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Nov 26, 2014
11/14
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mitchell helped make you a fi philosopher. if you make a good marriage, good bless you.age, you become a philosopher. we married for the wrong reasons. he held the purse strings. i had to be a housewife and bring home the bacon as well as him. it wasn't a good marriage. in our wedding day his own mother said the first waffle said be used to hold up the pan and thrown out. very selfishly, you took all of our money. we were poor. went out and bought himself a porsche speedster. we got off to a bad start. but one good thing that came out of it. he was very skploetitive. when i started out writing, i hasn't figured out how to you do it. i thought i would just skim the surface of what i was contemplating. i considered it a failure and others started to see something in it. in its vagueness, it's interpretable. singing at 21, what do you know about life. people kind of made fun of it. i thought naber version, who sang it in her 70s. i heard it and paid her a compliment she went, it takes an older woman to bring that song to life. she goes what -- >> i thought oh, dear you neve
mitchell helped make you a fi philosopher. if you make a good marriage, good bless you.age, you become a philosopher. we married for the wrong reasons. he held the purse strings. i had to be a housewife and bring home the bacon as well as him. it wasn't a good marriage. in our wedding day his own mother said the first waffle said be used to hold up the pan and thrown out. very selfishly, you took all of our money. we were poor. went out and bought himself a porsche speedster. we got off to a...
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Nov 23, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN3
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when i look it barnes particularly, she is invested in it philosophically, and that really lifts up into a serious subject. think about our relationship to literature, and i think fashion can be thought about in the same way. form thatlid cultural writers were really interested in. >> have you found any surprises in your research? >> i was really surprised to learn -- one of the nicest discoveries i i could not find anything else about her. the resources at the library of congress are amazing, but i still could not find her name anywhere. paragraph about the work she did. name,s using a different slightly more formal. she was a young female journalist in new yord
when i look it barnes particularly, she is invested in it philosophically, and that really lifts up into a serious subject. think about our relationship to literature, and i think fashion can be thought about in the same way. form thatlid cultural writers were really interested in. >> have you found any surprises in your research? >> i was really surprised to learn -- one of the nicest discoveries i i could not find anything else about her. the resources at the library of congress...
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Nov 19, 2014
11/14
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LINKTV
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christ wears the robe of a greek philosopher... and his beardless, youthful face bears more than a passing resemblance to pagan images of apollo. the first great churches were variations of the roman assembly hall known as a basilica, with a central nave often ending in a semicircular apse and side aisles screened by colonnades. santa sabina finished in 432, is a particularly fine example of these simple but elegant early christian basilicas. the roman arch appears here in yet another form, springing directly from the column capitals. the insignia of the new christianized empire whose capital is no longer rome but constantinople are placed with perhaps unconscious symbolism atop the corinthian columns taken from a pagan building. once reviled and persecuted, christianity is triumphant. historians havargued about the causes of the fall of the roman empire ever since it happened when saint augustine wrote that the empire had been part of god's divine plan for the furtherance of christianity through the world that it had now fulfilled
christ wears the robe of a greek philosopher... and his beardless, youthful face bears more than a passing resemblance to pagan images of apollo. the first great churches were variations of the roman assembly hall known as a basilica, with a central nave often ending in a semicircular apse and side aisles screened by colonnades. santa sabina finished in 432, is a particularly fine example of these simple but elegant early christian basilicas. the roman arch appears here in yet another form,...
