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Frederiksborg Slotskirke, Helsingør stift. 11. søndag efter Trinitatis. Medvirkende: Prædikant: Sol Bjørn Weismann. Organist: Allan Rasmussen. Salmer: DDS 3: Lovsynger Herren. DDS 397: Trods længselens smerte. DDS 151: Med sin alabasterkrukke. DDS 613: Herre, du vandrer forsoningens vej. Nr. i 800 Salmer: 807: Den lange lyse sommerdag. Musik: Introitus. As Torrents in Summer. Komponist: Edward Elgar. Postludium: Fuga i A-dur. Komponist: Johann Sebastian Bach. Vært: Katarina Lewkovitch.
Join us for an insightful episode featuring Aaron Weismann, Chief Information Security Officer at Main Line Health, as he discusses the latest in healthcare information security. Aaron highlights key focuses in his role and shares essential lessons from 2024, offering valuable insights for both professionals and enthusiasts alike. Tune in to stay informed and secure in the digital age of healthcare.
Join us for an insightful episode featuring Aaron Weismann, Chief Information Security Officer at Main Line Health, as he discusses the latest in healthcare information security. Aaron highlights key focuses in his role and shares essential lessons from 2024, offering valuable insights for both professionals and enthusiasts alike. Tune in to stay informed and secure in the digital age of healthcare.
Generative AI security and integrity. This is important to me because it's a cool new commercially available technology that promises efficiency and time savings--and therefore everyone wants to use it without a thorough understanding of how to secure data used with it or correcting model bias introduced through improper governance. The implications, particularly in the healthcare space, are significant where AI-driven care decisions can drift away from optimal care and have the potential to expose significant care gaps. Visit https://cisostoriespodcast.com for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://cisostoriespodcast.com/csp-163
Flynn's legal action against MSNBC, footage of the conference featuring Weismann, RFK Jr.'s endorsement of Hillary in 2000, revelations from RFK Jr.'s diary shedding light on his personal life, the Brooks Brothers Riot and DJT's presence in court, a Tucker Carlson segment discussing Ukraine, the ban on Christianity in Ukraine, Hannity's interview with Mike Johnson, the Biden Gun Grab policy and its implications for firearm manufacturers, and much more. Support the show! https://mg.show/support
A podcast magyar nyelvű verziója ide kattintva olvasható a Portfolio-n. We sat down online with Itzchak Weismann, an Associate Professor of Islamic Studies and former Director of the Jewish-Arab Centre at the University of Haifa. Weismann shared his insights on the unexpected turn of events in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict last Saturday. We also discussed the routes and the evolution of Hamas in the past few decades and delved into the possible implications of the October 7th terrorist attacks on Israel. You can access the written, edited version of this conversation in Hungarian by clicking here.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Aaron Weismann, CISO at Main Line Health, is the developer of the cybersecurity board game, “Guardians of the Grid.” In this episode, he joins host Paul John Spaulding to discuss what inspired him to create the game, as well as how it's played, and how it can strengthen and aid cybersecurity education programs across the globe. Learn more about “Guardians of the Grid” at https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/827155571/guardians-of-the-grid-a-cybersecurity-tabletop-boardgame. • For more on cybersecurity, visit us at https://cybersecurityventures.com
2023. október 2-án Karikó Katalin első magyar nőként Nobel-díjas lett. A neve három éve még ismeretlen volt, mára mégis százmilliók életét menthette meg - mégsem csak ezért kapta meg a legnagyobb tudományos elismerést a világon. Milyen körülmények között nőtt fel, hogyan került Amerikába, hány végzetesnek tűnő akadály és mennyi véletlen kellett ahhoz, hogy ide eljusson? Pontosan mi az a technológia, ami Nobelt ért, és miért lehet, hogy néhány éven belül ennél is sokkal többet fogunk róla hallani? Miért (csak) most kapott Nobel-díjat és magyar siker-e az ő sikere? Közéleti podcastunk azonnali adásában negyed órában összefoglaltunk mindent, amit tudni kell Karikó Nobel-díjáról, Nagy Iván László vendége Bedő Iván, a HVG újságírója volt. Karikó Katalin első interjúja Nobel-díjasként: https://hvg.hu/tudomany/20231002_kariko_katalin_orvosi_nobel_dij_szte_eredmenyvaro_kutatas_orom_stressz Karikó életútja: https://hvg.hu/tudomany/20231002_kariko_katalin_eletrajz_kisujszallas_mta_szte_mrns_nobel_dij HVG-interjú Karikó Katalinnal 2020-ból: https://hvg.hu/360/202049_kariko_katalin Mire költi a Nobel-díjért járó pénzt? https://hvg.hu/360/20211019_Kariko_Katalin_Nobel_Breakthrough_Albany_Lasker_NovoNordisk_Janssen_PaulEhrlich Iratkozzon fel a HVG Podcastok csatornájára Spotify-on, Apple Podcasts-on, Google Podcasts-on vagy hallgassa adásainkat és iratkozzon fel YouTube-csatornánkra! A HVG podcastjait most már külön-külön is megtalálja - csak keressen rá a műsor címére podcastapplikációja keresőjében és hallgassa meg a Fülke, a zCast, a Mérlegen, a Vasfüggöny, a Kösz, jól és az Elvitelre adásait! • 0:44: Melyek voltak a legfontosabb állomások Karikó Katalin karrierjében a Nobel-díj felé? • 2:05: Karikó a self-made tudós? • 2:52: Mi az az „ultimátum”, ami végül ahhoz vezetett, hogy megszületett a Karikó-féle mRNS-eljárás? • 3:38: Mit kell tudni a BioNTech cégről, amely kulcsszereplő lett Karikó karrierjében és a koronavírus-járvány leküzdésében? • 4:42: Hogyan jutott el Karikó és Weismann a Covid-vakcináig? Miért nem igaz, hogy ez az oltás egyik percről a másikra jelent meg? • 8:20: Pontosan miért kapták a Nobel-díjat? • 9:03: Milyen betegségekre lehet majd, és mire lehet már most hasznosítani az mRNS-technológiát? • 12:13: Miért csak most kapott Nobel-díjat? Vagy miért már most? • 13:32: Mennyi pénzt kap Karikó a Nobel-díjért? • 14:11: Mennyire tekinthető magyar sikernek Karikó Nobel-díja?
durée : 00:06:05 - Aude Rouaux, journaliste France télévision. Elle a réalisée un docu-fiction sur la vie du Sarthois Joseph Weismann, rescapté de la Rafle du Vel'd'hiv' en 1942. Documentaire diffusé ce dimanche sur France 2 dans l'émission 13H15 le dimanche avec Laurent De - Son histoire est bien connue des Sarthois. Celle de Joseph Weismann, rescapé de la rafle du Vel'd'Hiv en 1942. Il avait 11 ans à l'époque. Un documentaire fiction qui relate son histoire et son évasion du camp de Beaune-La-Rolande est diffusé ce dimanche sur France 2
In this author interview, I speak with Brad Weismann, an award-winning writer and journalist who has also worked as a stand-up comic and improv actor. He's contributed to publications and websites worldwide such as Senses of Cinema, Film International, Backstage, Movie Habit, Colorado Daily and Boulder Magazine. His first book, Lost in the Dark: A World History of Horror Films, was recently published by the University of Mississippi and he contributed to the critical collection 100 Years of Soviet Cinema. He joins me today to talk about his new book, Horror Unmasked: A History of Terror from Nosferatu to Nope. Listen to hear about what horror is, how horror films are similar to today's superhero films, and why the horror genre has been kept out of the Oscars (with very few exceptions). Books mentioned in this episode include:Danse Macabre by Stephen KingThe Monster Show: A Cultural History of Horror by David J. SkalScreams of Reason: Mad Science in Modern Culture by David J. SkalDark Carnival: The Secret World of Tod Browning, Hollywood's Master of Macabre by David J. SkalThe Horror Film: An Introduction by Rick WorlandThe Rough Guide to Horror Movies by Alan JonesFour of the Three Musketeers: The Marx Brothers on Stage by Robert S. BaderMontaigne's Essays by Michel de MontaigneOn the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio by John DunningFilms mentioned in this episode include:Dracula directed by Tod Browning & Karl FreundThe Mummy directed by Karl FreundFrankenstein directed by James WhaleBatman vs. Superman directed by Zack SnyderFreddy vs. Jason directed by Ronny YuGet Out directed by Jordan PeeleThe Shape of Water directed by Guillermo del ToroThe Silence of the Lambs directed by Jonathan DemmeSmile directed by Parker FinnNope directed by directed by Jordan Peele Evil Dead Rise directed by Lee CroninThe Bride of Frankenstein directed by James WhalePeeping Tom directed by Michael PowellThe Wicker Man directed by Robin HardySeven Samurai directed by Akira KurosawaLawrence of Arabia directed by David LeanChildren of Paradise directed by Marcel CarneAlso mentioned in this episode:Scooby-Doo
In this episode of Author to Author, Dr. Cynthia Toolin-Wilson interviews Elaine Weismann of The Center for the Study of the Great Ideas on Mortimer and Max and a lot of other things! (September 1, 2023)
The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel Season 5 Episode 7 "A House Full of Extremely Lame Horses". Rachel Brosnahan (Miriam 'Midge' Maisel), Hank Azaria (Danny Stevens). Image by Philippe Antonello/Prime Video. Copyright Amazon Studios 2023. A visiting star to Gordon's show becomes impressed with Midge, opening a door opens as another sadly closes. Meanwhile, Abe discusses a well-documented quirk of Weismann genetics with the family. Listen to our coverage of previous seasons! Season 5 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 Season 4 1+2 | 3+4 | 5+6 Season 3 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 Season 2 1+2 | 3 | 4-6 | 7+8 | 9+10 Season 1 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 Follow us on TWITTER, FACEBOOK, and INSTAGRAM!
