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Mar 29, 2024
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maynard metcalf from johns hopkins here in maryland, a renowned zoology ists and metcalf will take the stand and he will argue with darrow questioning him that almost all zoology is botanist and geologists, except evolution as fact. he will with darrow leading him be asked to estimate when the process of evolution began. and he says, metcalf says, well, mass extinctions complicate the story, but it was closer to 600 million years ago. then the 6000 years ago that some fundamentalists accepted as the date based on bishop usher's calculations, which we described last lecture. and judge ralston is going to hear this and said, i've heard enough. and he says, this scientific testimony is inadmissible. first of all, the non-expert mind can comprehend what we mean by descended from a lower order of animals. something more primitive than humans. we don't need experts to dance on the head of a pin. but he also says the question of evolution that's not what's on trial here. the question is, did scopes teach it? that's it. the state is allowed to say what's taught. scopes taught it. that's what's
maynard metcalf from johns hopkins here in maryland, a renowned zoology ists and metcalf will take the stand and he will argue with darrow questioning him that almost all zoology is botanist and geologists, except evolution as fact. he will with darrow leading him be asked to estimate when the process of evolution began. and he says, metcalf says, well, mass extinctions complicate the story, but it was closer to 600 million years ago. then the 6000 years ago that some fundamentalists accepted...
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Mar 2, 2024
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conan doyle you know, even gretchen stein dropped out of johns hopkins. there's a ton of and where you are at stanford, daniel mason is is a big name up now what is it about medicine that lends itself to becoming or do you think it's coincidental or some kind of observation the human condition. well, i'm not sure. i mean, i wonder if there's a you know, if there's sort of a bias in way we observe this because we don't make such a big deal about, you know, schoolteachers becoming or plumbers becoming writers. i think that people seem to see it as an anomaly that physicians should also be writers. i often think that given how we are privy to the most moments in people's lives and we're sort of, you know, on in the front row of drama sometimes we're not just in the front row, but on the stage on stage. and you're an often you're a catalyst, some way of improving it or making it worse. and so you wonder why i wonder why more physicians don't write. but yeah, we have a very illustrious core of, you know, well-known physician writers. somerset maugham actually
conan doyle you know, even gretchen stein dropped out of johns hopkins. there's a ton of and where you are at stanford, daniel mason is is a big name up now what is it about medicine that lends itself to becoming or do you think it's coincidental or some kind of observation the human condition. well, i'm not sure. i mean, i wonder if there's a you know, if there's sort of a bias in way we observe this because we don't make such a big deal about, you know, schoolteachers becoming or plumbers...
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Mar 9, 2024
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hopkins university from hopkins. he got a rhodes scholarship. this is a guy who came out of the you know, off the streets. they came in. he came and he kind of white house fellowship. he was he got into the he ran for and got a job to be head of the robin hood foundation is the largest anti-poverty organization in new york is a big, huge thing. west came in there he had no experience running anything he ran it beautifully for six or seven years. and then his friend said, you ought to run for office and ran for and he ran for office. he'd never done that before. he ran. and a big major feel at 15 different people in democratic primary. it was one in which and he swept it 20 points. he got into the general swept it by 20 points is. now, governor, he's a big champion of national service. he and gavin newsom are talking a lot about how do we ends of the country, both about both coasts of the country, how can we more of this? he's a guy. everybody wants him to run now in 2028. i don't know whether he's going to make it or
hopkins university from hopkins. he got a rhodes scholarship. this is a guy who came out of the you know, off the streets. they came in. he came and he kind of white house fellowship. he was he got into the he ran for and got a job to be head of the robin hood foundation is the largest anti-poverty organization in new york is a big, huge thing. west came in there he had no experience running anything he ran it beautifully for six or seven years. and then his friend said, you ought to run for...
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Mar 10, 2024
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hopkins of advanced international studies. her latest book is, quote, the twilight of democracy the seductive lure of by the way. when i recall a lot of the book titles that we've heard about during this festival, i'm tempted to think there's more than a little pessimism here about the future. ezra klein min is a columnist for the new york times, where he also hosts the ezra klein podcast at a young age. he has a storied career in journalism and as a is new york times best seller is entitled why we're polarized. another optimistic take on where we are in america. let me start with this and i guess i'll start with you, ezra. how polarized are we? how did we get here? and has the polarization ever been this serious and this dangerous in modern times? oh, nice easy question for 830 in the morning. well, thank you all for me. one of the tricky things about talking about polarization is you have to always ask polarized over what? it's a word we tend to use in the singular when it mean many different things. so are we more polarized
hopkins of advanced international studies. her latest book is, quote, the twilight of democracy the seductive lure of by the way. when i recall a lot of the book titles that we've heard about during this festival, i'm tempted to think there's more than a little pessimism here about the future. ezra klein min is a columnist for the new york times, where he also hosts the ezra klein podcast at a young age. he has a storied career in journalism and as a is new york times best seller is entitled...