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Nov 2, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN2
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is a very accomplished, precipice get a philosopher in his own right. this book is one part philosophy, where does this concept come from, we are does it mean a document relationships and societal relationships and how we wage war, lots of really good granular, philosophical stop the one part law. lots of good detailed legal analysis. how do you assess the permissibility of a drone strikes against isis on the syrian border today? how do you assess when hamas holds human shields in gaza? what does that analysis look like? lots of issues in vietnam as well. the book is two parts pragmatist. one of the things i'm proudest of is the degree to which you in the book with current application fort bragg and from afghanistan. this twist, the title of the panel, politics, like outlook and tactics. it's proportionality that determines how those things in relate and we come out on a particular issue. one of the great scholar said that the term itself is clunky and inexpressive and this book is her answer to try to grab the clunkiness and inexpressive the other term
is a very accomplished, precipice get a philosopher in his own right. this book is one part philosophy, where does this concept come from, we are does it mean a document relationships and societal relationships and how we wage war, lots of really good granular, philosophical stop the one part law. lots of good detailed legal analysis. how do you assess the permissibility of a drone strikes against isis on the syrian border today? how do you assess when hamas holds human shields in gaza? what...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 6, 2014
11/14
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SFGTV
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. >> we have such a philosophical mission around bringing people together around food.al for me to come here. >> we want them to walk away feeling like they have the tools to make change in their lives. whether that change is voting on an issue in a way that they will really confident about, or that change is how to understand why it is important to support our small farmers. each class has a different purpose, but what we hope is that when people leave here they understand how to achieve that goal and feel that they have the resources necessary to do that. >> are you inspired? maybe you want to learn how to have a patch in your backyard or cook better with fresh ingredients . or grab a quick bite with organic goodies. find out more about 18 reasons by going to 18 reasons.org and learn about buy right market and creamery by going to buy right market.com. and don't forget to check out our blog for more info on many of our episodes at sf quick bites.com. until next time, may the fork be with you. ♪ ♪ >> so chocolaty. mm. ♪ >> oh, this is awesome. oh, sorry. i thought we w
. >> we have such a philosophical mission around bringing people together around food.al for me to come here. >> we want them to walk away feeling like they have the tools to make change in their lives. whether that change is voting on an issue in a way that they will really confident about, or that change is how to understand why it is important to support our small farmers. each class has a different purpose, but what we hope is that when people leave here they understand how to...
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Nov 28, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN2
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it was used in the philosophical inquiry in order to create a highly complex sonnet and other forms of poetry. we have over 450 letters but what is really remarkable is that we have 13 of the performing copies he used in the public readings if this is the first one that he ever did. the first reading that he ever gave was in 1853, and this one is the prompt copy or performance copy. first in birmingham in 1853 this was not yet in existence and he said about creating things people could listen to forever period for over the period of one hour and ten minutes or so said he had a binder tear out the addition and then he went through it over the period of a few years in the passes and then you can see that he wrote the passages because if he would have deleted something and then it was referred to later he had to somehow introduce it so that's what you see here. you also find pieces of wax where they were pasted together but he wasn't going to read at all postage stamps. this is the last group of photos that were ever taken in new york in 1867. that was the great final reading tour of the
it was used in the philosophical inquiry in order to create a highly complex sonnet and other forms of poetry. we have over 450 letters but what is really remarkable is that we have 13 of the performing copies he used in the public readings if this is the first one that he ever did. the first reading that he ever gave was in 1853, and this one is the prompt copy or performance copy. first in birmingham in 1853 this was not yet in existence and he said about creating things people could listen...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 2, 2014
11/14
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that's a philosophical comment. got to think about that. number 8, [speaker not understood] is our brain instincts and harmony with our evolutionary instincts. for example, to develop a brown instincts by experiencing through time and [speaker not understood] instincts by physically evolving through time. and my question he is have we turned love into a commercial success in this country yet? thank you for listening. >> thanks. next speaker. >>> hello, my name is dana rosea. i live in the mission. the bay area had extremely high rates of breast cancer. marin county had the highest rates of breast cancer in the entire world. studies show that hormone replacement therapy played a major role in half the cases of breast cancer in marin. hormone replacement therapy should have never been put on the market until it was thoroughly tested. it was a known carcinogen for decades and editorial in the journal of the medical association by the ama in 1939 says plainly, the possibility of carcinoma induced by estrogen cannot be ignored. we need to do a t
that's a philosophical comment. got to think about that. number 8, [speaker not understood] is our brain instincts and harmony with our evolutionary instincts. for example, to develop a brown instincts by experiencing through time and [speaker not understood] instincts by physically evolving through time. and my question he is have we turned love into a commercial success in this country yet? thank you for listening. >> thanks. next speaker. >>> hello, my name is dana rosea. i...
