Analysing Arguments: How to Identify Premises and Conclusions |
Lecture 2 of 6 in Marianne Talbot's series on critical reasoning for beginners. |
Marianne Talbot |
20 March, 2014 |
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The Nature Of Argument: How to Recognise Arguments |
Lecture 1 of 6 in Marianne Talbot's series on critical reasoning for beginners. |
Marianne Talbot |
20 March, 2014 |
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An Introduction to the Oxford University International Politics Summer School |
A short introduction to the Oxford University International Politics Summer School by the Programme Director and students. |
Paul Chaisty, Mohammed Al Hinai, Fiona Glenister, Nelleke Hijmans, Timothy Sloan |
10 March, 2014 |
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An Introduction to the Oxford University Creative Writing Summer School |
A short introduction to the Oxford University Creative Writing Summer School by the Programme Director and students. |
Tara Stubbs, John Collins, Dalia Hosn, Nathan Smale, Alisa Smith |
10 March, 2014 |
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‘Archaeology in Practice’ at Oxford University Department for Continuing Education |
Information about the online short course: ‘Archaeology in Practice’ and other online short courses. |
Wendy Morrison |
10 March, 2014 |
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Studying archaeology at Oxford University Department for Continuing Education |
Information about the range of part-time archaeology courses on offer at Oxford University Department for Continuing Education. |
David Griffiths |
10 March, 2014 |
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The archaeology training excavation at Dorchester-on-Thames |
Students on the Undergraduate Certificate in Archaeology learn a range of archaeological techniques on the training excavation at Dorchester-on-Thames, Oxfordshire. |
Wendy Morrison, Jeanne Peskett, William Garrard, David Griffiths, Marie-Elizabeth Keil |
10 March, 2014 |
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Britain's economic problems and prospects |
At the time of the 2008 global credit crunch, I participated in Oxford's online debate on whether the economic crisis sounded the death knell for laissez faire capitalism. |
Jonathan Michie |
7 October, 2013 |
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Party games: coalition government in British politics |
This session will look at the history of coalition government in British politics over the past 200 years and discuss some of the constitutional implications of the current Conservative-Liberal Democrat government under David Cameron and Nick Clegg. |
Angus Hawkins |
7 October, 2013 |
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Philosophy in 45 minutes! |
Philosophy deals with the BIG questions of life: does God exist? How should we live? What is truth? What are numbers and do we need them? Does space come to an end or is it infinite? NO SOUND FOR FIRST 3 MINUTES. |
Marianne Talbot |
7 October, 2013 |
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Fitzgerald beyond Gatsby |
With the recent resurgence in interest in F. Scott Fitzgerald following Baz Luhrmann's imaginative film adaptation of Fitzgerald's 1925 novel The Great Gatsby have come the inevitable cliches of the 'lost generation' and the 'American dream'. |
Tara Stubbs |
7 October, 2013 |
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Gustav Klimt and secessionist Vienna |
Vienna around 1900 witnessed a vital and anxious surge in art, design, literature and music. This creativity also inspired psychological investigations into the inner self and dreams, most famously by Sigmund Freud. |
Claire O'Mahony |
7 October, 2013 |
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Surprises - for you and for mathematics |
In 1900, pure mathematics had the smug air of a finished product. We thought we knew what it was and we thought we knew how it was done. |
Bob Lockhart |
7 October, 2013 |
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International education: the transformative effect of student migration |
In this short lecture we will consider what the internationalisation of higher education means, and the global implications of international mobility - on the students, on their 'receiving' countries and on their places of origin. |
Johanna Waters |
7 October, 2013 |
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Why music matters in your life |
Imagine a world without music. No music on the radio, no concerts, no musical instruments. No background music in films and television. No music at our weddings, funerals, religious worship or sporting events. |
Jonathan Darnborough |
7 October, 2013 |
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Where's all the wildlife? Flooding and the importance of landscape conservation |
