar government research, and writing 300+ scientific papers, Solomon brings unmatched clarity and urgency to the question: Can we still save ourselves?With characters who feel heartbreakingly real and science that hits close to home, 100 Years to Extinction is both a wake-up call and a rallying cry. It dares readers to imagine a better future ... and to fight for it.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/houseofmysteryradio. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Wie erkläre ich’s meinem Kind? (Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung FAZ)
Warum Nobelpreise so ein großes Ding sind

Wie erkläre ich’s meinem Kind? (Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung FAZ)

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2025 6:09 Transcription Available


In der kommenden Woche werden die neuen Nobelpreisträger bekanntgegeben. Es gibt höher dotierte Auszeichnungen für Wissenschaftler – aber keiner verleiht so viel Ruhm. Warum? Und warum hat Stephen Hawking nie einen bekommen?

2 Bears 1 Cave with Tom Segura & Bert Kreischer
Phones Are Making You Unfunny w/ Jimmy Carr | 2 Bears, 1 Cave

2 Bears 1 Cave with Tom Segura & Bert Kreischer

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2025 76:07


Attention Hanover, MD! Tommy Buns is coming to The Hall At Live! Casino, Sunday, October 19. Get tickets now at https://tomsegura.com/tour SPONSORS: - Upgrade to ShipStation today to get a sixty-day free trial at https://www.shipstation.com/cave. - Eat smart at https://FactorMeals.com/bears50off and use code bears50off to get 50% off your first box, plus Free Breakfast for 1 Year. - For simple, online access to personalized and affordable care for Hair Loss, ED, Weight Loss, and more, visit https://Hims.com/BEARS. - Upgrade your wardrobe and save on @trueclassic at https://trueclassic.com/BEARS! #trueclassicpod This week, Tom Segura is joined by one of the greatest one-liner comedians in the world, Jimmy Carr! Tom and Jimmy dive deep into the craft of comedy, comparing Carr's laser-focused joke construction to Bert Kreischer's chaotic storytelling. Jimmy reveals his controversial (and hilarious) take on marijuana legalization—mandating it for people over 50—and the tragic role of "cheap dopamine" in modern life, from social media to porn. The conversation touches on global comedy culture, the variable reward system that drives stand-up and casinos , and why the live comedy experience is 30 times funnier than watching a special alone. Jimmy Carr also gives his final, wishful prediction for how Bert Kreischer will die. Plus: Why the 21st Century is just the 20th century on better screens, the long wait for GTA 6, Jimmy's hilarious interactions with Stephen Hawking, the importance of gratitude, and why Tom should have read the Quentin Tarantino book. Don't miss a conversation that is smart, insightful, and packed with the sharp, dark wit that only Jimmy Carr can deliver! 2 Bears, 1 Cave Ep. 308 https://tomsegura.com/tour https://www.bertbertbert.com/tour https://store.ymhstudios.com Chapters 00:00:00 - Intro 00:01:19 - The Mechanisms Of Reward 00:10:08 - The Spectacular Death Of Burt Kersher 00:15:51 - The Times They Are-A-Changing 00:28:51 - Weed Takes 00:37:22 - The Privilege of Pressure & Boredom 00:43:36 - Beautiful People 00:53:56 - Boinking Bert 00:59:02 - James Bond & GTA 6 01:06:11 - Quentin Tarantino 01:12:47 - Wrap Up Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

NTD Evening News
NTD Evening News Full Broadcast (Sept. 28)

NTD Evening News

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2025 46:34


A gunman opens fire at a church in Michigan. At least one person is reported dead, but police say they expect to find more victims. Arian Pasdar has how president Trump is responding.Propane tanks and cars are drifting through the streets in a small Arizona mining City after intense flooding. Four people have died and rescue teams are searching for a missing person.U-N sanctions are back on Iran over its nuclear program. Meanwhile, a U-S citizen wrongfully detained in Afghanistan is now free.Questions remain after Secretary Hegseth calls a rare, urgent military meeting in Virginia next week. Reports now say President Trump could attend. Two guests join us to unpack it all.A neuroscientist weighs in on what may be the hidden cause behind the illness that confined Stephen Hawking to his wheelchair. Learn more in this week's preview of Vital Signs.And, a million-year-old skull is challenging scientific theories about the timeline of human origins. The relic was discovered decades ago in central China. Find out why new analysis could change everything.