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Nov 28, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN2
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the used which, philosophical inquiry and in order to create highly formal and complex sonnets and other forms of poetry. >> host: what else do you want? >> guest: we have a wonderful dickens collection. over 550 letters. all the additions of books umpires. what is really remarkable is we have 13 for the performance copies for use in public readings. this is the first one he ever did. the first reading he ever gave was in 1853 and this is the prompt copy, performance copies for christmas carol. he first read it in birmingham and in 1853 this is not yet in existence and he set about creating a text that would be short enough that people could listen to for over a period of an hour, 10 minutes or so. so he had a finders tearout 49-point police and then he'd and then he grabbed whatever. a couple years and three editorial passes. you can see that he sometimes rewrote passages because if he would've deleted something something which a character with method or a scene described and referred to later, he had to introduce officially. that is what you see here. you also find bits of? pages paste
the used which, philosophical inquiry and in order to create highly formal and complex sonnets and other forms of poetry. >> host: what else do you want? >> guest: we have a wonderful dickens collection. over 550 letters. all the additions of books umpires. what is really remarkable is we have 13 for the performance copies for use in public readings. this is the first one he ever did. the first reading he ever gave was in 1853 and this is the prompt copy, performance copies for...
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Nov 23, 2014
11/14
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these years, even though, again, as my friend said, we approach things maybe from a different philosophical standpoint. that's fine. that's okay. but we've never, we've never let a disagreement on philosophy ever be the last word between us or the final word; anything like that. it's always well, that's that. what's next? the one thing, i really appreciate what my friend said, and that is when it comes to iowa, you don't find any daylight, when it comes to disasters, what we can do for iowa and iowans, we have had a wonderful relationship through all these years and it is one that i have cherished very much. i heard my friend -- i was making snoats -- making notes, say sometimes they say he's a cold hearted conservative and i'm a bleeding heart liberal. chuck grassley is not a cold heart the conservative. he cares deeply about the people. he cares deeply about the people of iowa. i hope i'm not a bleeding heart liberal. i hope i'm sort of a liberal that believes in individual responsibility. individual responsibility. so my friend has been a very caring conservative through all these years.
these years, even though, again, as my friend said, we approach things maybe from a different philosophical standpoint. that's fine. that's okay. but we've never, we've never let a disagreement on philosophy ever be the last word between us or the final word; anything like that. it's always well, that's that. what's next? the one thing, i really appreciate what my friend said, and that is when it comes to iowa, you don't find any daylight, when it comes to disasters, what we can do for iowa and...
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Nov 23, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN
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the larger, philosophical thing really goes to the heart of this and that is that i believe the president measures success in government by how many people are dependent on the government, by how many people are on medicaid, by how many people are on food stamps, but how many people are on unemployment. i personally believe that we should measure success in government by the opposite, by how many people are no longer dependent on the government, not because he pushed them out into the cold but because we understand that true freedom and prosperity does not, the mighty hand of the government but from the dignity that comes from work. >> a couple of things i would like to say. first of all, we have seen a significant improvement in ohio. we have single mothers now who can get treatment who could not get it because they were up to 100% of poverty. 138% of poverty, train the -- try to live on it, it is not great. now they are getting treated. secondly, ronald reagan expanded medicaid. ronald reagan expanded medicaid. ok? because he said there were people that were left out. when people cannot
the larger, philosophical thing really goes to the heart of this and that is that i believe the president measures success in government by how many people are dependent on the government, by how many people are on medicaid, by how many people are on food stamps, but how many people are on unemployment. i personally believe that we should measure success in government by the opposite, by how many people are no longer dependent on the government, not because he pushed them out into the cold but...
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Nov 3, 2014
11/14
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WJLA
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. >> always philosophical and funny. >> greta threeves air waves but not our hearts and mind. for her this is not an ending but the start of something new and exciting. >> this is my time and it's right. so i have no regrets at all. it's been a great run. >> greta was telling me one of her favorite moments was meeting pope john fall second and being surprised she was in her presence. and the words that came out of her mouth was golly you have a big job. >> just an amazing woman. i feel so lucky to be able to work alongside her. >> very good. >> let's talk about the weather. >> let's get to the cold temperatures. it's 47 at reagan national. we have a light breeze. it is nowhere as gusty as it was earlier. where i understand down to 10, 5 miles an hour max. 41 in baltimore. winds still out of the northwest t not as gusty as it was earlier. we had winds earlier between 25 and 35 miles an hour. air temperatures are in the 40's but low tchts will be falling below these wind chill temperatures. in fact upper 20's in the suburbs to middle 30's downtown. that is why a freeze warning i
. >> always philosophical and funny. >> greta threeves air waves but not our hearts and mind. for her this is not an ending but the start of something new and exciting. >> this is my time and it's right. so i have no regrets at all. it's been a great run. >> greta was telling me one of her favorite moments was meeting pope john fall second and being surprised she was in her presence. and the words that came out of her mouth was golly you have a big job. >> just an...