A visiting star to Gordon’s show becomes impressed with Midge, opening a door opens as another sadly closes. Meanwhile, Abe discusses a well-documented quirk of Weismann genetics with the family. […]
This episode features Aaron Weismann, Chief Information Security Officer at Main Line Health. Here, he discusses his background, how he is implementing generated Ai within his organization, how he's thinking about growth and adding value to Main Line Health, and more.Want to network with peers and hear more conversations like this? Apply to be one of our complimentary guest reviewers at our upcoming HIT + Digital Health + RCM Meeting Oct, 3-6 2023 here.
This episode features Aaron Weismann, Chief Information Security Officer at Main Line Health. Here, he discusses his background, how he is implementing generated Ai within his organization, how he's thinking about growth and adding value to Main Line Health, and more.Want to network with peers and hear more conversations like this? Apply to be one of our complimentary guest reviewers at our upcoming HIT + Digital Health + RCM Meeting Oct, 3-6 2023 here.
Mac and Bone open the show by celebrating Dan Snyder officially selling the Commanders, discussing the Canes win over the Panthers last night, updating the latest news around the No. 1 pick and talking to Brentley Weismann about the draft.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Behind the Design at Wade Weismann ArchitectureTom's residential architectural journey began in 1994 with an internship at RWA Architects in Cincinnati and would take him to Chicago to work under Thomas Beeby, (learning classical and traditional principles and details), and subsequently Stuart Cohen and Julie Hacker, (where traditional details were fused with a tailored, transitional design approach).Following his time at Cohen and Hacker, Tom formed his own practice, at which time he coincidentally met Wade Weissmann, though it would be several years before their paths crossed again. In the interim, Tom took a position with Lichten Craig Architecture + Interiors (now Craig and CO.) working on interior condo renovations in Chicago. In the summer of 2015, Tom reconnected with Wade and made the decision to relocate to Milwaukee.This week on EntreArchitect Podcast, Behind the Design at Wade Weismann Architecture with Tom Wynn.Learn more about Tom at Wade Weismann Architecture.Referenced in this EpisodeEA323: How Earned Trust Leads to Your Best Work [podcast]Please visit Our Platform SponsorsDetailed is an original podcast by ARCAT that features architects, engineers, builders, and manufacturers who share their insight and expertise as they highlight some of the most complex, interesting, and oddest building conditions that they have encountered… and the ingenuity it took to solve them. Listen now at ARCAT.com/podcast.Visit our Platform Sponsors today and thank them for supporting YOU… The EntreArchitect Community of small firm architects.Graphisoft + EntreArchitect Archicad BIM software enables design, collaboration, visualization, and project delivery, no matter the project size or complexity. With flexible licensing options and a dedicated support team to guide us along the way, Archicad is an ideal choice for firms and projects of any size. Visit our dedicated landing page at EntreArchitect + Graphisoft for an exclusive special offer waiting for our community of architects.
MAPS Technologies, LLC are developers and providers of a cloud-based business communication, management and sales automation solution, MAPS. Founder Steve Weismann tells us how the platform is offered to meet the needs of the end-user and offered as three subscription levels corresponding to the selection of business tools. Steve says MAPS is the ideal solution for non-profits and foundations that want all the tools necessary to help increase their donor base, operate, and quantify donor events, coordinate volunteer activities, create automated DRIP campaigns, and even organize/manage golf events. Listen and learn more.
In Episode #6 sprechen Vidya und Manfred mit dem berühmten Modefotografen Jork Weismann über Helmut Newton, welcher über Newton in einem Interview einmal sagte: „Newton is the one, who knew everything“. Weismann startete seine Karriere in Paris und arbeitete in London und Los Angeles, wo er bereits mit namhaften Persönlichkeiten wie Patti Smith, Orlando Bloom, Eva Longoria, Usher und Supermodels wie Gisele Bündchen, Tatjana Patitz, Caroline de Maigret und Toni Garrn zusammengearbeitet hat. Das offizielle Portrait von unserem Präsidenten Alexander Van der Bellen stammt übrigens auch von Weismann! Wir freuen uns über euer Feedback: Kontaktiert uns auf Instagram @kunstforumwien oder per E-Mail podcast@kunstforumwien.at
In this special episode of Author to Author, Dr. Cynthia Toolin-Wilson speaks with Elaine Weismann, president of the Center for the Study of the Great Ideas, about philosophy, life, and survival. (October 4, 2022)
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2022.09.26.509513v1?rss=1 Authors: Risen, S. J., Boland, S., Sharma, S., Weismann, G., Shirley, P., Hines, A. D., Hay, A. J. D., McGrath, S., Chatterjee, A., Nagpal, P., Moreno, J. A. Abstract: Neuroinflammation is a key factor in the development of neurodegenerative diseases, including prion disease. There are currently no effective treatments to halt pathogenesis and progression, which includes accumulation of misfolded proteins, neuroinflammation, and cognitive/behavioral deficits followed by irreversible neuronal death. We hypothesized that downregulation of two key neuroinflammatory targets would be neuroprotective. To test this, we utilized Nanoligomers in a prion-diseased mouse to assess the impact on glial inflammation, behavioral/cognition deficits, and loss of neurons. Nanoligomer treated mice displayed decreased numbers of glia, and improved behavior and cognitive tests. Critically, the Nanoligomer protected the brain from prion-induced spongiotic change, neuronal loss, and significantly increased life span, indicating that Nanoligomer inhibition of inflammatory pathways can prevent neuronal death and slow the progression of neurodegenerative diseases. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info Podcast created by PaperPlayer
Aaron Weismann, Chief Information Security Officer, Main Line Health System, joined the podcast to discuss what led him to healthcare technology leadership, top challenges he is currently preparing for, and more.
Aaron Weismann, Chief Information Security Officer, Main Line Health System, joined the podcast to discuss what led him to healthcare technology leadership, top challenges he is currently preparing for, and more.
