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The Folly of Secularism Dialogues on the theopolitics of the nation-state: Israel in a wider context. Session 1 Religion and Politics: a dialogue between William Cavanaugh (DePaul) and Timothy Fitzgerald (Centre for Critical Research on Religion)

Series
Israel Studies Seminar
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Timothy Fitzgerald and William Cavanaugh discuss the politics and history of the conceptual duality and its current usages. First session in a series of three
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Israel Studies Seminar
People
Timothy Fitzgerald
William Cavanaugh
Keywords
religion
secularism
Department: School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies (SIAS)
Date Added: 03/04/2019
Duration: 01:40:52

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Lincoln Leads in Material Culture

Series
Lincoln College
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Material Culture: The Power of the Image?
In this Lincoln Leads session we consider the power of the image. Our panel, composed of Dr Joshua Thomas (Lavery-Shuffrey Early Career Fellow in Roman Art and Archaeology), Sarah Bochicchio (2016, MSt in British and European History) and Robert Kerr (1971, Former Executive at Burberry), transverse the humanities as they discuss everything from archaeology and fashion, to history, diplomacy and advertising.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Lincoln College
People
Joshua Thomas
Robert Kerr
Sarah Bochicchio
Emily Glassford
Keywords
Lincoln College
lincoln leads
material culture
image
fashion
advertising
archaeology
Department: Lincoln College
Date Added: 02/04/2019
Duration: 00:50:46

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Lincoln Leads in Economics 2018

Series
Lincoln College
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Economics: Should money make the world go round?
This week our panellists, Professor Ian Crawford (Professor of Economics, Professorial Fellow at Nuffield College) and Jessica Milligan (2015, DPhil in Economics), discuss whether money should make the world go round. We learn more about experiments in altruism through the Human Sociality Project, as well as behavioural economics and how to predict change from policy intervention.

Episode Information

Series
Lincoln College
People
Ian Crawford
Jessica Milligan
Keywords
Lincoln College
lincoln leads
economics
Department: Lincoln College
Date Added: 02/04/2019
Duration: 00:36:20

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Strachey Lecture: Doing for our robots what evolution did for us

Series
Strachey Lectures
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Professor Leslie Kaelbling (MIT) gives the 2019 Stachey lecture. The Strachey Lectures are generously supported by OxFORD Asset Management.
We, as robot engineers, have to think hard about our role in the design of robots and how it interacts with learning, both in 'the factory' (that is, at engineering time) and in 'the wild' (that is, when the robot is delivered to a customer). I will share some general thoughts about the strategies for robot design and then talk in detail about some work I have been involved in, both in the design of an overall architecture for an intelligent robot and in strategies for learning to integrate new skills into the repertoire of an already competent robot.

Episode Information

Series
Strachey Lectures
People
Leslie Kaelbling
Keywords
computers
robots
engineering
robotics
ai
artificial intelligence
Department: Department of Computer Science
Date Added: 29/03/2019
Duration: 00:55:18

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Lincoln Leads in Engineering 2018

Series
Lincoln College
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The Lincoln Leads engineering panel discuss 'how is technology shaping the future?'
We look to the future in this Lincoln Leads session as our panellists consider the question 'how is technology shaping the future?' Dr Paul Stavrinou (Fellow in Engineering Science), Nicola Shaw CBE (Executive Director at National Grid), and DPhil student Holly Hathrell (Chromosome Biology), all bring their experience and expertise to the table and we learn how laser technology is shaping developments in engineering science, how the emergence of renewable energy shapes the operations of the National Grid, and how developments in AI and automation are themselves shaped by moral philosophy.

Episode Information

Series
Lincoln College
People
Paul Stavrinou
Nicola Shaw
Holly Hathrell
Xanita Saayman
Keywords
Lincoln College
lincoln leads
engineering
lasers
Energy
artifical intelligence
technology
Department: Lincoln College
Date Added: 27/03/2019
Duration: 00:49:26

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Medingen Manuscripts

Series
Medieval German Studies
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For the launch of the Polonsky Foundation funded digitisation project of Manuscripts from the German Speaking Lands, Henrike Lähnemann (Oxford) talks about manuscripts from the Cistercian Abbey of Medingen (Lower Saxony).
The manuscripts are now in Oxford, Hildesheim and Wolfenbüttel. More information https://hab.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/en/blog/blog-post-2/

Episode Information

Series
Medieval German Studies
People
Henrike Lähnemann
Keywords
german
history
manuscripts
Department: Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages
Date Added: 27/03/2019
Duration: 00:30:19

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Second part of the masterclass: The Medingen Manuscripts in the Bodleian