The Oxfordshire floods of 2007, 2008 and 2012 caused enormous disruption to homes, agriculture and local businesses, but what were the consequences for wildlife? |
Kerry Lock |
7 October, 2013 |
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What's so great about Austen? Isn't she just bonnets and balls? |
Some film and tv adaptations of Jane Austen's novels might give the impression that the stories are little more than Mills and Boon-type romances in empire-line frocks. |
Sandie Byrne |
7 October, 2013 |
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Too many words? An irreverent guide to screenwriting |
Aristotle's 'Poetics' is regarded as the earliest surviving work of dramatic theory. How much notice do Goldman, Godard, Bertolucci or indeed Tarantino pay to his classic tenets of drama? |
Victor Glynn |
4 October, 2013 |
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Who needs migrant workers? Controversies in international labour migration |
The regulation of labour immigration is among the most important and controversial public policy issues in high-income countries. |
Martin Ruhs |
4 October, 2013 |
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A history of England in five and a half maps |
There is a story behind every map. Generation after generation, we have imprinted ourselves on the land we live upon. Our depictions of that land, in maps, have recorded social attitudes and social change like no other source. |
Jonathan Healey |
4 October, 2013 |
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Spotlight on Archaeology |
Find out about how archaeologists uncover the past using a range of techniques, including excavation, survey and scientific analysis. |
Alison MacDonald |
4 October, 2013 |
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Anniversaries, feasts and commemoration in the Middle Ages |
Ritual celebrations were at the heart of life in medieval communities. The passage of time was articulated by the cycle of the seasons, the exigencies of husbandry and of trade, all inextricably bound up with religious holidays and anniversaries. |
Elizabeth Gemmill |
4 October, 2013 |
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Speaking stories: the oral roots of poetry |
We'll be looking at Beowulf and the epic as a way of passing on experience and history. See your own life as an epic! Where would you start? What would you leave out? Surprise yourself - and us! |
Jenny Lewis |
4 October, 2013 |
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The art of war: The Hundred Years' War in twenty objects |
This lecture will examine one of the longest wars in history, fought between England and France from 1337 to 1453 by scrutinising twenty objects. |
Janina Ramirez |
4 October, 2013 |
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Gender |
Gender relations shape our everyday interactions at work, on the street and in the home. Our speakers cover a wide range of topics, from historical, legal and therapeutic perspectives. |
Linda Scott, Frances Richardson, Nazila Ghanea-Hercock, Alistair Ross |
12 June, 2013 |
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Decay |
The presentations focus on the importance of disappearance as much as appearance, presence as well as absence, and growth in the guise of degeneration, arguing from difference perspectives for the importance of malaise or corrosion as a subject of study. |
David Howard, Martin Neubert, Robert Vanderplank, Tara Stubbs |
22 May, 2013 |
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The Num8er My5teries |
Professor Marcus du Sautoy - mathematician, footballer and amateur musician - shows how mathematicians have contributed to our understanding of the world around us for millennia. |
Marcus du Sautoy |
19 December, 2012 |
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Economics: which way now? |
Dr Martin Ruhs introduces the Department's expanding portfolio of economics courses, in the context of the on-going debate about where economics is headed, starting with the world economic downturn. |
Martin Ruhs |
19 December, 2012 |
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Henry II and the Twelfth-Century World |
Dr Elizabeth Gemmill introduces the most remarkable monarch, Henry II, whose dominions stretched from the south west of France to the north of Britain. His achievements have lasted until our own times, but his reign was marred by tragedy too. |
Elizabeth Gemmill |
19 December, 2012 |
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W.B. Yeats and the Ghost Club |
Dr Tara Stubbs uses exciting new research findings to discuss the close links between Yeats's attendances at the Ghost Club during the 1910s-1920s, his (sometimes amusing) spiritualist experiments, and his poetic works. |
Tara Stubbs |
19 December, 2012 |
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Boulevards, Brushwork and Bugattis : Modern Art and Design in Paris |