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Nov 6, 2014
11/14
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so this is a shift in a fundamental philosophical approach to education. is public education a public good that serves all of society or is it primarily a private good that serves only those who are benefitting from it? now the state of maryland is fortunate that our tuition is relatively low. at approximately tuition and fees approximately 9,400, which is about 4,000 dollars less than the medium of your peer institutions. and the reason it's lower is because our state appropriations are relatively high. it is approximately 12 -- i think 12,500 or so, so the total cost of education in the state of maryland is around $22,000. of which 40% is paid by the student, 60% is paid by the state. that is very different than the rest of the country where it's the ratio is reversed. that the proportion paid by the student is much higher than the proportion paid by the state. that is a fundamental issue and reflects, of course, political, economic and philosophical trend. with regard to the number of adjunct faculty, we have approximately around 4,000 faculty, about 1,
so this is a shift in a fundamental philosophical approach to education. is public education a public good that serves all of society or is it primarily a private good that serves only those who are benefitting from it? now the state of maryland is fortunate that our tuition is relatively low. at approximately tuition and fees approximately 9,400, which is about 4,000 dollars less than the medium of your peer institutions. and the reason it's lower is because our state appropriations are...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 26, 2014
11/14
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SFGTV
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commercial galleries around union square, and it is because of their core mission, to increase social, philosophical, and spiritual change my isolated individuals and communities. >> it gives a statement, the idea that a significant art of any kind, in any discipline, creates change. >> it is philosophy that attracted david linger to mount a show at meridian. >> you want to feel like your work this summer that it can do some good. i felt like at meridian, it could do some good. we did not even talk about price until the day before the show. of course, meridian needs to support itself and support the community. but that was not the first consideration, so that made me very happy. >> his work is printed porcelain. he transfers images onto and spoils the surface a fragile shes of clay. each one, only one-tenth of an inch thick. >> it took about two years to get it down. i would say i lose 30% of the pieces that i made. something happens to them. they cracked, the break during the process. it is very complex. they fall apart. but it is worth it to me. there are photographs i took 1 hours 99 the former s
commercial galleries around union square, and it is because of their core mission, to increase social, philosophical, and spiritual change my isolated individuals and communities. >> it gives a statement, the idea that a significant art of any kind, in any discipline, creates change. >> it is philosophy that attracted david linger to mount a show at meridian. >> you want to feel like your work this summer that it can do some good. i felt like at meridian, it could do some...
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Nov 23, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 37
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who used wit, philosophical inquiry in order to create highly formal and complex sonnets and other forms of poetry. >> what else do you want to shows? >> we have a wonderful dickens collection, over 550 letters, all have his first editions. what's remarkable come with 13 of his performance copies. the copies he used in public readings. this is the first one he ever did. the first week of her cave was a public reading, 1853 and this is the performance copies for a christmas carol. he first read it in birmingham in 1853. this is not yet in existence and he set about creating a text that could be short enough that people could listen to for over a period of an hour, 10 minutes or so. so he had a binder, put them in these blank leaves and then he went through it over a period of a couple of years. that our editorial passages. you can see that he sometimes we wrote passages because if he would have deleted something when a character was mentioned or a scene was described and it was referred to later, he had to somehow introduce it freshly. so that's what you see here. you also find bits of? w
who used wit, philosophical inquiry in order to create highly formal and complex sonnets and other forms of poetry. >> what else do you want to shows? >> we have a wonderful dickens collection, over 550 letters, all have his first editions. what's remarkable come with 13 of his performance copies. the copies he used in public readings. this is the first one he ever did. the first week of her cave was a public reading, 1853 and this is the performance copies for a christmas carol. he...
