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What is a Good Argument? Validity and Truth

Series
Critical Reasoning for Beginners
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Part four of a six-part series on critical reasoning. In this lecture we will learn how to evaluate arguments and how to tell whether an argument is good or bad, focusing specifically on inductive arguments.
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
Critical Reasoning for Beginners
People
Marianne Talbot
Keywords
inductive
critical reasoning
philosophy
argument
arguments
induction
reasoning
Department: Department for Continuing Education
Date Added: 11/03/2010
Duration: 00:52:58

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Nutritional Anthropology Lecture 2: Nutritional Quality and Child Growth

Series
Anthropology
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Professor Stanley Ulijaszek (Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Oxford) discusses nutritional factors that impact on the growth of children across the globe.
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
Anthropology
People
Stanley Ulijaszek
Keywords
anthropology
nutrition
Health
children
diet
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 10/03/2010
Duration: 00:51:04

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Anthropology seminar: Re-Tooling a Body with The Body

Series
Anthropology
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Assistant Professor Adam Frank (University of Central Arkansas) describes Three Ways of Teaching Tajiquan to the White Guy.

Episode Information

Series
Anthropology
People
Adam Frank
Keywords
anthropology
society
tai chi
china
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 10/03/2010
Duration: 00:49:46

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Medical Anthropology: Drink me... Take me... Read me...

Series
Anthropology
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Mark Lawrence, Director of First Read This (an Oxford company that aims to promote patient information leaflets), discusses how following instructions makes the patient feel better.

Episode Information

Series
Anthropology
People
Mark Lawrence
Keywords
anthropology
Medicine
Health
society
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 10/03/2010
Duration: 00:42:51

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Setting out Arguments Logic Book Style

Series
Critical Reasoning for Beginners
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Part three of a six-part series on critical reasoning. In this lecture we will focus on how to identify and analyse arguments, and how to set arguments out logic book-style to make them easier to evaluate.
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
Critical Reasoning for Beginners
People
Marianne Talbot
Keywords
critical reasoning
philosophy
reasoning
arguments
argument
Department: Department for Continuing Education
Date Added: 10/03/2010
Duration: 01:20:21

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Oxford Transitional Justice Research Conference - Justice and Self-Determination in West Papua

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Oxford Transitional Justice Research Conference - Justice and Self-Determination in West Papua
Podcasts from the Oxford Symposium on Justice and Self-Determination in West Papua held by the Oxford Transitional Justice Research group, part of the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies

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Interview with Professor Barry Cunliffe

Series
Archaeology
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Professor Barry Cunliffe of the School of Archaeology, University of Oxford discusses his life in archaeology.

Episode Information

Series
Archaeology
People
Barry Cunliffe
Megan Price
Keywords
barry cunliffe
archaeology
Department: Institute of Archaeology
Date Added: 08/03/2010
Duration: 00:21:21

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Relationships and the Internet

Series
Oxford Internet Institute - Lectures and Seminars
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This forum looks at the state of the art of academic research on relationships and the Internet and how this research informs research on the social aspects of the Internet in general, such as issues of trust and identity.
Research on the role of the Internet in meeting new people is an increasingly vital area of inquiry, and is illustrated by a burgeoning literature on such topics as online dating. However, the Internet may shape many other aspects of relationships beyond introducing individuals, such as in undermining or maintaining ongoing relationships, from courtship to marriage. This forum will look at the state of the art of academic research on relationships and the Internet and how this research informs research on the social aspects of the Internet in general, such as issues of trust and identity. Cross-national and cross-cultural aspects will be addressed in ways that can illuminate general cross-cultural trends and responses shaping use of the Internet in building and maintaining relationships. The forum will draw out the connections between this research and such emerging issues of policy and practice as involved in efforts to foster a digital economy in Europe. The forum will bring together researchers in the fields of online dating, social networking, and the role of information and communication technologies in interpersonal relationships with practitioners from a growing and international relationship industry and policy-makers concerned with consumer protection and media literacy in a digital age.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Internet Institute - Lectures and Seminars
People
William Dutton
Nicole Ellison
Bernie Hogan
Joseph B. Walther
Barry Wellman
Monica Whitty
Keywords
relationships
users
online dating
social
behaviour
internet
policy
trust
social networking
identity
Department: Oxford Internet Institute
Date Added: 08/03/2010
Duration: 01:22:22

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Those Golden Eggs Come From Somewhere: Internet Regulation at a Crossroads