Episode 174 – 10 Facts Every Christian Needs to Know 2 Welcome to Anchored by Truth brought to you by Crystal Sea Books. In John 14:6, Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth, and the life.” The goal of Anchored by Truth is to encourage everyone to grow in the Christian faith by anchoring themselves to the secure truth found in the inspired, inerrant, and infallible word of God. Script: Thank you for making me so wonderfully complex! Your workmanship is marvelous—how well I know it. Psalm 139, verse 14, New Living Translation ******** VK: Hello! I’m Victoria K. Welcome to Anchored by Truth brought to you by Crystal Sea Books. We’re excited to be with you today as we continue the new series we started last time on Anchored by Truth. So, In the studio today we have RD Fierro. RD is an author and the founder of Crystal Sea Books and he is the one picking the facts we are covering in this series. RD, you’ve entitled this series “10 Facts Every Christian Needs to Know.” I’m sure many listeners would wonder how in the world you settled on the 10 facts that we are including in this series. There are surely thousands of facts that are relevant to the Christian faith. Picking 10 means you have to have done some hard thinking. RD: Well, I’d first like to start by thanking everyone for joining us here today. And you are absolutely right that there are thousands, or perhaps hundreds of thousands of facts that are relevant to the Christian faith. I have wanted to do this series for a while to highlight a couple of key points. First, as we discussed last time the Christian faith is a faith of facts. In other words the Christian faith is a faith that reflects the real world, and not just the world as it is today but the entire history of the world – both natural and human history. One of the ways we can be confident about the truth of the Christian faith is that Christianity permits us to test it by examining its principle source – the Bible – through the lens of logic, reason, and evidence. VK: Now in saying that I want to be sure that people understand that we are not elevating man’s logic over the revelation made in the Bible. What you are saying is that the Bible may be tested in the same way a farmer tests his fruit trees. Jesus gave us this test in Matthew, chapter 12, verse 33 which says, “A tree is identified by its fruit. If a tree is good, its fruit will be good. If a tree is bad, its fruit will be bad.” That’s the New Living Translation version of that verse. We can be sure of the Bible’s trustworthiness because we can evaluate its content for accuracy, reliability, consistency, and relevance. When we do so we see that it possesses the attributes we would expect of a book that claims to be the word of God. The Bible is consistent with what we know about world and human history and it gives evidence of supernatural origin. RD: Yes. We do not judge the Bible. The Bible judges us. But the Bible commands us, to use our minds in worship. In John 10:38, Jesus said to a group of people who were about to stone him, “even though you do not believe me, you should at least believe my deeds, in order that you may know once and for all that the Father is in me and that I am in the Father.” Even Jesus didn’t just demand unquestioning obedience. He gave evidence, and a lot of it, that He was who He said He was. In the same way the Bible provides evidence that it is what it says it is. So, part of what we’re doing in this series is to look at a set of facts that serve the same purpose that Jesus’ deeds did. These facts confirm the Bible and its message. But you are right that deciding on just 10 facts was not easy. VK: So, how did you do it? RD: Whenever I think about the Bible I always try to ensure that I start out with the big story. The Bible is one grand saga – the saga of creation, fall, and redemption. The saga features a chosen people, the Jews, a chosen family, the family of David, and, of course, one central person – the Messiah who was Christ Jesus. Those are the primary actors in this unfolding, grand drama but make no mistake – we are all players on the stage. So, when I started thinking about which facts that pertain to Christianity I went back to the places where the grand saga is so misunderstood in our day and age. And, of course, no surprise the misunderstanding of the story begins at the beginning. VK: It’s obvious to anyone who is paying attention that the book of Genesis is the most attacked book in the Bible. For more than a century and a half the attacks have been relentless. In our culture the belief that all life arose from the random collision of inanimate particles has largely supplanted a belief in the creative activity of God. Even many Christians now fall for the idea that God may have started everything but somehow He used evolution to move life along. Long-age uniformitarianism has replaced the idea that the surface of the earth we see resulted from a catastrophic world-wide flood. Few people now believe that the world wide dispersal of human beings and the proliferation of languages resulted from God correcting the behavior of His people at Babel when they tried to build a tower that would reach the heavens. RD: Yes. As you said Genesis is the most attacked book in the Bible and for good reason. If Satan and his human minions can dispense with the necessity of God as creator they can fill the gap with any nonsense that is convenient at the moment. God as creator means God as regulator and the one idea that fallen people hate is that they are accountable to a holy sovereign. So, the first fact that I chose to feature in this series, and that we addressed on our last episode, is the whole notion of what is sometimes termed “deep time.” The simple fact is that there is abundant scientific evidence that is consistent with the age of the earth and universe being thousands of years old rather than millions or billions of years old. VK: Deep time is essentially the idea that the universe and the earth are billions of years old. The secular world must have deep time in order to maintain the illusion that the General Theory of Evolution is plausible. Evolution needs billions of years of time to change bacteria into biologists. The only supposed creative force evolution has is beneficial mutation - in other words the random interaction of unthinking matter. To make the whole evolutionary hypothesis plausible the scheme needs lots of time. Lots of time is necessary so that lots of those random, chaotic, interactive events can take place. They need untold trillions of those interactions in the hope that a few of them will produce a living being so complex that the code that describe its construction can contain 3 billion data elements. RD: Deep time is the root of the evolutionary weed. Destroy the root and the weed dies. VK: I like that phrase. “Deep time is the root of the evolutionary weed.” It’s graphic but appropriate. So, we addressed the issue of deep time in our last episode of Anchored by Truth. What fact do you want to tackle today? RD: Today I want to address the fact that the complexity of life makes it impossible that life could have arisen as a result of the random collision of atoms and molecules – even if you could explain the existence of the atoms and molecules to begin with. VK: Ok. I think we’re going to need to probe some of the specifics that lead to a statement as definitive as that. RD: I agree. So, let’s start out with the fact that unlike Charles Darwin thought a living cell is not a simple blob of protoplasm. Living cells are enormously complex structures. In fact the simplest living cell is more complex than the most sophisticated machine ever built by man. VK: I think we better get into some specific examples of what you’re thinking about. RD: I agree. So, let’s start with some basic facts about cells. All life on earth is cellular based. We know that there are different types of cells – some have nuclei and some don’t – but all life on earth is based on cells. Some living forms are only a single cell but. Higher forms of life have a great many cells. Recent estimates are that the human body contains 200 different types of cells and about 30 Trillion individual cells. But regardless of whether we’re talking about a single cell bacterium or a human being all life on earth is based on the existence of cells. VK: And we know that all cells are composed of a cell wall, or membrane, that encloses the cells machinery which consists of various proteins. The number of proteins that a particular cell contains varies widely but even the simplest cell contains thousands of individual proteins. Estimates say that the simplest bacterial cell is comprised of at least 100 Billion atoms. That’s Billions with a “B.” In other words, every single cell on earth is a phenomenally complicated system and the complexity of life only increases as we move up the chain. RD: Right. And the sheer numbers only begin to hint at the complexity. All of those protein machines must not only be present but they must be able to properly perform their individual function. Why don’t you go ahead and read that section about cellular composition from Michael Denton’s classic book Evolution: A Theory in Crisis? VK: This is from page 263 from a chapter entitled “The Enigma of Life’s Origin.” The American biochemist Harold Markowitz has speculated as to what might be the absolute minimum requirement for a completely self-replicating cell … Such a cell would necessarily be bound by a cell membrane and the simplest one feasible is probably the typical bilayered lipid membrane utilized by all existing cells. The synthesis of the fats of the cell membrane would require perhaps a minimum of five proteins. A minimum of ten proteins would be required for the nucleotide building blocks of the DNA, and for the DNA synthesis. Such a cell would also require a protein synthetic apparatus for the synthesis of its proteins. If this was along the lines of usual ribosomal system, it would require about eighty proteins. … This is the smallest hypothetical cell we can envisage ... since we have allowed no control functions, no vitamin metabolism and extremely limited intermediary metabolism. RD: So, what Denton was describing was the simplest theoretical cell. Some bacterial cells approach that level of “simplicity” but the cells of higher organisms multiply the level of complexity present within each cell. We can get some idea of how much more complicated higher organisms are by considering DNA. The DNA of the simplest self-reproducing organism, Mycoplasma genitalium, has the smallest known genome of any free-living organism. Its DNA contains 482 genes with 580,000 base pairs. But Mycoplasma can’t actually survive by itself. It only survives by parasitizing more complex organisms, which provide many of the nutrients it cannot manufacture for itself. Mycoplasma has DNA which consists of approximately 500,000 base pairs. Human DNA by comparison consists of 3 Billion base pairs. VK: So, the point of all this is really very simple. Living creatures are enormously complicated systems. Yet the General Theory of Evolution contends that all of this complexity arose as the result of the random collision of bits of matter floating in what is sometimes called a “pre-biotic soup.” Wow. That would have to have been an extremely fortunate accident for 100 Billion of the right atoms to all collide with one another in such a way that a permeable cell wall was instantly formed that contained hundreds of individual proteins that immediately began acting together to sustain and replicate themselves. How do evolutionists address this obvious problem? RD: Well, typically they don’t actually attempt to address the issue of original cellular formation. They try to come at the problem indirectly by talking about how organic pre-cursors may have formed. All of the proteins that comprise cellular machinery are made up of amino acids. So, the evolutionists try to show how these amino acids may have formed without intelligent intervention. That’s one of the reasons the Miller- Urey experiments were so sensationalized during the latter half of the 20th century. VK: In 1953 Harold Urey of the University of Chicago and his 23-year-old graduate student, Stanley Miller. The Miller–Urey experiments involved filling a sealed glass apparatus with gases that had been speculated were necessary to form life—namely methane, ammonia and