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Nov 26, 2014
11/14
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through all these years, even though, again, as my friend said, we approach things from a different philosophical standpoint. that is fine, that is ok. we have never let a disagreement on philosophy ever be the last word between us. or the final word. anything like that. it is always, that is that. what is next? the one thing i appreciate my friend said is that, when it comes to iowa, do not find any daylight when it comes to disaster, what we can do for iowa. we have had a wonderful relationship through all these years. it is a relationship i have cherished very much. that they friend say say he is a coldhearted conservative and i'm a bleeding heart liberal. i want to second the record straight. is not assley coldhearted conservative. here's a caring conservative. he cares deeply about people, the people of iowa too. and i hope i am not a bleeding heart liberal. i hope i am sort of a liberal that believes in individual responsibility. friend has been a very caring conservative through all these years. i think together, we have achieved important things for our state. economic development, world
through all these years, even though, again, as my friend said, we approach things from a different philosophical standpoint. that is fine, that is ok. we have never let a disagreement on philosophy ever be the last word between us. or the final word. anything like that. it is always, that is that. what is next? the one thing i appreciate my friend said is that, when it comes to iowa, do not find any daylight when it comes to disaster, what we can do for iowa. we have had a wonderful...
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Nov 8, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN2
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i think many philosophers and not just philosophers, some neurosciences make this a mistake about consciousnessgiving us all these functional features of the events in the brain, but where is the intrinsic quality of the conscious -- they are making the same mistake which is just more clouded, you might say, harder to see. the idea -- that a property is intrinsic. do i have time for one more quick thought experiment? i don't think i do so i will stop there. >> thank you. [applause] >> maybe you can bring it up when we are standing. i want to mention we will open up for questions and there are microphones in the room if you want to ask a question and afterward they will be signing copies of their books and you can talk with them after word in gordon chapel. what i am wondering if you can both briefly address this is what do you think your research and your measurements say about the notion of the cumin skull in consciousness? stanislas dehaene. >> that is very interesting. i am a member of the academy organizing a meeting about the mind and soul and i could find scientists for the first two. >>
i think many philosophers and not just philosophers, some neurosciences make this a mistake about consciousnessgiving us all these functional features of the events in the brain, but where is the intrinsic quality of the conscious -- they are making the same mistake which is just more clouded, you might say, harder to see. the idea -- that a property is intrinsic. do i have time for one more quick thought experiment? i don't think i do so i will stop there. >> thank you. [applause]...
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Nov 15, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN2
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i was talking to philosophers and people who helped me think about the conscience and what it means to have a conscience though the research was really wide ranging from me. some of it was very technical and based in medicine and required that i get a lot of help from people who had expertise in medicine and a lot of it was -- was more kind of social in nature and historical. >> that is my students, my former students all grown up now. >> by three months. i was wondering about another question. how did you, go through and make sure all the research was still accurate after you went through? >> that is a great question and i expect nothing less from you. how did i make sure everything was still correct when i finished? partly i had helped in that there was a copy editor doing some fact checking and i also went back myself and double checked all my sources. i also had two separate scientists read the book, one of the scientists was a source of mine but i also found a scientist who was not a source of mine to read the book for accuracy. despite all that effort, not everything that is in t
i was talking to philosophers and people who helped me think about the conscience and what it means to have a conscience though the research was really wide ranging from me. some of it was very technical and based in medicine and required that i get a lot of help from people who had expertise in medicine and a lot of it was -- was more kind of social in nature and historical. >> that is my students, my former students all grown up now. >> by three months. i was wondering about...
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Nov 6, 2014
11/14
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MSNBCW
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i'm andrea mitchell in washington, where president obama was philosophical after being blamed for theergizes me. because it means that this democracy is working. >> the president
i'm andrea mitchell in washington, where president obama was philosophical after being blamed for theergizes me. because it means that this democracy is working. >> the president
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46
Nov 30, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN2
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incredibly incontestably furious, philosophically resigned people. >> they also felt guilty but they also felt complicit in it all spent i think they realized that got out of hand. >> the irish have a real talent for suffering last night when present with the opportunity to suffer, they rarely turn away from it spent its true. my mother's family, the largest number of potential pilgrimage sites. that it spent everything about performance in their sports teams. [laughter] >> assuming we have another question the audience consuming the foundation of it, is the trust, the playing field is fair to give you there's been a betrayal of that trust that endangers our economic? >> i think there is an issue about trust, to put it mildly. i think the big, dark, difficult thing about inequality, i mean you know in some versions of political thought that is as it were a fair version of inequality which is where the more talented people do better. it's a right wing philosophy. i think the problem with where we are now is that there is a preview in the sense that it's clearly in evidence, correlatio
incredibly incontestably furious, philosophically resigned people. >> they also felt guilty but they also felt complicit in it all spent i think they realized that got out of hand. >> the irish have a real talent for suffering last night when present with the opportunity to suffer, they rarely turn away from it spent its true. my mother's family, the largest number of potential pilgrimage sites. that it spent everything about performance in their sports teams. [laughter] >>...