Science in Action
Stephen Hawking gets it right again

Science in Action

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2025 26:29


Gravitational waves show two black holes merge just how Hawking predicted. Plus, a space mission without a target. And a Space probe without a confirmed budget.In January 2025 the LIGO gravitational wave observatories witnessed two distant black holes spinning into each other. In the ten years of LIGO's operations, that's not a first. But the instruments have been improved to such an extent that this time some very important predictions of General Relativity and out understanding of black holes could be tested. As Birmingham University's Alberto Vecchio says, the elegant simplicity of the mathematics of black holes has passed a test, in particular Stephen Hawking's prediction that the surface area of merging black holes can only be increased.Space craft have met comets before. But because spaceflight takes so long to plan and fund, we've only sent them to comets with human-lifetime orbital periods so far, because we know when they're arriving. ESA wants to meet one we've never seen before, one that has never or seldom been in close to the sun, and never been barbecued and seared by the radiation. Colin Snodgrass of the University of Edinburgh explains the plan to launch and park a comet chaser in space to wait for one of these elusive extraterrestrial objects to come in from the cold.That, says Meg Schwamb of Queen's University Belfast, is going to be much easier in the next few years as the Vera Rubin Telescope begins its ten year survey cataloguing anything in the sky that changes. The type of sky survey it will provide will identify, it is hoped, many candidate first-time comets for the small fleet of spacecraft to intercept.Having a spacecraft ready in position rather than having to launch a new one anytime you want to do some science is a good place to be, one would think.NASA's Juno mission has been delivering science from Jupiter since its launch, and is still functioning and able to deliver more. Yet NASA funds are under considerable threat, and as Scott Bolton tells Roland, at the end of this month Juno could be left slowly spiralling into the gas giant, silently collecting data but with no budget to keep the science going.Presenter: Roland Pease Producer: Alex Mansfield Production Coordinator: Jana Bennett-Holesworth

Real Laughs
Go Phish

Real Laughs

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2025 45:21


Wednesday 9-10-25 Show #1191: Stephen Hawking, an island (you know which one), the cat phishing documentary on Netflix, and other nonsense.

Real Laughs
Go Phish

Real Laughs

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2025 45:21


Wednesday 9-10-25 Show #1191: Stephen Hawking, an island (you know which one), the cat phishing documentary on Netflix, and other nonsense.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Quirks and Quarks Complete Show from CBC Radio
Science in Prison and more...

Quirks and Quarks Complete Show from CBC Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2025 54:09


10 years ago we first saw gravitational waves — what we've seen sinceIn September 2015, LIGO—or Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory—captured the ripples in spacetime produced by the cataclysmic merger of two black holes, from over a billion light years away. This discovery confirmed Einstein's hypothesis about gravitational waves and gave astronomers a new way to explore the cosmos. In the decade since, LIGO's scientific team, including physicist Nergis Mavalvala, has been busy, including new results announced this week confirming a 50-year-old prediction by Stephen Hawking about how black holes merge. Mavalvala is the dean of the school of science and the Curtis and Kathleen Marble Professor of Physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The latest discovery was reported in the journal Physical Review Letters.What wild killer whales sharing food with humans says about their intelligenceAfter an experience of being offered a recently killed seabird by an Orca, cetologist Jared Towers decided to document other instances of killer whales approaching humans to share a snack. Towers, the executive director of the marine research nonprofit Bay Cetology, found dozens of examples of this behaviour. It's a perhaps unique example of a wild creature sharing food with humans for its own diversion and curiosity. The research was published in the Journal of Comparative Psychology.Sweat science — This research really was 90% perspirationWhile the biology of perspiration is relatively well understood, the physical process by which water excreted from our skin cools us is not. This motivated engineer Konrad Rykaczewski to strap himself into a specialized full-body, tube-filled suit to observe how water emerges from sweat glands over the skin. Rykaczewski, a thermal and materials engineer at Arizona State University, found that sweat rises out of sweat glands in pools, eventually spilling out and soaking the top layer of the skin. The research was published in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface.What came first, the tomato or the potato?As it turns out, the potato came from the tomato. By tracking their genetic lineage, an international team of researchers, including University of British Columbia botanist Loren Rieseberg, have found that the noble potato actually resulted from the tomato naturally cross-breeding with another unrelated species, more than eight million years ago. The research was published in the journal Cell.Bringing science education to the incarceratedWe speak with a scientist who spent much of his summer working in Canadian prisons doing brief, but intense, science education courses. Phil Heron created the Think Like a Scientist program to teach critical thinking skills to those who may have had negative experiences with education. He believes that the scientific method will help people understand how failure in life, as in science, can be a pathway to success.We spoke to:Phil Heron, assistant professor at the University of Toronto, Scarborough campus, in the department of physical and environmental sciences and founder of the Think Like a Scientist program.Dalton Harrison, founder of Standfast Productions and former program participant finishing a masters degree in criminal justice and criminology.Phoenix Griffin, university student in criminal justice and criminology and former program participant.Jamie Williams, a director with Spectrum First Education and a co-facilitator of Think Like a Scientist.