hydrogen (to mimic the conditions that they thought were in the early atmosphere) and water vapor (to simulate the ocean). Next a heating coil kept the water boiling, and they struck the gases in the flask with a high-voltage to simulate lightning. Below this was a water-cooled condenser that cooled and condensed the mixture, allowing it to fall into a water trap below. The result was a sort of gooey tar mixture that contained some amino acids. And some scientists of the day proclaimed that scientists had created life in a test tube. Some still do and the Miller-Urey experiments is still prominently featured in many textbooks as proof that life arose from non-life. RD: That’s the contention but the truth is that the Miller-Urey experiments not only didn’t create life they proved how difficult it is for life to have arisen randomly. In his well-known book called Algeny Jeremy Rifkin wrote this: “It turns out that the particular amino acids Miller formed in his experiment are totally unsuitable for the formation of life. Chemists divide amino acids into levorotary and dextrorotary. The latter are incapable of supporting life. … For biogenesis to take place all … amino acids of living protoplasm must be levorotary … if even small amounts of the dextrorotary type are present, proteins of a different three dimensional structure are formed, which are unsuitable for life’s metabolism. … Miller’s experiment produced only [combinations of the two types].” VK: One survey of adult Americans believe that as many as 75% of adult Americans believe that scientists have produced life from non-living chemicals but that’s not true is it? RD: No. All similar experiments since Miller-Urey have resulted only in the production of a combination of levorotary and dextrorotary amino acids which as Rifkin said are completely unsuitable to sustain life. So, all of this biochemistry leads us back to where we began in stating our fact for this episode: the complexity of life makes it impossible that life could have arisen as a result of the random collision of inanimate atoms and molecules. VK: Well, as you put it some people believe that chemistry plus physics equals biology. But that’s not true is it? RD: No. And even if a scientist did create “life in a test tube” that would not prove life arose or could arise without intelligent intervention – unless the scientist wanted to claim they themselves were not intelligent! And it is not just that life displays incredible complexity. There are least 3 specific forms of complexity that are present in life: irreducible complexity, specific complexity, and informational complexity. When we speak of “irreducible complexity” we are simply saying that living systems are not only complicated but they must operate as a system. Take one part away or if a single part malfunctions and you don’t just affect that part. The entire system ceases to function. This is very similar to mechanical systems with which we are more familiar. Someone may drive a car worth $100,000 but you can take away a $3 spark plug wire or valve stem out of a tire and the whole car stops. The failure of a single, seemingly insignificant part stops the entire system from functioning. VK: The most graphic example of the failure of a single part stopping an enormously complicated system was the 1986 Challenger disaster. According to Wikipedia “The disaster was caused by the failure of the two redundant O-ring seals in a joint in the Space Shuttle's right solid rocket booster (SRB). The record-low temperatures of the launch reduced the elasticity of the rubber O-rings, reducing their ability to seal the joints. The broken seals caused a breach into the joint shortly after liftoff, which allowed pressurized gas … to leak and burn through the wall to the adjacent external fuel tank. This led to the separation of the right-hand [solid rocket booster’s] aft attachment, which caused it to crash into the external tank, which caused a structural failure of the external tank and an explosion.” RD: Yes. Most people don’t realize that there are dozens of biochemical reactions that must be present for vision to occur. Remove a single one and even though the eye itself might be fine the entire system fails. But the complexity of life is not just irreducible it is also specified. The example most often given of specified complexity is language. We can have a very long sequence of random letters – hundreds, thousands, or millions yet without specificity most of that series will be meaningless. VK: An analog might be if we filled a swimming pool with a child’s letter blocks. There would be enormous complexity in the jumble of blocks but how much meaning would be present. If we started pulling out blocks one at a time, occasionally we will pull out a sequence of 2 or 3 letters that has meaning. The letter “t” and “o” might come out and that means something. Then we pull a “p” and that means something because now we have “top.” But after that, then what? If we pulled out another “p” we could be on our way to “topple” but how likely would we pull out the “l” and “e” in that order? So, a physical situation can be enormously complex but meaningless. But that is not at all how life exists. RD: And with your letter blocks in the pool analogy we start to see the impossibility of aligning the 100 Billion atoms in the simplest cell by random interaction. Specified complexity means that the complexity has been so arranged that it produces use, meaning, or in the ultimate expression – life. Life, all life, exhibits specified complexity. Cells not only have billions of atoms but all of those atoms are organized into micro-machines that perform specific purposes and all those micro-machines must work together properly or the system fails. VK: So, specified complexity leads us to the conclusion that life contains informational complexity. Back to your formula – chemistry plus physics does not equal biology. Nor does the addition of time complete the package for life. Chemical plus physical systems that have been around for a while are just old systems. What transforms chemistry plus physics into biology is information. You might say that information is necessary for animation. Right? RD: Right. There’s a great book that discusses this need thoroughly and compellingly called In the Beginning was Information. Informational complexity is exhibited in all living systems but it is most potently exhibited in DNA. DNA is far more than just a series of hydrogen, carbon, oxygen, nitrogen and other elements clinging together in long molecular strings. DNA is an information storage system that is far more complicated, at its simplest, than the most sophisticated human information system. Originally it was thought that the genes that DNA contains controlled the attributes of the creature. It was thought that one gene controls one attribute. VK: But that’s not true at all is it? RD: No. The genes of all higher order animals are pleiotropic which means that most genes control or contribute to the control of multiple aspects of the creature. Moreover, we now know that DNA differs greatly from human information systems in that it is not two dimensional in its storage capacity. It is three dimensional. It can be read not just right to left but left to right and even up and down. In some cases some parts of the code are skipped in providing instructions to the cell while in other cases that part of the code is used. And there is a relatively new discipline called “epigenetics” which tells us that contrary to long standing ideas certain characteristics acquired by an individual during their lifetime can be passed immediately to their descendants. VK: It used to be thought that there was an absolute barrier between what are referred to as “somatic” cells and “germ” cells. Somatic cells are used to build the “body” of the creature. “Germ” cells are reproductive cells. It was thought that there was an absolute barrier between the two and it was called the Weismann barrier. But the latest science indicates that isn’t always true. Yet all of this amazing complexity must be specified somewhere with the DNA. The big point is that living beings do not and cannot exist without enormous information systems being present in every component of the living creature – the cell. RD: Right. The simplest cell will not work if its component parts don’t function properly individually and collectively. The same is true for body systems that those cells build. That’s irreducible complexity. The cells and body systems must be organized in very specific ways. They must exist as systems that have utility, function, and purpose so they must have been developed and must be maintained in very specific configurations. In other words, they are specified in their design and function. That’s specified complexity. And present throughout all living creatures are incomprehensible amounts of information. And the information is not a direct consequence of the underlying chemistry any more than the information on the page of a book is dependent on the chemistry of the ink and paper. The information present in living creatures transcends the physical storage apparatus in the same way that the information contained in a computer has nothing to do with chips, plastic, wires, or metal. And information is the exact opposite of randomness and chaos. Chaotically derived information is not only ridiculous it is impossible. VK: Well, as you said the complexity of life makes it impossible that life could have arisen as a result of the random collision of atoms and molecules – even if you could explain the existence of the atoms and molecules to begin with. And even King David knew that 3,000 years ago as our opening verse from Psalm 139 demonstrated. Life is complex – irreducibly, specifically, and informationally. But let’s hasten to add that as complex as it is to us, it presents no challenge to an omniscient God. Today let’s listen to a prayer for children who are getting ready to go back to school. And let’s remember that as important as education is to our children parents must always be alert to what their kids are being taught in school, especially public schools. That’s one of the reasons it is so important for us to ground ourselves firmly in facts so we can correct the impressions that circulate so widely today – such as the idea that evolution can explain the marvelous complexity of life. Evolution can’t but the Bible does. ---- PRAYER FOR CHILDREN STARTING SCHOOL VK: Before we close we’d like to remind our audience that a lot of our radio episodes are linked together in series of topics so if they missed any episodes in this series or if they just want to hear one again, all of these episodes are available on your favorite podcast app. To find them just search on “Anchored by Truth by Crystal Sea Books.” If you’d like to hear more, try out crystalseabooks.com where “We’re not perfect but our Boss is!” (Opening Bible Quotes from the New Living Translation) Psalm 139,verse 14, New Living Translation How simple can life be? - creation.com Why the Miller Urey research argues against abiogenesis - creation.com C14 dinos - creation.com
The first and most important question for CISOs to ask is, “Am I risk aligned with the place where I work?” If not, they might be swimming upstream as they promote a culture of security that the organization doesn't embrace, says Aaron Weismann, CISO with Main Line Health. Source: Q&A with Main Line Health CISO Aaron Weismann: “CISO Success Depends on Organizational Risk Alignment” on healthsystemcio.com - healthsystemCIO.com is the sole online-only publication dedicated to exclusively and comprehensively serving the information needs of healthcare CIOs.
Father Gary Weismann, the Director of Mission Awareness with the Diocese of Mandeville, Jamaica, was the guest homilist at the Basilica during the weekend of July 16-17, 2022. This homily was recorded on July 17, 2022, during the Sixteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time.
Joseph WEISMANN est arrêté lors de la rafle du Vél' d'Hiv' du 16 juillet 1942 et interné au camp de Beaune-la-Rolande (Loiret). Il s'évade à 11 ans avec un ami, Joseph Kogan. Son histoire inspira le film de Roselyne Bosch La Rafle (sorti en 2010), ainsi que la bande dessinée Après la rafle (Les Arènes) d'Arnaud Delalande et de Laurent Bidot parue en janvier. Il témoigne dans le cadre du 80e anniversaire de la rafle du Vel'd'Hiv.