Series
Oxford Internet Institute - Lectures and Seminars
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A discussion of how largely well-intentioned political and legal reactions to the highest-profile risks of ICT creates a danger of perhaps killing the goose that is giving us golden eggs of innovation, decentralization, and personal empowerment.
From its inception, many have recognized the Internet's potential as a liberating, decentralizing, and, yes, destabilizing technology but also its counter-potential as a controlling and centralizing technology. Over the last two decades, predictions about the social effects of the Internet have ranged from cybernetic anarchy (both utopian and distopian) to the instantiation of a fascistic regime of surveillance that would make Orwell look like a piker. Some see a winner-take-all economy of massive new monopolies emerging on the back of network effects, others see the growth of a new economy in which intermediaries are replaced by huge open networks of buyers and sellers trading with e-cash on anonymous electronic exchanges - and evading their taxes. Meanwhile enthusiasts of electronic democracy and popular empowerment offer a vision sharply at odds with that of Cassandras of globalization for whom the Internet provides yet another occasion for decision-making authority to seep away towards relatively undemocratic trans-national bodies. One would think that such contrasting predictions could not possibly all be correct. Yet, for the last decade, to a surprising extent both sets of trends have manifested themselves simultaneously. The question is whether those two trends can continue, or if instead we are witnessing the start of a collision between them. At present, 'the Internet' is neither 'fraud's playground' nor democracy's. (Indeed, there is more than one 'Internet'.) Rather, different groups of people doing different things with different objectives have moved down independent paths. Now, however, these trends find themselves meeting at a crossroads: Largely well-intentioned political and legal reactions to the highest-profile risks of communications technology create a danger of at least wounding and perhaps in some areas even killing the goose that is giving us golden eggs of innovation, decentralization, and personal empowerment. Advances in medical records technology might give patients greater control over their treatment, but could also further disempower them, and (in the US at least) seem even more likely to become another target for data mining and marketing. E-government holds out the promise of more involved and better informed citizens. The same technologies may, however, also empower nosey neighbors, or the nanny state's evil sibling Big Sister, who knows what is best for you and has honed predictive profiling to the point where many find their liberty practically encumbered without being formally curtailed. Most immediately, technologies, practices, and technical standards that may appear benign in a democracy - may in truth be benign in a democracy - may take on a more sinister cast when adopted in more repressive regimes faced with indigenous pressure for reform. For example, the world witnessed via YouTube as Iranian demonstrators marched to protest the theft of an election. The communicative freedom making the sending of those images possible is a fragile thing, and could fall before the creation of standards and practices intended to foil digital piracy half a world away.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Internet Institute - Lectures and Seminars
People
Michael Froomkin
Keywords
freedom
culture
communication
economics
dmocracy
innovation
Governance
society
regulation
internet
policy
politics
law
technology
networks
Department: Oxford Internet Institute
Date Added: 08/03/2010
Duration: 01:11:30

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When the Audience Clicks: Buying Attention in the Digital Age

Series
Oxford Internet Institute - Lectures and Seminars
Embed
Discussion of media buying and the attention-creation industry - showing how the fixation on audiences' click-like behaviour is a disruptive institutional force, and how buyers' new approaches to attention are creating new forms of social discrimination.
A huge part of the media business is about getting people's attention and proving it to advertisers. The goal is to present people with interesting stuff-articles, videos, music - so they will see commercial messages that ride along, and sometimes in, the material. At the start of the 21st century's second decade a new attention-creation industry struggles to be born out of the legacies of 20th century ad norms, the initiatives of powerful corporations, and dreams of target-marketing startups. Media buying has become the hub of the huge venture. Virtually ignored by academics, media buying involves purchasing space or time for advertising on outlets as diverse as billboards and radio, websites, mobile phones and newspapers. For decades, the activity was a backwater, a service part of advertising agencies that hired female liberal arts majors just out of college for the lowest-paying jobs on Madison Avenue. That has changed. During the past twenty years, media-buying firms and a wide array of satellite firms that feed them technology and data have become lucrative magnets for software engineers and financial statisticians of both sexes. What they are creating is nothing less than new ways of thinking about, and trading, audiences. The traditional way involved reaching out to the types of people who according to survey research tend to visit particular media locations-specific newspapers, particular magazines, one or another website. The new way draws as detailed a picture as possible of particular individuals based in large part on measurable physical acts they perform such as clicks, swipes, and mouseovers. The aim is to infer profiles from those measureable acts and other data and then engage the attention of the most commercially attractive individuals with persuasive strategies in whatever places and ways can prove the best return on investment. Based on research in progress, this talk will discuss media buying in the context of a longstanding (and recently energized) debate within media studies about the relative importance of human agency and institutional power in confronting 'the text.' It will then sketch key ramifications of the restructured attention-buying industry. It will show how the fixation on audiences' click-like behavior is a disruptive institutional force with cascading influences. A central argument is that media buyers' new approaches to attention are creating new forms of social discrimination in the public sphere.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Internet Institute - Lectures and Seminars
People
Joseph Turow
Keywords
economics
targeting
time
business
space
media buying
industry
attention
purchasing
behaviour
society
audience
statistics
advertising
internet
user
Department: Oxford Internet Institute
Date Added: 08/03/2010
Duration: 01:27:56

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