Daniel Ramos' Podcast
Episode 497: 13 Septiembre del 2025 - Devoción matutina para Jóvenes - ¨Hoy es tendencia¨

Daniel Ramos' Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2025 3:54


====================================================SUSCRIBETEhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNpffyr-7_zP1x1lS89ByaQ?sub_confirmation=1==================================================== DEVOCIÓN MATUTINA PARA JÓVENES 2025“HOY ES TENDENCIA”Narrado por: Daniel RamosDesde: Connecticut, USAUna cortesía de DR'Ministries y Canaan Seventh-Day Adventist Church===================|| www.drministries.org ||===================13 de SeptiembreEn hombros de gigantes«Mientras llego, ocúpate en la lectura». 1 Timoteo 4: 13, RVC¿Quién es el científico más prominente de la historia? Posiblemente, te lleguen a la mente nombres como Stephen Hawking o Marie Curie, aunque quizás el científico más famoso de los últimos cien años es sin duda Albert Einstein. Pero el galardón al científico más importante de la historia se lo lleva otra persona. Alguien que sentó las bases sobre las que Einstein «construyó» su teoría de la relatividad general. Me refiero a Sir Isaac Newton, quien formuló las leyes de la mecánica clásica y la ley de la gravitación universal e inventó el cálculo.A pesar de su incomparable genio, Newton supo reconocer que había aprendido de otros. En una carta a Robert Hooke fechada en 1676, Isaac Newton escribió: «Si he llegado a ver más lejos que otros es porque me subí a hombros de gigantes». Sin embargo, esta frase no es original de Newton, sino de Juan de Salisbury, que escribió en el siglo XII que «somos como enanos sentados sobre los hombros de gigantes para ver más cosas que ellos y ver más lejos, no porque nuestra visión sea más aguda o nuestra estatura mayor, sino porque podemos elevarnos más alto gracias a su estatura de gigantes».¿Quieres crecer y llegar lejos en esta vida? La mejor forma de lograrlo es subir a hombros de gigantes mediante la lectura. ¿Por qué? Porque el crecimiento intelectual no sucede en el vacío, es un esfuerzo colectivo y continuo de muchas generaciones. La lectura te permite acceder al conocimiento acumulado de la humanidad y aprender de los que te han precedido. También amplía tu mente y te motiva a pensar por ti mismo y a desarrollar la creatividad.La lectura, especialmente de las Escrituras, también tiene grandes beneficios espirituales. No hay nada más efectivo para mejorar tu relación con Dios que leer la Palabra, pues mediante ella podrás subir a hombros de gigantes espirituales. Aprenderás a de la humildad de Moisés, de la valentía de David, de la sabiduría de Salomón y sobre todo, del amor de Jesús. Por eso no me sorprende que hace casi dos milenios Pablo le aconsejó a Timoteo: «Mientras llego, ocúpate de la lectura» (1 Timoteo 4:13). ¿Quieres crecer y ampliar tus horizontes? ¡Súbete a los hombros de los gigantes! 

StarDate Podcast
Back in Time

StarDate Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2025 2:14


Based on the number of books, movies, and TV shows about it, you might assume that traveling through time is almost as easy as ambling through the park on a sunny day: Just build a TARDIS or soup up your Delorean, and off you go. Alas, the arrow of time moves in only one direction. It allows you to travel into the future, but roadblocks seem to prevent any method that scientists can envision for traveling in the other direction. Wormholes, for example, are theoretical “tunnels” through space and time. They seem to allow travel to other times – past or future. But there’s a problem: The wormhole may collapse as soon as anything enters it – a person, a spaceship, or even a radio beam. Another possibility for traveling into the past is moving really fast. Albert Einstein’s theories of relativity suggest that anything moving faster than light might move backward in time. But any physical object moving at lightspeed would become infinitely massive. That means you’d need an infinite amount of energy just to reach lightspeed – and even more to go faster. A few decades ago, Stephen Hawking suggested that the universe doesn’t like time travel. He wrote that the laws of physics may stop anyone from ever building a time machine – keeping the past safe from its own future. Even so, physics provides some tricks that allow travel to the future, and we’ll have more about that tomorrow. Script by Damond Benningfield