Dr. İpek Weismann ile Almanya'daki Heimat-Museum konseptlerini konuşuyoruz.
EPISODIO #35 _______ Vaya episodio… este es uno de esos capítulos que lo tendréis que guardar en favoritos por que no caducará en la vida. Hoy tendré una charla con Alberto Triano, un director de cine que comenzó siendo un filmmaker generalista, pero que siempre tuvo el foco en el cine. Está a punto de estrenar su largo “Fracasados”, pero sin embargo podemos ver ya en varias plataformas su documental ficcionado “Todos quieren ser el próximo Weismann” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MP73eFGJCNQ Alberto tiene una gran trayectoria (también con su productora Zombi Moreno), y no le importa desnudarse ante nosotros y explicarnos la realidad de tirar una producción independiente en nuestro país. Lejos de la pomposidad o el glamour, descubrimos a un cineasta totalmente humilde, que nos habla tanto de sus aciertos como de sus fracasos. Un podcast al que le puedes sacar muchísima chicha, y del que podemos aprender enormemente. Como siempre, en el podcast hablamos de muchas cosas, y una de ellas es de este libro, que es de mis favoritos: Roba como un Artista de Austin Kleon https://amzn.to/3yvF6QH Me quieres invitar a un café?: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/elcortefinal Espero que os guste, y nos apoyéis con vuestros comentarios y compartiendo el podcast para llegar a mas gente. _______ Si os ha gustado este episodio y queréis ayudarnos, que sepáis que dándonos 5 estrellas, comentando o compartiendo este podcast nos ayudáis enormemente. No olvidéis suscribiros en la plataforma que mas uséis como Apple Podcast, iVoox, Spotify o Anchor (estamos en las principales), para enteraros antes que nadie cuando sacamos un episodio nuevo. Si queréis contactar con nosotros estamos en Facebook, o mandando un mail a elcortefinalpodcast@gmail.com. El Corte Final es un podcast creado por: Jordi Extremera: Instagram @daddymaza Twitter @daddymaza Web: www.jordiextremera.com Mail: info@jordiextremera.com
Episode 127 - The Business Of Private Jets And HyperCars with Ameerh Naran Make It Happen with Will Polston is a weekly podcast that consists of a combination of episodes with Mindset Strategist Will Polston and episodes with Will's guests from around the world providing you with insights on how you can transform your excuses into results to benefit yourself, your family, your friends, your community, society, humanity and the universe, what he calls - The Ripple Effect. Ameerh Naran is a very successful, dynamic serial entrepreneur. Now, aged 36, He is the owner and CEO of several global companies including Vimana Private Jets, one of the world's most successful private jet brokerages, and has recently founded Naran Automotive, a Supercar Company using his own build and design, with his first Hypercar being launched in late 2022. Ameerh quickly gained a loyal client base and built up an impressive network with access to over 5000 aircraft worldwide and a charter team available 24 hours a day, 365 days a year to attend to every client's needs. As well as private aviation, Ameerh has turned another passion into a business venture which has great synergy with the core charter business. His first attempt, in 2006, at becoming a racing driver was thwarted by a lack of funds. His attempt to buy a car company also ended in disappointment when, in 2015, he was outbid for Weismann, the liquidated German supercar company. And so, naturally, he has created a supercar company of his own. The 1048hp V8 - powered, all- wheel drive Naran coupé, With a top speed in excess of 230mph and a 0-60mph sprint time of just over 2 seconds is the creation of Ameerh, who is turning his boyhood dream into a reality with the launch of the limited-edition machine. In this episode, Will has Ameerh as his guest and they talk about: How the way his parents raised him influenced his mindset How he started a business at a young age The importance of having a good work ethic for success Why he started his car company and how it benefits others To find out more about Ameerh and his businesses, click here and here. Join the free Make It Happen Community Facebook group by clicking here. Take the 5-Minute Quiz that Reveals What's Preventing You from Living a Purposeful, Inspired and Energised Life You Love by clicking here.
Moving from burnout to badass is not an easy journey, but listening to Dr. Errin Weismann share her story helps us know it is possible. In our conversation, she shares how she managed to address the big question, “ Is this it? Is this all life is going to be?” She shares her best on rest and recovery, overcoming guilt and how being a workaholic is just like any other addiction. She is sassy, authentic, and gets real about navigating that addiction. If this podcast resonates with you leave us some feedback.
La bande dessinée Après la rafle raconte la vie de Joseph Weismann, dont la famille a été arrêtée lors de la rafle du Vél' d'Hiv' en juillet 1942. Le scénariste de la bande dessinée, Arnaud Delalande, répond aux questions de Frédérique Genot.
Juillet 1942. En deux jours, l'Etat français, sous l'autorité du régime de Vichy, organise l'arrestation de tous les juifs d'origine étrangère. À Paris, plus de 13 000 personnes sont interpellées et conduites au Vélodrome d'Hiver, dans le 15e arrondissement.Parmi elles, Joseph Weismann, un gamin de Montmartre âgé de 11 ans. Après plusieurs jours d'attente dans des conditions inhumaines, ses parents, ses deux sœurs et lui sont déportés vers le camp de transit de Beaune-la-Rolande (Loiret). Il est le seul de sa famille à pouvoir s'évader, et à survivre.À l'occasion de la sortie le 27 janvier d'«Après la rafle» (édition Les Arènes), une bande-dessinée sur son histoire, Joseph Weismann a accepté de témoigner dans Code source au micro d'Ambre Rosala.Ecoutez Code source sur toutes les plateformes audio : Apple Podcast (iPhone, iPad), Google Podcast (Android), Podcast Addict ou Castbox, Deezer, Spotify.Direction de la rédaction : Pierre Chausse - Rédacteur en chef : Jules Lavie - Reporter : Ambre Rosala - Production : Raphaël Pueyo et Thibault Lambert - Réalisation et mixage : Julien Montcouquiol - Musiques : François Clos, Audio Network, Epidemic Sound - Identité graphique : Upian. Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
El Almería afronta el partido del sábado sin tapujos, sin rodeos, sin ambages. Rubi ha afirmado que "no es un partido más" en clara alusión a la oportunidad que tiene su equipo de poner mucha distancia ante un rival directo. En este informativo conoceremos el análisis de Juan Antonio Manzano (Onda Cero) y escucharemos a Weismann, atacante del Pucela
In this episode, Xavier Bonilla has a dialogue with Sarah Richardson about the history of maternal-fetal effects. They discuss why human developmental plasticity is important for intrauterine growth and how this impacts the evolution of post-natal growth. The talk about the importance of Weismann's philosophy of science for maternal health. They mention maternal impressions theories and the complicated history of eugenics with maternal health. They discuss the importance of animal studies to understand maternal-fetal effects and the ongoing emphasis on birth weight. They discuss the unfinished story on epigenetics and many of its challenges along with some pragmatic considerations on maternal-fetal effects. Sarah Richardson is Professor of the History of Science and of Studies of Women, Gender, and Sexuality at Harvard University. She directs the Harvard GenderSci Lab and her interests are in gender, sexuality, and reproduction. She has been published in many scientific journals and in popular media outlets. Her latest book, The Maternal Imprint: The Contested Science of Maternal-Fetal Effects can be published here. You can also find her work here.
Dr Rob reveals several new studies that are challenging the fundamental assumptions that underlie the neo-Darwinian synthesis. Specifically. the 'central dogma of molecular biology' (the thought that information only flows from DNA to RNA to protein) and the Weismann barrier (the thought that only the DNA 'information' in sperm and egg cells is inherited) are both wrong. Recent revelations have shown us that sperm actively absorb and use body-cell-sourced RNA in the epididymis, and one polymerase uses RNA templates in a newly discovered DNA repair system. Neither of these are supposed to be true. Can a vague idea from the 19th century withstand the assault of 21st century knowledge? Hardly. The simplifying assumptions made by Darwin and his contemporaries no longer hold up. Notes and links: Main article: Carter R., The barrier has been breached! Making a fool out of Professor Wise-man, Creation.com, 7 September 2021. Wilhelm D, Palmer S, Koopman P, Sex determination and gonadal development in mammals, Physiol. Rev. 87(1):1–28, 2007; doi: 10.1152/physrev.00009.2006. Crow JF, Age and sex differences on human mutation rates: an old problem with new complexities, J. Radiat. Res. 47(Suppl.):B75–B82, 2006; doi: 10.1269/jrr.47.b75. James ER, et al., The role of the epididymis and the contribution of epididymosomes to mammalian reproduction, Int. J. Mol. Sci. 21:5377, 2020; doi: 10.3390/ijms21155377. Chandramouly G, et al., Polθ reverse transcribes RNA and promotes RNA-templated DNA repair. Science Advances 7(24):eabf1771; doi: 10.1126/sciadv.abf1771. See also the press release from Thomas Jefferson University “New discovery shows human cells can write RNA sequences into DNA”, Phys.org, 11 June 2021. King TE, et al., Africans in Yorkshire? The deepest-rooting clade of the Y phylogeny within an English genealogy, Eur J. Hum. Genet. 15:288–293, 2007; doi: 10.1038/sj.ejhg.5201771. Filming locations: Kennesaw National Battlefield Park and Kennesaw Memorial Park.