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277
Nov 1, 2014
11/14
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WJLA
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. >> so this is a big philosophical question.o dress up as celebrities, what do celebrities go as? >> that's a philosophical question. >> that's a big thought for you this morning. >> i have no answer for that. i do know there are no shortage of ideas from the big names in hollywood. and a whole lot of creative. so take a look. ♪ >> it's halloween weekend and the stars are pulling out all the stops. this year from jimmy kimmel's couch to the red carpet at heidi klum's 15th annual halloween bash stars underwent a metamorphosis. >> i'm really excited. this is my favorite holiday of the year. it's halloween and this year i am a butterfly. >> reporter: klum has become famous for her crazy costumes from last year's realistic old lady to her beautifully rendered goddess and all the other transformative costumes in between. ashanti was at the annual bashoing us her best rendition of personal belly dancer. >> i am a personal belly dancer for a prince in cairo. >> reporter: and jimmy kimmel made sure to celebrate the holiday in style as a
. >> so this is a big philosophical question.o dress up as celebrities, what do celebrities go as? >> that's a philosophical question. >> that's a big thought for you this morning. >> i have no answer for that. i do know there are no shortage of ideas from the big names in hollywood. and a whole lot of creative. so take a look. ♪ >> it's halloween weekend and the stars are pulling out all the stops. this year from jimmy kimmel's couch to the red carpet at heidi...
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Nov 8, 2014
11/14
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that's a great set of questions and i'm recalling the contemporary philosopher yogi berra that the future is hard to predict. so the answer is i don't know -- i take my page if you will from a book is called the black swan which has nothing to do with public health, nothing to do with disasters of the classical sense but certainly economic disasters. it's the whole notion of whether you can predict those things from happening. in retrospect it can. of course we can see the recession of 2000 may coming. look at all the abuses and look at all the loopholes that the answer is in some ways his contention is that in some ways you can predict these things and really the approach is really about preparedness to become resilient. by the way they're a good black swans and bad black swans and you have to be prepared to recognize either one and prepare to take care of the good and mitigate the bad. that is how i will leave it that in some ways we probably are not going to be 100% accurate in terms of our predictive capabilities but we certainly know what works for better preparedness for these thing
that's a great set of questions and i'm recalling the contemporary philosopher yogi berra that the future is hard to predict. so the answer is i don't know -- i take my page if you will from a book is called the black swan which has nothing to do with public health, nothing to do with disasters of the classical sense but certainly economic disasters. it's the whole notion of whether you can predict those things from happening. in retrospect it can. of course we can see the recession of 2000 may...
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Nov 9, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN
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it is very important to try to have the philosophical perspective and i want to start with you, tim. explaining where the whole issue of net neutrality is and where the idea comes from. >> thank you to pen for having us here. as dutch of importance and concern. i want to discuss why it is a give somebody historical background. daynt to the fcc the other to go to a hearing, with the chairman, there was a crowd of protesters there. people beating drums. i have to tell you when i started working on this issue in the 2000, we would be lucky to have 10 people show up. it was an obscure academic issue. there's a lot of reason why net neutrality has become an important issue. i want to describe some of the issues i think. it raises in our time questions of the power of private power in particular, and the exercise thereof. there is discussion in this country whether private power has gone too far. it puts into question the perennial issue of free speech. and the internet has been an incredible engine and some people feel it will be a direct. threat.ect -- if there will be a slow line create
it is very important to try to have the philosophical perspective and i want to start with you, tim. explaining where the whole issue of net neutrality is and where the idea comes from. >> thank you to pen for having us here. as dutch of importance and concern. i want to discuss why it is a give somebody historical background. daynt to the fcc the other to go to a hearing, with the chairman, there was a crowd of protesters there. people beating drums. i have to tell you when i started...