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Mar 31, 2024
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well, it turns out thomas dixon and woodrow wilson went to school together at johns hopkins university in baltimore. so ugly birds, a feather stick together. another columbia university historian would say william, dunning. he promoted the view that black people were incapable of governing themselves and reconstruction woue been a colossal error, reversing reconstruction was reversion to natural order, the same fact of raci inequality that s once encoded the natural order, is black people to be enslaved. that's from this vantage point. it's kind of hard to get in touch with the okay, so let's go the next group, just the housekeeper, you know, and then, you know, tear her down or anything but but they also they didn't want to give her a whole lot of credit for anything. judge charles landis, a noted jurist in lancaster county back in the 19th century, wrote a defense of stephens and smith, a very detailed defense. in fact, he says at the beginning of it, i've researched this, so don't you dare question anything i say. and here he did make a couple of mistakes. but anyway, he wanted to d
well, it turns out thomas dixon and woodrow wilson went to school together at johns hopkins university in baltimore. so ugly birds, a feather stick together. another columbia university historian would say william, dunning. he promoted the view that black people were incapable of governing themselves and reconstruction woue been a colossal error, reversing reconstruction was reversion to natural order, the same fact of raci inequality that s once encoded the natural order, is black people to be...
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Mar 16, 2024
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and ultimately founded the residency system at johns hopkins university. as we know it today. and really the father of so, so much of the medicine that we practice today. and when i went back in time to really understand why is it if we think about the present problem, that heart disease is the number one killer of women in the united states? we also are taught in medical school in many instances, certainly during my training, that the way that a woman presents with heart disease or a heart attack is atypical relative to the man. let's sit with that for a second. we are greater than 50% of the population is the number one killer of women in the united states. and somehow our symptoms are not average, are not typical. that's simply ridiculous. and it and it really highlights this how important the legacy of the words that we choose to describe women's health disease become so important. and for me, it was necessary to go back in time to understand who laid the groundwork for this. now, of course, sir william osler did amazing. absolutely incredible things for medicine and had s
and ultimately founded the residency system at johns hopkins university. as we know it today. and really the father of so, so much of the medicine that we practice today. and when i went back in time to really understand why is it if we think about the present problem, that heart disease is the number one killer of women in the united states? we also are taught in medical school in many instances, certainly during my training, that the way that a woman presents with heart disease or a heart...
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Mar 16, 2024
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hopkins university and a ba in biology from northwestern. welcome. senator jim tell, u.s. senator from missouri, which time he was a member of the senate armed services and energy and national resources committee. he was vice chair of the bipartisan commission of the prevention of wmd proliferation and terrorism. it has concluded that unless action is taken, a biological event in the united states is likely. he has criticized the federal government's readiness to deal with major public health crises. so have i, senator. mr. kenneth wayne steen serving as the undersecretary of intelligence and analysis at the department of homeland security. he was confirmed by the united states senate in june 2022. the office of intelligence and analysis, he's a member of and the department liaison to the u.s. intelligence community. he serves as the chief intelligence officer for dhs and reports directly to the dhs secretary and director of national intelligence. he also previously served as a commissioner on the bipartisan commission on bio defense as a me
hopkins university and a ba in biology from northwestern. welcome. senator jim tell, u.s. senator from missouri, which time he was a member of the senate armed services and energy and national resources committee. he was vice chair of the bipartisan commission of the prevention of wmd proliferation and terrorism. it has concluded that unless action is taken, a biological event in the united states is likely. he has criticized the federal government's readiness to deal with major public health...
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Mar 10, 2024
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now increase to five members by ed in john from new york and stephen hopkin from rhode island. recognize last name, nepotism was alive and well. the first fleet, admiral hopkins, was a brother of the congressman. they met on second story room of this building you see depicted on the slide that is ton tavern, which is commonly accepted the birthplace of the united states marines today. in fact i was sharing with dr. brooks how that building no longer in philadelphia. there's just a historical marker on the site where it but there are gentlemen that have purchased land in very close proximity to the original location that are now rebuilt in an exact replica of ton tavern and. hope to have that complete by the 250th anniversary on passamaquoddy advice, congress developed the plan from to conduct a naval campaign to capture the british principal naval base located in halifax, nova scotia. the committee presented its recommendation to the full congress on the 9th of november, and the following day congress resolved. i quote that two battalions of marines be raised, that they be dist
now increase to five members by ed in john from new york and stephen hopkin from rhode island. recognize last name, nepotism was alive and well. the first fleet, admiral hopkins, was a brother of the congressman. they met on second story room of this building you see depicted on the slide that is ton tavern, which is commonly accepted the birthplace of the united states marines today. in fact i was sharing with dr. brooks how that building no longer in philadelphia. there's just a historical...
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Mar 9, 2024
03/24
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and and john mack calls them experi answers because he does not want to. prejudge one way or another what actually happened to these people and that alien abductions really. come to the fore. this in the late 1960s and then really peak in the 1980s, early nineties and the the psychiatrist to study them really believed that something happens to these people and that they report report all of the signs trauma that would be consistent with people who have undergone actual trauma. you know, they up psychiatrically sort of very similar to abuse victims, you know, war veterans, you know, sort of other people who have variations of what we now call ptsd. and that they are have no interestingly, no share sort of psychopathy before reporting in experi ence and no shared psychopathy after. so is not a situation where you see, you know, people who are schizophrenic, who then report alien or people who report alien abductions then go on to be a diagnosed as bipolar, that they're are sort of this very wide spectrum of experience. here's and that as far as sort of menta
and and john mack calls them experi answers because he does not want to. prejudge one way or another what actually happened to these people and that alien abductions really. come to the fore. this in the late 1960s and then really peak in the 1980s, early nineties and the the psychiatrist to study them really believed that something happens to these people and that they report report all of the signs trauma that would be consistent with people who have undergone actual trauma. you know, they up...