O Balde com 3 é o podcast onde uma professora, um jogador de poker e um maconheiro recebem o convidado, numa mesa de bar, para falar sobre a vida.
Leonardo Weismann, médico infectologista do Instituto Emilio Ribas e consultor da Sociedade Brasileira de Infectologia.// Fala da variante Indiana e situação da pandemia e vacinas
Lucas has been a real estate investor since January 2008. In 2017, he got into solar development. Lucas got interested in green energy for several reasons. First, he uses it to increase the cash flow of the property. Being able to take advantage of the tax credit is also nice, and the accelerated depreciation plan is very beneficial as well. And while ROI varies depending on the area’s energy and labor costs, he believes that green energy can add value to the property and help real estate investors increase their cash flow. Lucas Weismann Real Estate Background: President of Blue Mustang Investments 12 years of real estate investing experience Portfolio consists of 4 single family rentals, & a 24-Unit Apartment Based in Denver, CO Say hi to him at: www.w-consulting-group.com Best Ever Book: Miracle Morning Click here to know more about our sponsors RealEstateAccounting.co thinkmultifamily.com/coaching Best Ever Tweet: “Find a local mentor group” - Lucas Weismann.
In this episode, host @BrookeLJames is joined by @ZachWeismann, Founder of Mag Impact Collective, to discuss the difference in expectations between caregivers across genders, how to balance work and caregiving, and societal expectations on male grievers. CW - mention of suicidal ideation thegriefcoach.co www.zachweismann.com Zach's TedX talk - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-tyMwL95Ugw
On this episode of The First 10 Podcast, I talk to Zach Weismann, who is the founder of MAG Collective. MAG is a collection of brand experts, designers, strategists and marketers that work with organizations of all sizes to create lasting social change and generate true social impact.Key Points"Take advantage of your ecosystem""You can get a customer with a decent-looking website and a bank account. and maybe not even both.""Be patient, try to communicate value clearly and succinctly, and don't underestimate the value of backward-looking networks and who you have worked with in the past."Show NotesSwitch by Chip and Dan HeathSo Good They Cant Ignore You by Cal NewportMade to Stick by Chip and Dan HeathContact Detailshttps://www.linkedin.com/in/zachweismann/https://www.magcollective.com/teamhttps://twitter.com/zachweismannhttps://www.makedents.com/If you like what you hear on this podcast, make sure and sign up to get regular updates hereAlso follow me on Twitter here
On today's episode, Alex and Steven discuss the following:- The ramifications of the Jets beating the Rams, and the Chargers falling to #9 in the draft order- The latest on the head coaching buzz, including their thoughts on Buffalo Bills Offensive Coordinator Brian DabollPlus,They are joined by The Draft Network's Brentley Weismann, a former scout for the Chargers, to discuss the 2021 NFL Draft and his time with the team. Hope you enjoy this bonus episode! Support the show (https://t.co/vODLzzX1uD?amp=1)
This week on The Bump n' Grind Angie has scored an exclusive with the infamous Dutch Weismann's Follies creator Tony Marando! Angie and Tony spill the beans on the legendary club which birthed Angie's burlesque career and influenced so many others at the very beginning of the burlesque revival. Prepare to be wowed by stories of illegal speakeasies, mobsters, movie directors, and a whole lot more!
Ein Hörspiel über Außenseiter und Versöhnung von George Tabori. Der Jude Arnold Weismann ist auf dem Weg nach New York, um in dem Park Ecke Riverside/ 99. Straße die Asche seiner an einem verspäteten Weisheitszahn verstorbenen Frau Bella auszustreuen. Im Gebirge, wo er sich verirrt, trifft er einen jungen Indianer. Zwischen den beiden Außenseitern entwickelt sich ein ritualhafter Kampf, den nur einer von ihnen überleben wird. George Tabori sagte über sein Stück: "It is, of course, a love-story" und "der Irrationalismus macht sich nicht davon, wenn wir ihn missbilligen: denn schließlich ist er ein Teil von jedem von uns." Das Stück wurde von Regisseur Jörg Jannings fürs Hörspiel inszeniert und wurde 1978 mit dem Prix Italia ausgezeichnet. Für diese und viele seine Radioarbeiten gilt: "Man spricht ja mit dem ganzen Körper. Man hört auch mit dem ganzen Körper - mit der Haut.“ Für den Hörspielregisseur Jannings ist eben dies das zentrale Moment dieser fragilen, in Klang gefassten Kunst: der Schauspieler und all seine Mittel. Nur wenige seiner Zunft waren in der Lage, einen Text durch exzessive und neugierige Arbeit mit seinen Produktionsteams so umzusetzen, dass jene akustischen Artefakte auch Jahrzehnte nach ihrer Entstehung noch so schimmern wie es nur echte Kunst vermag. Am 14. November wird Jörg Jannings, der Generationen von Hörspielschaffenden beeinflusst hat, 90 Jahre alt. Mit: George Tabori als Erzähler, Leopold Hainisch als Weismann und Heinz Hönig als Rotgesicht. Komposition: Birger Heymann und Michael Achilles. Übersetzung aus dem Amerikanischen: Peter Sandberg. Regie: Jörg Jannings. Produktion: NDR 1978. Verfügbar bis 09.11.2021. https://ndr.de/radiokunst
Andrew Weissmann was the general counsel of the FBI. He was the head of the Justice Department's fraud section and helped run the Enron Task Force. And yet, he is best known these days for having been one of Bob Mueller's top prosecutors—and certainly the most smeared of Bob Mueller's prosecutors. Weismann's name became a kind of tagline for Mueller's supposedly evil alter ego as the investigation went on, and Andrew's new book, "Where Law Ends: Inside the Mueller Investigation," recounts the whole experience. In it, Weissman describes what the Mueller investigation did right, what it did wrong, what it could have done differently and how it all went down from the inside. He joined Benjamin Wittes for a Lawfare Live event to discuss the book.
Epigenetics deals with those things that control which genes are turned on and off, and at what time, in the cell. It is a serious challenge to the neo-Darwinian idea that evolution occurs via a simple mutation + selection scenario. Location: Sweetwater Creek State Park, Douglasville, GA Links: Darwin’s Lamarckism vindicated? Genetic Diversity on Noah’s Ark Sciamenna, I. et al. The active role of spermatozoa in transgenerational inheritance. Proc. R. Soc. B 286:20191263, 2019; http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2019.1263. Chen, Q. et al. Epigenetic inheritance of acquired traits through sperm RNAs and sperm RNA modification, Nature Reviews Genetics 17:733–743, 2016; https://www.nature.com/articles/nrg.2016.106 Sabour, D and Schöler, H.R., Reprogramming and the mammalian germline: the Weismann barrier revisited, Current Opinion in Cell Biology 24(6):716-723, 2012; pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22947493/ CMI's Question Evolution campaign, info, articles, and merch
Hoy toca repasar el mercado de fichajes hasta el momento de la 2020/21 en la que ponemos atención a los últimos fichajes de LaLiga. Analizamos algunas llegadas como Rakitic u Óscar Rodríguez con Miguel Álvarez, de Jornada Sevilla, o Weismann con Iván Herrero, de Jornada Pucela. Te pedimos que te suscribas al canal de Ivoox, pero también que también dejes tu comentario y me gusta si consideras relevante el contenido. ¡No te pierdas las PREVIAS que hacemos antes de cada jornada y participa con nosotros en las fichitas! Presenta y dirigen Javi Rando, creador y director de Jornada Perfecta, Antonio García y Fabián Fuentes, también parte del proyecto fantasy más grande de España, que reúne a más de 50 expertos de fútbol que te aconsejan y recomiendan sobre #biwenger, #laligafantasyMarca, #mister, #comunio y #Futmondo. Puedes seguir más fantasy en el proyecto Jornada Perfecta, que incluye: Web: https://www.jornadaperfecta.com/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvMw41zGXyYYPDvyXcHZfug/ Twitter: @JornadaPerfecta Cualquier consulta puedes trasladarla en la pestaña Comunidad de Ivoox o a través del correo webjornadaperfecta@gmail.com Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
After graduating with a Masters in Professional Accounting (MPA), Zach Weismann took a job with one of the Big 4 accounting firms. A year into the job, Zach wasn't feeling fulfilled and his strong passion for advocating on social and environmental issues was pulling him in another direction. After a trip of a lifetime to Peru working in the field with local communities on health and water sanitation issues, Zach was galvanized to focus on doing more meaningful work in the social impact space. This desire fueled Zach to eventually start his own company, MAG Impact Collective. MAG brings together experts in the areas of branding, strategy, and design to serve clients more efficiently and effectively, matching the right team to the right project to achieve the greatest impact. In this episode, I speak with Zach Weismann about his mission and the impact MAG Impact Collective is making in the world. Let's dive in! https://www.magcollective.com/
After graduating with a Masters in Professional Accounting (MPA), Zach Weismann took a job with one of the Big 4 accounting firms. A year into the job, Zach wasn't feeling fulfilled and his strong passion for advocating on social and environmental issues was pulling him in another direction. After a trip of a lifetime to Peru working in the field with local communities on health and water sanitation issues, Zach was galvanized to focus on doing more meaningful work in the social impact space. This desire fueled Zach to eventually start his own company, MAG Impact Collective. MAG brings together experts in the areas of branding, strategy, and design to serve clients more efficiently and effectively, matching the right team to the right project to achieve the greatest impact. In this episode, I speak with Zach Weismann about his mission and the impact MAG Impact Collective is making in the world. Let's dive in! https://www.magcollective.com/
Hablamos del nuevo récord que impuso el Bugatti Chiron para coches de producción, del posible regreso de Weismann en el Autoshow de Frankfurt, de la muerte de Ferdinand Piech y en nuestra sección de preguntas… la Costa Azul.