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Nov 29, 2014
11/14
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BLOOMBERG
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. >> there is a classic dilemma that philosophers debate called the trolley problem.f the car is on track and is it about to hit five people, should it be programmed to veer off the road and kill the driver or stay the course? >> right now, we program it to never get in a situation where it could kill five people. if it does get in a situation mike that, it will go for the smaller thing. >> what does that mean? >> if there are two things to hit, it would hit the smaller thing. the car would not know that there are five people in the other car. it thinks of the environment as moving objects are to be avoided. we have situations where i was leading the team and the car had to face the couch and it was hard for it to drive around. now we have programmed the right evasion behavior in. >> what if it is not a couch, if it is a human being. doesn't know the difference between things and people? >> it knows about pedestrians, cars. it knows different categories. >> now, there is a different iteration of the car that you and i drove in which is a car that does not even have th
. >> there is a classic dilemma that philosophers debate called the trolley problem.f the car is on track and is it about to hit five people, should it be programmed to veer off the road and kill the driver or stay the course? >> right now, we program it to never get in a situation where it could kill five people. if it does get in a situation mike that, it will go for the smaller thing. >> what does that mean? >> if there are two things to hit, it would hit the smaller...
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67
Nov 16, 2014
11/14
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WPVI
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these are the same people i'dologicicly and philosophically attacked us on september 11. they have lands the size of indiana. they have sophisticated weapons and govern are structure and the ability to export their brand of terrorism to the united states and elsewhere over time. so it's very real threat. >> what you would you like to see happen? >> the president has to demonstrate the will to succeed and vince the -- convince the sunni arab states and the turkeys to help. it's going to take troops on the grounds it should come from the sunni arabs and the turks who are most at risk. >> thank you for being here, good to see you. we'll be back with more inside story and the panelist discussion next >> welcome back to inside story, time to meet our insiders this week, george b up rell. rene amoore and terry madonna and larry plat, obviously a journalist, glad to have you back. not only is there big gridlock people are expecting out of washington, hope to see something happen with the republican controlled out and the democratic president. we have a lot of changes going on wi
these are the same people i'dologicicly and philosophically attacked us on september 11. they have lands the size of indiana. they have sophisticated weapons and govern are structure and the ability to export their brand of terrorism to the united states and elsewhere over time. so it's very real threat. >> what you would you like to see happen? >> the president has to demonstrate the will to succeed and vince the -- convince the sunni arab states and the turkeys to help. it's going...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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28
Nov 12, 2014
11/14
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SFGTV
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president may continue public comment to another time during the meeting. 12341234 >> i have a new philosophical thing as i heard from the web the book said of the diary of king napoleon once said. i shall not waste my energy, therefore i would rather be, i shall not waste i shall always find time. >> next speaker. >> good afternoon, supervisors. in the lake of the world series victory which should have been caused for --? san francisco. instead it served as a sad reminder to see how ill prepared and in adequate staffed we are. on wednesday evening the world witnessed our city shamed and embarrassed. residential process damaged. defacing businesses with graffiti. public urination. fires being discharged illegally. physical -- altercation and gun violence. thesen suing post game mob scenes in san francisco painted a different source, the san francisco police department in a run away shutdown. what did our city government do about this? they rewarded the city and fans with a victory parade, of course. go figure. most educators and parents know that you cannot promote healthy development and teach
president may continue public comment to another time during the meeting. 12341234 >> i have a new philosophical thing as i heard from the web the book said of the diary of king napoleon once said. i shall not waste my energy, therefore i would rather be, i shall not waste i shall always find time. >> next speaker. >> good afternoon, supervisors. in the lake of the world series victory which should have been caused for --? san francisco. instead it served as a sad reminder to...
