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Kevin Buzzard

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Leo De Moura

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Mikko Tolonen

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Yair Berlin

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What do clinician-educators really think about assessment?

Series
Deanery Digests
Embed
Dr Nici Simms discusses her research exploring the different ways clinician-educators experience and understand assessment.
Assessment in the field of health professions, such as medicine, is of critical importance because it has implications for the public; for example, certification of health professionals as equipped for patient care. However, within health professions, little attention is paid towards the many health professionals who are involved in assessment – most of which are unlikely to have formal educational qualifications. In this episode, Dr Nici Simms discusses findings from interviews with clinician-educators responsible for assessment in undergraduate medical programmes and identifies four key levels at which they engage with and make sense of assessment in their work.

The Deanery Digest (a plain language summary) of this research can be viewed and downloaded here: https://www.education.ox.ac.uk/deanery-digest/what-do-clinician-educators-really-think-about-assessment/

Nici’s Socials: Twitter @DanicaAnneSims @OxfordMMEd, LinkedIn Danica (Nici) Simms

Learn more about the Oxford Education Deanery: https://www.education.ox.ac.uk/about-us/oxford-education-deanery/

Join our mailing list: https://forms.office.com/pages/responsepage.aspx?id=G96VzPWXk0-0uv5ouFLPkdxpy7LmNcFLujTOHXPmFwlUOUtYSFBOMklHRUhJMzhPRU9GRTJGRDFWQyQlQCN0PWcu&route=shorturl

Episode Information

Series
Deanery Digests
People
Danica Simms
Laura Molway
Keywords
medical education
drama
oral language
primary school
research
oxford education deanery
Department: Department of Education
Date Added: 15/05/2025
Duration: 00:10:26

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On Padmasambhava’s Names, Himalayan Syncretism, and the Apotheosis of the Fierce Guru

Series
Padmasambhava, Uḍḍiyāna and Tibet
Embed
Dan Hirshberg describes the origins of the famous 'Eight Names' of Padmasambhava, and also of his fierce form as 'Guru Dragpo'.
Padmasambhava earns only scattered mentions among imperial-era sources, and yet in later centuries he becomes the protagonist of a vibrant biographical tradition that would forever establish him as the catalyst for the adoption of Buddhism in Tibet. One key mode of elaborating him and his activities was through the introduction and delimitation of eight “names” (mtshan), each of which eventually becomes distinguished episodically, liturgically, and iconographically. Among them, the tiger-riding Dorjé Drolö (Rdo rje gro lod) emerged as a synthesis of tantric Buddhism, earlier devotionalism to Padmasambhava as the Fierce Guru (Gu ru drag po), and indigenous Himalayan religions. By analyzing Padmasambhava’s apotheosis through his names, this presentation seeks to shed light on the syncretism that contributed to a distinctly Tibetan Buddhism in the renaissance period.
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
Padmasambhava, Uḍḍiyāna and Tibet
People
Dan Hirshberg
Robert Mayer
Keywords
religion
tibetan buddhism
padmasambhava
nyangral
chowang
Department: Wolfson College
Date Added: 15/05/2025
Duration: 00:38:41

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Love, Pride, Fear, and Happiness: Zionism as a Case Study for 'National Emotions'

Series
Israel Studies Seminar
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What emotional traits are essential for building a nation? More broadly, are there such things as ‘national emotions,’ and if so, what are they?
In this lecture, I will explore these questions by analysing the Zionist case through the lens of the history of emotions. I will examine emotions where the national dimension is evident, such as honour and love of the homeland, alongside emotions that may seem less directly national, like fear and happiness.
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
Yair Berlin
Keywords
emotions
zionism
Israel
masculinity
Department: School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies (SIAS)
Date Added: 15/05/2025
Duration: 00:49:12

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Will Computers prove theorems?