On Wednesday's Mark Levin Show, we thank the Democrat Party for finally killing any impeachment hearings with the Mueller hearings today. The Democrats should be ashamed of themselves for putting him up to this. It's clear that Mueller's top attorney Andrew Weismann was the invisible hand behind all of the Mueller Report. The strategy Weismann used to destroy Arthur Andersen is the same legal strategy used in this case and it has Weismann all over it. Mueller proved that he was incapable of managing this investigation let alone trying to prove that there was any corrupt intent in President Trump's decision-making. The Constitution and the law on the President's side in this Mueller investigation. Then, Trump has criticized Rep's. Jerry Nadler and Adam Schiff today and it's notable that, consequently, neither of them are women of color. Later, Rep's Jim Jordan, Devin Nunes, and Louie Gohmert call in to recap their lines of questioning in today's hearings. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On Wednesday's Mark Levin Show, we thank the Democrat Party for finally killing any impeachment hearings with the Mueller hearings today. The Democrats should be ashamed of themselves for putting him up to this. It's clear that Mueller's top attorney Andrew Weismann was the invisible hand behind all of the Mueller Report. The strategy Weismann used to destroy Arthur Andersen is the same legal strategy used in this case and it has Weismann all over it. Mueller proved that he was incapable of managing this investigation let alone trying to prove that there was any corrupt intent in President Trump's decision-making. The Constitution and the law on the President's side in this Mueller investigation. Then, Trump has criticized Rep's. Jerry Nadler and Adam Schiff today and it's notable that, consequently, neither of them are women of color. Later, Rep's Jim Jordan, Devin Nunes, and Louie Gohmert call in to recap their lines of questioning in today's hearings. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Itai Weismann is geboren en getogen in Beer-Sheva, Israël. Hij groeide op in een muzikale familie en speelt saxofoon vanaf zijn tiende. Hij studeerde aan de Jerusalem Music Academy en kwam in 2006 naar het Conservatorium van Amsterdam. Naast saxofoon speelt Itai voornamelijk op zijn EWI, een elektronisch blaasinstrument dat veel weg heeft van de sax, maar waar ook de meest bizarre geluiden uit getoverd kunnen worden! Playlist: Jon Hassell - Last Night the Moon Came Fullbite - 24 / 7 Fullbite - Laika Tyranni Flock - Speeltuin (Nick Vollebregt 01-04-2018) Fullbite - Halul Itai Weissman - Band of DJ’s Fullbite - Guesthouse Tyranni Flock - Ujong Kulon Valvetronic Brassband - Ex Machina & Brazzilla (Nick Vollebregt 2 juni 2019) Agnes Gosling - Life on Mars (Nick Vollebregt 2 juni 2019) Greyheads - Clouds Cruising Marike van Dijk - Snipits Monty Alexander Trio & Friends - Hope (NSJ 2013) Mudita - Listen to the Sound of the Forest (Nick Vollebregt 4 november 2018) Rob Franken - Tamotua Kijk voor meer informatie op https://www.nporadio2.nl/soulenjazz.
Itai Weismann is geboren en getogen in Beer-Sheva, Israël. Hij groeide op in een muzikale familie en speelt saxofoon vanaf zijn tiende. Hij studeerde aan de Jerusalem Music Academy en kwam in 2006 naar het Conservatorium van Amsterdam. Naast saxofoon speelt Itai voornamelijk op zijn EWI, een elektronisch blaasinstrument dat veel weg heeft van de sax, maar waar ook de meest bizarre geluiden uit getoverd kunnen worden! Playlist: Jon Hassell - Last Night the Moon Came Fullbite - 24 / 7 Fullbite - Laika Tyranni Flock - Speeltuin (Nick Vollebregt 01-04-2018) Fullbite - Halul Itai Weissman - Band of DJ's Fullbite - Guesthouse Tyranni Flock - Ujong Kulon Valvetronic Brassband - Ex Machina & Brazzilla (Nick Vollebregt 2 juni 2019) Agnes Gosling - Life on Mars (Nick Vollebregt 2 juni 2019) Greyheads - Clouds Cruising Marike van Dijk - Snipits Monty Alexander Trio & Friends - Hope (NSJ 2013) Mudita - Listen to the Sound of the Forest (Nick Vollebregt 4 november 2018) Rob Franken - Tamotua Kijk voor meer informatie op https://www.nporadio2.nl/soulenjazz.
Guest: Daniel Lazare. We discuss the origins of Russiagate, some key questions that we have about the Mueller Report and surprising things that the Mueller Report doesn’t cover at all. In Lazares’s own words: “Mueller’s door-stopper of a report may be chockfull of facts, but it’s also filled with the non sequiturs, loose threads and self-serving arguments that we’ve come to expect from official Washington. It’s good on collusion, pointing out that reports of a Trump-Russia conspiracy remain unsubstantiated despite desperate Democratic efforts to spin it otherwise.” “But it’s lousy on interference, regurgitating the standard intelligence-community line that Russia ‘interfered in the 2016 presidential election in sweeping and systematic fashion.’ Simultaneously, it is remarkably incurious about how the scandal began, who propelled it along, and how it all snowballed into a mega-Watergate.” Timestamps: 02:00- historical recap (from 2014) of US-Russia relations and flawed US foreign policy: Maidan revolution, Crimea, Syria regime change war, Russian intervention and subsequent fury and panic of US War Party, Trump campaign’s pro-Russia stance leading to War Party believing Trump was in league with Putin 8:30 Origins of Russiagate: US and foreign intelligence suspicions about Trump campaign’s contacts with Russians, counterintelligence investigation. Informants, creating pretexts for investigations, Papadopoulous, Mifsud, Roger Stone, Felix Sater 18:00 Mueller and Weismann reputations, Manafort, collusion section of Mueller report 24:00 Other foreign policy and empire ambitions and problems that influenced Russiagate, e.g. Syria, Ukraine, refugee crisis in Europe, rise of right-wing parties 32:00 Watergate narrative, DNC alleged hack, neverending Russiagate, Assange 36:00 Key questions we have about the Mueller Report and questions the Mueller report does not answer, creeping conspiracy culture, the Steele dossier, IRA, GRU, new investigations and the political impact Daniel Lazare is a journalist and author of three books: The Frozen Republic; The Velvet Coup, and America's Undeclared War. FOLLOW Dan on Twitter @dhlazare. Find his work at Consortium News and find his writings and his books at daniellazare.com. Around the Empire is listener supported, independent media. Pitch in if you can at Patreon: patreon.com/aroundtheempire or paypal.me/aroundtheempirepod. Website: aroundtheempire.com. SUBSCRIBE on YouTube. FOLLOW @aroundtheempire and @joanneleon. SUBSCRIBE/FOLLOW on iTunes, iHeart, Spotify, Google Play, Facebook or on your preferred podcast app. Recorded on May 8, 2019. Music by Fluorescent Grey. Reference Links: Top Ten Questions About the Mueller Report, Daniel Lazare, Consortium News The ‘Guccifer 2.0’ Gaps in Mueller’s Full Report, Daniel Lazare, Consortium News The Tale of a ‘Deep State Target’, Daniel Lazare, Consortium News Bachelor Show 5/7/29 interview with Andrew McCarthy: "I think they're not finding Mifsud because they don't want to find him."