1,203
1.2K
Nov 21, 2014
11/14
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COM
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the got philosopher immanuel kant. here's what i got.n i eat bacon i want to make sure it's facing forward. that's where the flavor comes from. >> jon: you can tell the difference of pork raised in crates where they can't move and pigs raised more humanity. >> probably not. i just don't like pigs facing different directions. they should move. it's a gut thing. [laughter] >> jon: final thoughts hasan. >> i don't even, okay. i just want everybody to know that history will judge us by how we treat the creatures who serve us. >> jon: that's beautiful. jordan, do you have something you want to close with. [applause] >> that's nice, nice. why don't you try one. >> pigs shouldn't turn around. it's like friday night lights. clogged hearts can't move. >> vo: no one ever claims to be ordinary. everyone wants to be the best. but what does that really mean? to us, it means giving you a wide selection of products, both online and in-store. expert advice. our geek squad agents to get you up and running. and thanks to our price match guarantee, you'll
the got philosopher immanuel kant. here's what i got.n i eat bacon i want to make sure it's facing forward. that's where the flavor comes from. >> jon: you can tell the difference of pork raised in crates where they can't move and pigs raised more humanity. >> probably not. i just don't like pigs facing different directions. they should move. it's a gut thing. [laughter] >> jon: final thoughts hasan. >> i don't even, okay. i just want everybody to know that history will...
203
203
Nov 25, 2014
11/14
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COM
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the got philosopher immanuel kant. here's what i got.bacon i want to make sure it's facing forward. that's where the flavor comes from. >> jon: you can tell the difference of pork raised in crates where they can't move and pigs raised more humanity. >> probably not. i just don't like pigs facing different directions. they should move. it's a gut thing. [laughter] >> jon: final thoughts hasan. >> i don't even, okay. i just want everybody to know that history will judge us by how we treat the creatures who serve us. >> jon: that's beautiful. jordan, do you have something you want to close with. [applause] >> that's nice, nice. why don't you try one. >> pigs shouldn't turn around. it's like friday night lights. clogged hearts can't move. >> [announcer:] apples are good. as strongbow hard cider, better. but strongbow over ice is the best. enjoying strongbow over ice with your slow motion horse, the bestest. ♪ strongbow, world's number one hard cider . warm up to winter with a white chocolate delight from mccafe. uright now when you get a new
the got philosopher immanuel kant. here's what i got.bacon i want to make sure it's facing forward. that's where the flavor comes from. >> jon: you can tell the difference of pork raised in crates where they can't move and pigs raised more humanity. >> probably not. i just don't like pigs facing different directions. they should move. it's a gut thing. [laughter] >> jon: final thoughts hasan. >> i don't even, okay. i just want everybody to know that history will judge us...
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88
Nov 24, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN3
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a famous swiss philosopher fashioned the theory of synchronicity, in which one seemingly isolated event, like dropping a pebble in a pond of water, concentric circles move out forever. reagan's speech, following goldwater's approval, is that couple that sends out concentric circles forever. not only would we not be here at beay's meeting -- we might writing in cyrillic and eating borscht. losing the cold war. it is not too far-fetched of a notion to say it was possible for the soviets to win the cold war. everything,hanges including the arc of american history. reagan literally bends light, because he changes the future. we are on a path toward a more collectivist state. he rolled that back. the backdrop to reagan giving the speech -- i want to get into that a little bit. he did not live a serendipitous life, just going from opportunity to opportunity, always winning, hitting singles, doubles, and home runs. the early 1960's were a pretty bad time for ronald reagan. he had lost his ge career in 1962. in 1953 as to work the host of ge theater, the top-ranked show for many years on cbs. h
a famous swiss philosopher fashioned the theory of synchronicity, in which one seemingly isolated event, like dropping a pebble in a pond of water, concentric circles move out forever. reagan's speech, following goldwater's approval, is that couple that sends out concentric circles forever. not only would we not be here at beay's meeting -- we might writing in cyrillic and eating borscht. losing the cold war. it is not too far-fetched of a notion to say it was possible for the soviets to win...
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45
Nov 4, 2014
11/14
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LINKTV
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series with fantastic conversations and film segments exploring the most urgent, existential, philosophical and spiritual issues of the 21st century. so, settle back, take a slow deep breath, as we join our trusted guide and host, phil cousineau, on this fascinating episode of "global spirit," the first internal travel series.
series with fantastic conversations and film segments exploring the most urgent, existential, philosophical and spiritual issues of the 21st century. so, settle back, take a slow deep breath, as we join our trusted guide and host, phil cousineau, on this fascinating episode of "global spirit," the first internal travel series.