In the nineteenth-century Paris was transformed into an alluring spectacle of cafés, department stores and exhibitions. Dr Claire O'Mahony looks at the inspiration of the modern city of light from Impressionist painters to the glamour of Art Deco. |
Claire O'Mahony |
19 December, 2012 |
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Philosophy in 45 minutes! |
Marianne Talbot takes participants on a romp through the nature of philosophy for complete beginners discussing some of the BIG questions of life: does God exist? How should we live? What is truth? Does space come to an end or is it infinite? |
Marianne Talbot |
19 December, 2012 |
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From global credit-crunch to Eurocrisis and double-dip recession: whatever next? |
The 25 years up to the 2007-8 global credit crunch were ones of privatisation, deregulation, financialisation and, in the UK, demutualisation. Professor Jonathan Michie will discuss the causes and consequences of the global credit crunch. |
Jonathan Michie |
19 December, 2012 |
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Shedding light on the dark ages |
The Dark Ages are traditionally seen as nasty, brutish and short - a cultural and intellectual waste land, with virtually nothing worthy of art historical consideration. But Janina argues this is far from the truth. |
Janina Ramirez |
5 December, 2012 |
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Morphogenesis Then and Now |
Philip Maini, Oxford University, gives a talk for the Alan Turing Centenary weekend. |
Philip Maini |
22 October, 2012 |
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Congruent Worlds: Turing, Lovelace and Babbage |
Doron Swade, Royal Holloway, Univ. of London, gives a talk for the Alan Turing Centenary weekend. |
Doron Swade |
22 October, 2012 |
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What Alan Turing might have discovered |
Stephen Wolfram, founder and CEO of Wolfram Research and creator of Mathematica, gives a talk for the Alan Turing Centenary weekend. |
Stephen Wolfram |
22 October, 2012 |
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Turing in the History of Software |
Cliff Jones, Newcastle University, gives a talk for the Alan Turing Centenary Weekend. |
Cliff jones |
22 October, 2012 |
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Turing in the age of the Internet and the quantum computer |
Samson Abramsky, Oxford University, gives a talk for the Alan Turing Centenary weekend. |
Samson Abramsky |
22 October, 2012 |
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Decidability: The Entscheidungs problem |
Robin Whitty, London South Bank University, gives a talk for the Alan Turing Centenary weekend. |
Robin Whitty |
22 October, 2012 |
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Turing and the Public Consciousness: Turing 2.0(12) |
Sue Black, University College London, Turing and the Public Consciousness: Turing 2.0(12). |
Sue Black |
22 October, 2012 |
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Welcome Address |
Jonathan Bowen, London South Bank University. |
Jonathan Bowen |
22 October, 2012 |
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Ethics |
Ethical decisions, and often dilemma, lie at the heart of all research methodologies and practice. Marianne Talbot, course director in Philosophy, chaired three presentations from across the disciplines. |
Marianne Talbot, Abi Sriharan, Kate Blackmon, David Griffiths |
20 June, 2012 |
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Revolution |
Revolutionary concepts continually shape and uproot research agendas, and occasionally researchers themselves. This seminar examined the many ways revolution impacts on research. |
Adrian Stokes, Kerry Lock, Peter Watson |
20 June, 2012 |
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Risk |
The inaugural research seminar invited three speakers to consider how the concept and experience of 'risk' influenced their current research. |
David Howard, Jonathan Michie, Nigel Mehdi, Adam Josephs |
20 June, 2012 |
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Reading List for Bioethics: An Introduction |
Reading List to accompany the Bioethics: An Introduction podcast series. |
Marianne Talbot |
30 May, 2012 |
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Common moral arguments: 'morality? It's all a matter of opinion' |
Final of nine short introductory podcasts on Bioethics by Marianne Talbot. |
Marianne Talbot |
29 May, 2012 |
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Common moral arguments: 'it's too risky' (the Precautionary Principle) |
Eighth of nine short introductory podcasts on Bioethics by Marianne Talbot. |
Marianne Talbot |
29 May, 2012 |
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Common moral arguments: 'it's not natural' and 'it's disgusting' |
Seventh of nine short introductory podcasts on Bioethics by Marianne Talbot. |