RHLSTP with Richard Herring
Retro RHLSTP 112 - Dara Ó Briain

RHLSTP with Richard Herring

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2025 75:33


#385 Do Not Listen On 2x Speed - Richard is disappointed about his daughter's Easter egg, because it's still Easter where we are, in the past and has an ultimatum for Ian Cadbury. His guest returns after just 9 years away. It's the extremely fast-talking whirlwind of a man, Dara Ó Briain. Chat includes the Irish James Bond, how Stephen Hawking ruined Terminator, the likelihood of Richard speaking fluent Spanish for the rest of his life and the impact of that on the theories of Infinite Universes, sending robots into space (and what happens the night before they go), depriving a comedian of an audience for two years, why Richard will never present Going for Gold and what he'd insist upon if he was at the helm of Blockbusters and to be honest such a depth and pace of comedy that you are going to need to listen on half speed to catch it all.Catch Dara doing what he does best on his latest stand up tour - https://daraobriain.com/#tour-datesSUPPORT THE SHOW!Watch our TWITCH CHANNELBecome a badger and see extra content at our WEBSITE See details of the RHLSTP LIVE DATES Buy DVDs and books from GO FASTER STRIPE Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Low Value Mail
Trump Bans Flag Burning + Guest Howard Bloom | EP #158 | Low Value Mail Live Call In Show

Low Value Mail

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2025 147:31


Howard Bloom has been called “next in a lineage of seminal thinkers that includes Newton, Darwin, Einstein, Freud, and Buckminster Fuller” by Britain's Channel4 TV and “the next Stephen Hawking” by Gear Magazine. Bloom is the author of seven books, including The Lucifer Principle: A Scientific Expedition Into the Forces of History and the new Einstein, Michael Jackson & Me: A Search for Soul in the Power Pits of Rock and Roll. The Office of the Secretary of Defense threw a symposium on Bloom's second book, Global Brain: The Evolution of Mass Mind from the Big Bang to the 21st Century, and brought in representatives from the State Department, the Energy Department, DARPA, IBM, and MIT. The eleventh president of India, Dr. A.P.J. Kalam called Bloom's third book, The Genius of the Beast: A Radical Re-Vision of Capitalism, “a visionary creation.” And the Sheikh who runs Dubai named a racehorse—the Beast–after that same book. Bloom has published or lectured scholarly conferences in twelve different fields, from quantum physics and cosmology to neuroscience, evolutionary biology, psychology, information science, governance, and aerospace. His work has appeared in the Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal, Wired, Knight Financial News Service, Cosmopolitan, The Village Voice, and the blog sites of Psychology Today and The Scientific American. In a full-page article in Business Insider, SpaceX's Elon Musk praised one of Bloom space projects, the Two Billion Dollar Moon Prize. The Two Billion Dollar Moon Prize was also covered in Time, Newsweek, CBS, NBC, Fox News, and Politico. And Jeff Bezos tweeted a Bloom blog from the Scientific American calling for the establishment of a permanent transport infrastructure in space.Low Value Mail is a live call-in show with some of the most interesting guests the internet has to offer.Every Monday night at 7pm ETSupport The Show:

Unashamed with Phil Robertson
Ep 1148 | Jase Can't Get Over How Silly Evolution Sounds & Is the Big Bang Theory Proof of God?

Unashamed with Phil Robertson

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2025 57:59


Jase uses the mental gymnastics of evolutionists to crown himself “The Dinosaur Commander” and channels his inner Phil by turning this obsession into a spiritual lesson about God's fingerprints on the universe. Zach discusses the work of famed physicist Stephen Hawking, who acknowledged that even the Big Bang points to divine intervention. The guys explore how Peter's transformation from denier into a bold preacher of the gospel shows that redemption is possible in every sin struggle. Plus, gut health expert Kim Bright joins the show to discuss chickens, eggs, and the surprising benefits of kimchi. In this episode: Genesis 1; John 13, verses 37–38; John 21; Romans 1, verses 20–25; Acts 1; Acts 2; Acts 10; Galatians 1 “Unashamed” Episode 1148 is sponsored by: https://andrewandtodd.com or call 888-888-1172 — These guys are the real deal. Get trusted mortgage guidance and expertise from someone who shares your values! https://fieldofgreens.com — Get 20% off your first order to get started today! https://myphdweightloss.com — Find out how Al is finally losing weight! Schedule your one-on-one consultation today by visiting the website or calling 864-644-1900 https://tomorrowclubs.org/unashamed/ or text 30KIDS to 44321 — Join us in bringing Christ-centered discipleship to kids in underserved communities Kimchi One from Brightcore Nutrition Get 25% off – Use Code: UNASHAMED at https://mybrightcore.com/unashamed or call (888) 404-9677 for up to 50% OFF your order and Free Shipping! http://unashamedforhillsdale.com/ — Sign up now for free, and join us every Friday starting 8/29 for Unashamed Academy Powered by Hillsdale College Listen to Not Yet Now with Zach Dasher on Apple, Spotify, iHeart, or anywhere you get podcasts. — Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Tai Lopez Show
#732 - Lessons from the 100 Greatest Books Ever Written