Series
Strachey Lectures
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Kevin Buzzard: Will Computers prove theorems?
Will computers one day replace human mathematicians? Is this just around the corner, or decades away? Can neural networks spot patterns which humans have missed? Currently language models are great for brainstorming big ideas but are very poor when it comes to details. Can integrating a language model with a theorem prover like Lean solve these problems? Is the modern mathematical literature riddled with errors, and is it feasible to hope that a machine might find and even fix them? Is it possible to teach a computer the proof of Fermat's Last Theorem? And what do mathematicians make of all this? I'll talk about how modern developments in AI and theorem provers are beginning to affect mathematics.

Episode Information

Series
Strachey Lectures
People
Kevin Buzzard
Keywords
computers
humans
mathematics
Department: Department of Computer Science
Date Added: 15/05/2025
Duration: 00:46:25

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Formalizing the Future: Lean’s Impact on Mathematics, Programming, and AI

Series
Strachey Lectures
Embed
Leo De Moura: Formalizing the Future: Lean’s Impact on Mathematics, Programming, and AI
How can mathematicians, software developers, and AI systems work together with complete confidence in each other’s contributions? The open-source Lean proof assistant and programming language provides an answer, offering a rigorous framework where proofs and programs are machine-checkable, shared, and extended by a broad community of collaborators. By removing the traditional reliance on trust-based verification and manual oversight, Lean not only accelerates research and development but also redefines how we collaborate.
In this talk, I will highlight how Lean is being used to tackle challenging problems in mathematics, software verification, and AI research that depends on formally sound reasoning. I will also introduce the Lean Focused Research Organization (FRO), a non-profit dedicated to expanding Lean’s capabilities and community. By showcasing real-world examples, ranging from advanced research projects to industry-driven applications, I illustrate how Lean empowers us to innovate in a more reliable, transparent, and truly collective manner.

Episode Information

Series
Strachey Lectures
People
Leo De Moura
Keywords
ai
trust
community
Department: Department of Computer Science
Date Added: 15/05/2025
Duration: 00:47:14

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Books as Objects, Data and Meaning: A Computational Approach to Eighteenth-Century Book and Intellectual History

Series
Voltaire Foundation
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Annual Voltaire Foundation Lecture on Digital Enlightenment Studies: Mikko Tolonen on Books as Objects, Data and Meaning: A Computational Approach to Eighteenth-Century Book and Intellectual History
In this lecture, I will present a framework developed by the Helsinki Computational History Group and implemented together with its partners for investigating eighteenth-century book and intellectual history through three interconnected lenses: Books as Objects, Books as Data and Books as Meaning.

We treat bibliographical detail as a key factor for understanding the flow of ideas, examining also the physical attributes of books including the ornaments embedded within them. Using a dedicated machine learning pipeline, we automatically extract and categorize these ornaments at scale from the ECCO corpus, then integrate the results with bibliographical metadata. This approach enables us to trace publishing practices and how books circulated and transformed within the broader distribution of intellectual traditions, thus shedding new light on the activities of publishers and printers, such as Jacob Tonson and John Watts.

We also approach Books as Data by leveraging computational methods for text reuse, translation mining and cross-lingual investigation for reception studies—particularly focusing on English, Scottish and French Enlightenment corpora drawn from ECCO and Gallica. These pipelines illuminate textual overlaps and uncover patterns of influence, offering insights into large-scale cultural and historical questions—for instance, the eighteenth-century reception of David Hume’s essays—and providing the means to reevaluate fundamental issues such as the boundaries of translations.

Finally, we turn to Books as Meaning by applying cutting-edge large-language models. Through “meaning matching”, we not only quantify textual overlaps but also track how semantic content evolves over time, capturing cultural shifts once considered out of reach for computational study. By combining physical features of the books, computational workflows and interpretive practices, this threefold perspective—object, data, meaning—expands our capacity to analyze and reconstruct the multifaceted history of books, authors and ideas in the eighteenth century.

Episode Information

Series
Voltaire Foundation
People
Mikko Tolonen
Keywords
data
books
meaning
Department: Voltaire Foundation
Date Added: 15/05/2025
Duration: 01:05:04

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