Marianne Talbot |
29 May, 2012 |
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Induction |
Sixth of nine short introductory podcasts on Bioethics by Marianne Talbot. |
Marianne Talbot |
29 May, 2012 |
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Deduction |
Fifth of nine short introductory podcasts on Bioethics by Marianne Talbot. |
Marianne Talbot |
29 May, 2012 |
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Arguments |
Fourth of nine short introductory podcasts on Bioethics by Marianne Talbot. |
Marianne Talbot |
29 May, 2012 |
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Utilitarianism |
Third of nine short introductory podcasts on Bioethics by Marianne Talbot. |
Marianne Talbot |
29 May, 2012 |
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Deontology |
Second of nine short introductory podcasts on Bioethics by Marianne Talbot. |
Marianne Talbot |
29 May, 2012 |
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Virtue Ethics |
First of nine short introductory podcasts on Bioethics by Marianne Talbot. |
Marianne Talbot |
29 May, 2012 |
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Inspector Morse in Print and on TV |
Highly acclaimed crime writer Colin Dexter, OBE, talks at the Crime Fiction Day at St John's College, University of Oxford, on the theme of Inspector Morse. |
Colin Dexter |
15 May, 2012 |
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Dons, Deaths and Detectives: Oxford in Crime Fiction |
Professor Colin Bundy, University of Oxford, talks at the Crime Fiction Day at St John's College around the history of detective fiction in Oxford. |
Colin Bundy |
15 May, 2012 |
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Cluedo and Cadavers: British Detective Fiction |
Peter Kemp, the Sunday Times fiction editor, talks at the Crime Fiction Day at St John's College, University of Oxford, on the theme of British Detective Fiction. |
Peter Kemp |
15 May, 2012 |
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Further reading and more... |
So you've finished this series of podcasts. Find out where to go from here... |
Marianne Talbot |
16 April, 2012 |
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Further reading and more... |
So you've finished this series of podcasts. Find out where to go from here... |
Marianne Talbot |
16 April, 2012 |
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Further reading and more... |
So you've finished this series of podcasts. Find out where to go from here... |
Marianne Talbot |
16 April, 2012 |
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Part 5: Questions and Answers |
Marianne Talbot presents the last of five episodes of the Romp through the Philosophy of Mind, engaging in a questions and answers discussion with the audience. |
Marianne Talbot |
10 April, 2012 |
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Veterinary Vaccines: Protecting livestock - saving human life |
Lecture given by Dr Michael Witty, former Chairman, GALVmed, during Human and Veterinary Vaccinology short course November 2011. |
Michael Witty |
16 March, 2012 |
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Effective Introduction of New Vaccines: "the UK experience" |
Lecture given by Prof David Salisbury, Director of Immunisation, UK Department of Health, during Human and Veterinary Vaccinology short course November 2011. |
David Salisbury |
16 March, 2012 |
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Part 4: Are We Asking the Wrong Questions? |
Marianne Talbot presents the fourth of five episodes of the Romp through the Philosophy of Mind, wondering if we are asking the wrong questions? |
Marianne Talbot |
7 February, 2012 |
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Part 3: If Physicalism Won't Work, What is the Alternative? |
Marianne Talbot presents the third of five episodes of the Romp through the Philosophy of Mind, on alternatives to Physicalism. |
Marianne Talbot |
7 February, 2012 |
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Part 2: Non-Reductive Physicalisms and the Problems they Face |
Slides to accompany Marianne Talbot's second of five episodes of the Romp through the Philosophy of Mind, on Non-Reductive Physicalisms and the problems they face. |
Marianne Talbot |
7 February, 2012 |
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Part 1: Identity Theory and Why it Won't Work |
Marianne Talbot presents the first of five episodes of the Romp through the Philosophy of Mind, on Identity Theory and why it won't work. |
Marianne Talbot |
7 February, 2012 |
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Making Up Your Mind |
Part 7 of 7 in Marianne Talbot's "A Romp Through Ethics for Complete Beginners". This final episode is a time to take stock and bring together all the strands we've considered. |
Marianne Talbot |
8 August, 2011 |
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Utilitarianism: Mill and the utility calculus |