The Tai Lopez Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2025 116:07


From Peter Drucker to Stephen Hawking, from Freud to Will Durant, Tai Lopez breaks down the life-changing lessons hidden in some of the greatest books ever written. These aren’t just summaries — they’re the actionable ideas, mental models, and mindset shifts that can actually move the needle in your life. You’ll learn time management from geniuses, the psychology behind human behavior, why geography matters for happiness, and the strategic thinking used by billionaires. If you’ve ever wondered which books to read and, more importantly, how to apply them, this is your roadmap.

Frightday: Horror, Paranormal, & True Crime
VISITORS: James Fox (The Phenomenon, The Program, Moment of Contact)

Frightday: Horror, Paranormal, & True Crime

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2025 54:22


Documenting the Search for Truth: Honest Connection, Legendary Voices & UFO Whiteness Explored... In this episode of VISITORS, Kelly sits down with acclaimed documentary filmmaker James Fox, whose work has shaped the public conversation about UFOs and the mysteries of the phenomenon. James dives into his unique process and perspective, the relentless pursuit of credible stories, and his honest connection with UFO whiteness—bringing forward extraordinary testimonies and challenging conventional thinking. They discuss his conversations with pioneers in the field like Stanton Friedman and the rare moment spent with Stephen Hawking.  James also discusses the personal impact of working so closely with witnesses, the responsibility of telling their stories truthfully, and the importance of respectful storytelling with skeptics and believers in mind simultaniously.

You Won't Believe What Happened To Me
AI Will Kill Us All - The Paranormal Report 187

You Won't Believe What Happened To Me

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2025 63:03


This week on The Paranormal Report, things get weird, wild, and just a little unsettling. Jim and Dar dive into the latest paranormal headlines, from Senator JD Vance confessing his obsession with UFOs, to comedian Matt Rife bizarrely becoming the "legal guardian" of the infamous Annabelle doll and the Warren's home. A UK political party recruits a paranormal expert, while AI experts warn of humanity's end. We also revisit Stephen Hawking's chilling warning about hostile aliens, and a psychic shares signs your deceased loved ones might be reaching out. Oh, and if you thought this was all serious—you haven't seen the sea star with a seriously unfortunate resemblance to Patrick Star. Thanks for listening/watching! Please share the show and help us get the word out there! LINKS https://www.foxnews.com/media/jd-vance-says-hes-obsessed-eerie-ufo-videos https://people.com/matt-rife-is-legal-guardian-of-haunted-annabelle-doll-11783839 https://www.the-independent.com/news/uk/politics/reform-uk-defection-rupert-matthews-b2801559.html https://www.thetimes.com/us/news-today/article/why-how-ai-lead-end-humanity-nx8zjhgft https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Stanley_Hotel https://www.uncovercolorado.com/stanley-hotel-haunted-history/ https://www.ladbible.com/news/science/stephen-hawking-ufo-warning-hostile-alien-threat-210882-20250804 https://www.tyla.com/life/psychic-signs-dead-loved-ones-contact-you-295915-20250805 https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-14963685/Ark-Covenant-mystery-biblical-relic-discovered.html https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-14971885/spongebob-squarepants-patrick-sea-star-big-bottom.html Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

TED Talks Daily
Stories of photographing monumental people -- from Michelle Obama to Stephen Hawking | Platon

TED Talks Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2025 19:53


With his art, photographer Platon seeks to strip away assumptions and leave viewers with a window into his subject's character, filling our eyes with wonder and curiosity. Sharing extraordinary stories of what it's like to photograph some of the world's most prominent figures -- from Michelle Obama and Pussy Riot to Vladimir Putin and Muhammad Ali -- Platon captures the disarming power of empathy and human connection.For a chance to give your own TED Talk, fill out the Idea Search Application: ted.com/ideasearch.Interested in learning more about upcoming TED events? Follow these links:TEDNext: ted.com/futureyouTEDSports: ted.com/sportsTEDAI Vienna: ted.com/ai-vienna Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.