Series
Medieval German Studies
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Masterclass for the Leverhulme Doctoral Students with Henrike Lähnemann, filmed by Natascha Domeisen.
All the manuscripts featured are available via digital.bodleian search 'Medingen' on https://digital.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/ for more details)
O1 Oxford Easter Prayer-Book (c. 1500): Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS. Lat. liturg. f. 4 Community: fol. 174v (nuns and lay-people); fol. 28v (prayer for Lüneburg and the Abbess) Printing: fol. 141v (Glued-in maiden); fol. 217v (Glued-in lions); Musical Notation: fol. 90r / 283v-284r / 36v-37r Binding: Early 16th cent. roll with Venus, Prudentius and Lucretia
O2 Manual for the Provost (1470s): Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS. Lat. liturg. e. 18 Community: fol. 1r (ownership mark of Medingen); Reworking: fol. 2/2* (added in songs with lay-participation) Musical Notation: 81v-83r / 49v-50r Binding: Late 15th cent. stamps with 19th cent. ownership plaque
O4 Oxford Medingen Psalter (1510s-1530s): Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS. Don. e. 248 Community: fol. 7v (Obiit entry for Abbess Margarete Puffen), 20v-21r (punctus flexus) Reworking: fol. 18 (Low German replacement prayer), plaque in its 19th century setting Musical Notation: fol. 103r / 277v

Episode Information

Series
Medieval German Studies
People
Henrike Lähnemann
Keywords
history
manuscripts
german
Department: Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages
Date Added: 27/03/2019
Duration: 00:26:00

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Trailer: Medieval Manuscripts in the Bodleian

Series
Medieval German Studies
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A film of a class for 'Publication Beyond Print', the Leverhulme Doctoral Training Centre. Filmed at the Weston Library, Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford, by Natascha Domeisen.
Featured manuscripts: MS Add. E. 6; MS Laud. misc. 683; MS Douce 302; MS Lat. liturg. f. 4; MS Lat. liturg. e. 18; MS Don. e. 248. With thanks to Matthew Holford, Curator of Medieval Manuscripts, and the Bodleian Library

Episode Information

Series
Medieval German Studies
People
Daniel Wakelin
Henrike Lähnemann
Keywords
german
medieval
history
books
printing
Department: Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages
Date Added: 27/03/2019
Duration: 00:01:27

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The role of network meta-analysis in the evaluation of antidepressants for depression

Series
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Andrea Cipriani is NIHR Research Professor at the Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford and Honorary Consultant Psychiatrist at the NHS Foundation Trust in Oxford.

His main interest in psychiatry is evidence-based mental health and his research focuses on the evaluation of treatments in psychiatry, mainly major depression, bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. Dr Cipriani is author of 267 peer reviewed scientific publications (Scopus), mainly systematic reviews, meta-analyses and randomised controlled trials in psychopharmacology, however in the past few years he has also been investigating relevant issues in epidemiological psychiatry and public health, like patterns of drug consumption, risk of serious adverse events (most of all suicide and deliberate self harm) and implementation of treatment guidelines.

Being interested in the methodology of evidence synthesis, Dr Cipriani has now a specific focus on network meta-analysis and individual patient data meta-analysis, trying to assess the validity, breadth, structure and interpretation of these statistical approaches to better inform the mental healthcare decision-making process. He is currently Editor in Chief of Evidence-Based Mental Health (ebmh.bmj.com) and also on the Editorial Board of the Lancet Psychiatry, the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry and the Cochrane Collaboration for Depression, Anxiety and Neurosis

Episode Information

Series
Evidence-Based Health Care
People
Andrea Cipriani
Keywords
Health
Medicine
psychiatry
depression
Department: Medical Sciences Division
Date Added: 26/03/2019
Duration:

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The Ethics of Stress, Resilience, and Moral Injury Among Police and Military Personnel

Series
Uehiro Oxford Institute
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Professor Seumas Miller sets out how the use of lethal and coercive forces may erode moral character and cause moral injury.
According to leading psychiatrist Jonathan Shay whose patients are US war veterans, “Moral injury is an essential part of any combat trauma that leads to lifelong psychological injury. Veterans can usually recover from horror, fear and grief so long as ”what’s right” has also not been violated”. The focus of this paper is on moral injury in both military combatants and police officers. The role of combatants and that of police officer both necessarily involve the use of harmful methods – paradigmatically, the use of lethal force in the case of combatants, the use of coercive force, deception and the like in the case of police officers - in the service of good ends, notably national self-defence and law enforcement, respectively. However, the use of these methods sets up a dangerous moral dynamic, including so-called dirty hands/dirty harry scenarios, and the possibility of the erosion of moral character - and, in some cases, moral injury.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Uehiro Oxford Institute
People
Seumas Miller
Keywords
military ethics
police ethics
moral injury
stress
Department: Uehiro Oxford Institute
Date Added: 26/03/2019
Duration: 00:56:12

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