Part 6 of 7 in Marianne Talbot's "A Romp Through Ethics for Complete Beginners". A reflection on Mill's account of morality, and the greatest happiness of the greatest number. |
Marianne Talbot |
27 June, 2011 |
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Deontology: Kant, duty and the moral law |
Part 5 of 7 in Marianne Talbot's "A Romp Through Ethics for Complete Beginners". In this episode we reflect on Kant's account of morality, including the categorical imperative. |
Marianne Talbot |
3 June, 2011 |
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Humean Ethics: Non-Cognitivism, the passions and moral motivation |
Part 4 of 7 in Marianne Talbot's "A Romp Through Ethics for Complete Beginners". In this episode we reflect on Hume's account of morality and his rejection of reason as the source of morality. |
Marianne Talbot |
2 June, 2011 |
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Virtue Ethics: virtue, values and character |
Part 3 of 7 in Marianne Talbot's "A Romp Through Ethics for Complete Beginners". In this episode we will reflect on Aristotle's account of morality and the centrality of the virtues in this account. |
Marianne Talbot |
24 May, 2011 |
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Freedom, knowledge and society: the preconditions of ethical reasoning |
Part 2 of 7 in Marianne Talbot's "A Romp Through Ethics for Complete Beginners". In this episode we examine the preconditions of ethical reasoning and make a comparison between the law of the land and the moral law. |
Marianne Talbot |
20 May, 2011 |
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Rules, truths and theories: an introduction to ethical reasoning |
Part 1 of 7 in Marianne Talbot's "A Romp Through Ethics for Complete Beginners". In this episode we examine moral dilemmas, moral truth and moral knowledge, freewill and determinism. |
Marianne Talbot |
19 May, 2011 |
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The God Delusion: Questions and Answers |
Stephen Law and Marianne Talbot take part in a panel discussion with Tom Fisher, chairman of the Oxford Philosophical Society, chairing. They answer questions form the audience about The God Delusion and discuss the philosophical issues surrounding it. |
Marianne Talbot, Stephen Law, Tom Fisher |
20 May, 2010 |
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Attacking the God hypothesis in other ways |
Stephen Law gives the fourth talk on Richard Dawkins' The God Delsuon as part of The God Delusion Weekend. |
Stephen Law |
20 May, 2010 |
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Has Dawkins shown that God is Redundant? |
Marianne Talbot presents the third talk on Richard Dawkins' The God Delusion as part of The God Delusion Weekend. |
Marianne Talbot |
20 May, 2010 |
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The Strengths and Weaknesses of The God Delusion |
Stephen Law givs the second talk on Richard Dawkins' The God Delusion as part of The God Delusion Weekend. |
Stephen Law |
20 May, 2010 |
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A Scientific Hypothesis? |
Marianne Talbot gives the first talk on Richard Dawkins' The God Delusion as part of The God Delusion Weekend. |
Marianne Talbot |
20 May, 2010 |
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Evaluating Arguments Part Two |
Part six of a six-part series on critical reasoning. In this final lecture we will look at fallacies. These are bad arguments that can easily be mistaken for good arguments. |
Marianne Talbot |
18 March, 2010 |
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Evaluating Arguments Part One |
Part five of a six-part series on critical reasoning. In this lecture we will continue with the evaluation of arguments - this time deductive arguments - focusing in particular on the notion of validity. |
Marianne Talbot |
15 March, 2010 |
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Taming the Casino Banks |
In this podcast the experts discuss whether the 'casino' banks that are considered too big to fail are simply too big, and explain the arguments for and against splitting them up. |
Jonathan Michie, Martin Slater, Linda Yueh |
15 March, 2010 |
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What is a Good Argument? Validity and Truth |
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. |
Marianne Talbot |
11 March, 2010 |
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Setting out Arguments Logic Book Style |
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. |
Marianne Talbot |
10 March, 2010 |
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Different Types of Arguments |
The second of six lectures dealing with critical reasoning. In this lecture you will learn about the different types of arguments, in particular deductive and inductive arguments. |
Marianne Talbot |
29 January, 2010 |