On Tuesday's Mark Show, the progressive movement continues to reject our constitution, reject our declaration of Independence and pushes for more absurd impeachment rhetoric. The reality is that there isn't a single staffer in the White House that could have stopped President Trump from firing whomever he wanted to. He didn't do it because he didn't do it, not because people he could have fired "stopped" him. Moreover, Robert Mueller's lead prosecutor, Andrew Weismann used a similar approach as he did in the Enron case with Arthur Andersen asserting that they acted knowingly and corruptly and his case was reversed by all nine justices of the Supreme Court. Mueller and Weismann stretched the definition of obstruction just like they'd stretched the definition of "corruptly" in the Andersen case. Trump did not interfere in any way, it was not thwarted in any way. Then, pseudo-journalist Phillip Bump took exception with comments made on this program despite their accuracy. Bump fails to realize that the President does not serve at the pleasure of Congress or any political party, he serves at the pleasure of the American people that elected him. Later, Nancy Pelosi is full of it, these Democrat committee chairs are loyalists to Pelosi and wouldn't be pursuing this impeachment nonsense unless she was okay with it. This is because the fourth estate has become a fifth column. Lastly, Sen. Mike Lee calls in to discuss his new book "Our Lost Declaration: America's Fight Against Tyranny from King George to the Deep State." Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On Tuesday's Mark Show, the progressive movement continues to reject our constitution, reject our declaration of Independence and pushes for more absurd impeachment rhetoric. The reality is that there isn't a single staffer in the White House that could have stopped President Trump from firing whomever he wanted to. He didn't do it because he didn't do it, not because people he could have fired "stopped" him. Moreover, Robert Mueller's lead prosecutor, Andrew Weismann used a similar approach as he did in the Enron case with Arthur Andersen asserting that they acted knowingly and corruptly and his case was reversed by all nine justices of the Supreme Court. Mueller and Weismann stretched the definition of obstruction just like they'd stretched the definition of "corruptly" in the Andersen case. Trump did not interfere in any way, it was not thwarted in any way. Then, pseudo-journalist Phillip Bump took exception with comments made on this program despite their accuracy. Bump fails to realize that the President does not serve at the pleasure of Congress or any political party, he serves at the pleasure of the American people that elected him. Later, Nancy Pelosi is full of it, these Democrat committee chairs are loyalists to Pelosi and wouldn't be pursuing this impeachment nonsense unless she was okay with it. This is because the fourth estate has become a fifth column. Lastly, Sen. Mike Lee calls in to discuss his new book "Our Lost Declaration: America's Fight Against Tyranny from King George to the Deep State." Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Do you need the government for this? Shoshana Weismann Talks Unnecessary Food Regulations by Independent Women's Forum
Democrat party identity politics - Trump comparison - SOTU opportunity - Weismann writing Mueller report
For a century, the belief was that genetic information built organisms, never the other way around. A new paper by Denis Noble definitively proves otherwise. The paper is called “Central Dogma or Central Debate.” In this interview, Denis explains the revolution that is going on in genetics. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Weismann, Mullers chief aid linked to fake dossier According to new information that’s true So NOW MSM who cover NONE of this, have a massive dilemma
Today’s show is to our Children’s future and the future of Humanity. YES YOU CAN! create that magical doorway to your future with the Power of Infinite Love and Gratitude. Learn how to weave and design a creative road-map for understanding and transforming negative ways of thinking into positive and empowering ways of living. Are you Ready?! You will thrive and be transformed and to your surprise so will everyone else around you. Introducing to you two powerful authors Dr. Darren Weissman and B. T. Brunelle who have co-authored an explosive book “The Daily Lessons of Infinite Love & Gratitude“, and with their book they have enhanced our lives and those of our families with techniques to empower each and every single one of our relationships.
Should we really believe what our best scientific theories tell us about the world, especially about parts of the world that we can't see? This question informs a long history of debates over scientific realism and the extent to which we trust what contemporary and future scientific theories tell us about unobservable phenomena. Using the history of science as an evidentiary archive, Kyle Stanford explores this set of problems in Exceeding Our Grasp: Science, History, and the Problem of Unconceived Alternatives (Oxford University Press, 2006; paperback, 2010). He suggests that we reframe the problem as one of “unconceived alternatives.” Put briefly, if we look at the history of scientific inquiry we'll see that scientists have repeatedly occupied an epistemic position from which they could conceive of only a fraction of the theories that would have been amply supported by existing evidence. Stanford develops this idea and demonstrates its significance via a series of case studies from the early history of theorizing about generation and inheritance, moving from Darwin's “mad dream” to Galton's rabbit transfusion experiments and Weismann's theory of germ-plasm. Over the course of our conversation we talked, among other things, about the ways that a project like this can contribute to efforts to create a broader trans-disciplinary dialogue across the vast terrain of STS. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Should we really believe what our best scientific theories tell us about the world, especially about parts of the world that we can’t see? This question informs a long history of debates over scientific realism and the extent to which we trust what contemporary and future scientific theories tell us about unobservable phenomena. Using the history of science as an evidentiary archive, Kyle Stanford explores this set of problems in Exceeding Our Grasp: Science, History, and the Problem of Unconceived Alternatives (Oxford University Press, 2006; paperback, 2010). He suggests that we reframe the problem as one of “unconceived alternatives.” Put briefly, if we look at the history of scientific inquiry we’ll see that scientists have repeatedly occupied an epistemic position from which they could conceive of only a fraction of the theories that would have been amply supported by existing evidence. Stanford develops this idea and demonstrates its significance via a series of case studies from the early history of theorizing about generation and inheritance, moving from Darwin’s “mad dream” to Galton’s rabbit transfusion experiments and Weismann’s theory of germ-plasm. Over the course of our conversation we talked, among other things, about the ways that a project like this can contribute to efforts to create a broader trans-disciplinary dialogue across the vast terrain of STS. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Should we really believe what our best scientific theories tell us about the world, especially about parts of the world that we can't see? This question informs a long history of debates over scientific realism and the extent to which we trust what contemporary and future scientific theories tell us about unobservable phenomena. Using the history of science as an evidentiary archive, Kyle Stanford explores this set of problems in Exceeding Our Grasp: Science, History, and the Problem of Unconceived Alternatives (Oxford University Press, 2006; paperback, 2010). He suggests that we reframe the problem as one of “unconceived alternatives.” Put briefly, if we look at the history of scientific inquiry we'll see that scientists have repeatedly occupied an epistemic position from which they could conceive of only a fraction of the theories that would have been amply supported by existing evidence. Stanford develops this idea and demonstrates its significance via a series of case studies from the early history of theorizing about generation and inheritance, moving from Darwin's “mad dream” to Galton's rabbit transfusion experiments and Weismann's theory of germ-plasm. Over the course of our conversation we talked, among other things, about the ways that a project like this can contribute to efforts to create a broader trans-disciplinary dialogue across the vast terrain of STS. Enjoy!
Should we really believe what our best scientific theories tell us about the world, especially about parts of the world that we can’t see? This question informs a long history of debates over scientific realism and the extent to which we trust what contemporary and future scientific theories tell us about unobservable phenomena. Using the history of science as an evidentiary archive, Kyle Stanford explores this set of problems in Exceeding Our Grasp: Science, History, and the Problem of Unconceived Alternatives (Oxford University Press, 2006; paperback, 2010). He suggests that we reframe the problem as one of “unconceived alternatives.” Put briefly, if we look at the history of scientific inquiry we’ll see that scientists have repeatedly occupied an epistemic position from which they could conceive of only a fraction of the theories that would have been amply supported by existing evidence. Stanford develops this idea and demonstrates its significance via a series of case studies from the early history of theorizing about generation and inheritance, moving from Darwin’s “mad dream” to Galton’s rabbit transfusion experiments and Weismann’s theory of germ-plasm. Over the course of our conversation we talked, among other things, about the ways that a project like this can contribute to efforts to create a broader trans-disciplinary dialogue across the vast terrain of STS. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Cytogerontology, the science of cellular ageing, originated in 1881 with the prediction by August Weismann that the somatic cells of higher animals have limited division potential. Weismann's prediction was derived by considering the role of natural selection in regulating the duration of an organism's life. For various reasons, Weismann's ideas on ageing fell into neglect following his death in 1914, and cytogerontology has only reappeared as a major research area following the demonstration by Hayflick and Moorhead in the early 1960s that diploid human fibroblasts are restricted to a finite number of divisions in vitro. In this review we give a detailed account of Weismann's theory, and we reveal that his ideas were both more extensive in their scope and more pertinent to current research than is generally recognised. We also appraise the progress which has been made over the past hundred years in investigating the causes of ageing, with particular emphasis being given to (i) the evolution of ageing, and (ii) ageing at the cellular level. We critically assess the current state of knowledge in these areas and recommend a series of points as primary targets for future research.