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The Nature of Arguments |
The first of six lectures dealing with critical reasoning. In this lecture you will learn how to recognise arguments and what the nature of an argument is. |
Marianne Talbot |
29 January, 2010 |
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Bank bonuses, breakups and regulation |
In the first podcast of 2010, the experts discuss bank bonuses, proposed break-ups and tighter regulation of the banking and financial sectors. |
Linda Yueh, Jonathan Michie, Martin Slater |
28 January, 2010 |
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Occupational Health and Safety in a Research Setting |
Dr Simon Ndirangu, Bioanalytical Laboratory at the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI)/Wellcome Trust Research Programme in Kilifi, Kenya discusses the importance of implementing occupational health and safety standards in research settings. |
Simon Ndirangu Muchohi |
29 October, 2009 |
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Measurement of Drug Levels in Clinical Trials |
Dr Simon Ndirangu, Bioanalytical Laboratory at the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI)/Wellcome Trust Research Programme in Kilifi, Kenya describes the basic concepts of pharmacological clinical trials, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. |
Simon Ndirangu Muchohi |
29 October, 2009 |
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Setting Up a Laboratory for Clinical Trials in Resource-Poor Settings |
Ken Awuondo, Clinical Trials Laboratory Manager for the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI)/Wellcome Trust Research Programme in Kilifi, Kenya gives an overview of the requirements for setting up a laboratory in resource-poor settings. |
Ken Awuondo |
29 October, 2009 |
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The Role of Laboratory in Clinical Trials |
Ken Awuondo, Clinical Trials Laboratory Manager for the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI)/Wellcome Trust Research Programme in Kilifi, Kenya gives an overview of the role of the laboratory in clinical trials. |
Ken Awuondo |
29 October, 2009 |
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Data Safety Monitoring Boards: Their Place and Role in Trials |
Dr Roma Chilengi, Head of Clinical Trials at the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI)/Wellcome Trust Research Programme in Kilifi, Kenya discusses clinical trial data safety monitoring boards (DSMBs). |
Roma Chilengi |
29 October, 2009 |
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Clinical Trial Protocol Development |
Dr Phaik Yeong Cheah, Head of Clinical Trials at the Mahidol-Oxford Research Unit in Bangkok, Thailand discusses clinical trial protocol development. |
Phaik Yeong Cheah |
29 October, 2009 |
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Introduction to Research Ethics |
Dr Roma Chilengi, Head of Clinical Trials at the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI)/Wellcome Trust Research Programme in Kilifi, Kenya gives an introduction to research ethics. |
Roma Chilengi |
29 October, 2009 |
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The Story of ICH-GCP: An introduction for investigators and site staff |
Dr Roma Chilengi, Head of Clinical Trials at the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI)/Wellcome Trust Research Programme in Kilifi, Kenya gives an introduction to ICH-GCP. |
Roma Chilengi |
29 October, 2009 |
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An Introduction to Clinical Trials |
George Warimwe from the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI)/Wellcome Trust Research Programme in Kilifi, Kenya presents an introduction to clinical trials aimed at trial site staff and anyone new to the field. |
George Warimwe |
29 October, 2009 |
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Challenging Macroeconomics |
In part 6, our experts examine new models for monetary and fiscal policy, global financial markets and a world economy characterised by global imbalances. |
Linda Yueh, Jonathan Michie, Martin Slater |
11 August, 2009 |
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UK Budget and Global Recovery Plans |
In Part 5, our experts examine the British economy in light of the recent Budget, and assess whether a global recovery may be on the horizon. |
Linda Yueh, Jonathan Michie, Martin Slater |
4 June, 2009 |
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The reversal of cell differentiation and prospects for cell replacement therapy |
The inaugural Anne McLaren Memorial Lecture, "The reversal of cell differentiation and prospects for cell replacement therapy", given by Prof Sir John Gurdon FRS, University of Cambridge, at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, on 7 November 2008. |
John Gurdon |
5 May, 2009 |
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