Saturday, May 3, 2008

Life and bio-engineering - podcast review

WNYC's Radiolab tackled Life as a subject. In a way there were two subjects and the bridge between them was somewhat flimsy, if you ask me, but nevertheless they were fascinating and both pertaining life, although not exactly as we know it.

At first they built up to a short interview with a chimera. Karen Keegan from Boston one day found out she was a twin in one person. Part of her organs genetically were her sister's and part were hers. They blended into one functioning human during the earliest stages of pregnancy. That is a chimera.

The bridge, as said, to bioengineering is not so compelling, but one wouldn't give up such a juicy story as Keegan's. Now hosts Krulwich and Ambumrad take on a couple of working examples of bioengineering: microbes that got new DNA in the lab in order to get functions they naturally do not have; human DNA implanted in other organisms. Eventually, life could be designed, as such.

The undertone in the last subject, and basically of the program is: is this right? One conclusion that stands out is: it could be dangerous considering we already have begun engineering while we still know so little in microbiology. But ethically? Even if we can make things work. We can cure disease, let microbes solve pollution and the energy problem? Is that right. Krulwich expresses it intuitively: it doesn't feel right, but other than that this question is not explored. It is as if they lack terms, or an entry into the philosophy.

In the past I have noted this inability apart from one podcast, the bioethics podcast, which knows it full well, but is so exclusively predisposed with its Christian fundamentalist outlook on the world, that it doesn't satisfy the need for a universal and not strictly evangelical answer.

More Radiolab:
War of the Worlds,
Wright Brothers,
Morality.

Bioethics:
Bioethics without Christ, please,
A useful map into Bio-Ethics,
Stem Cell Research: Science, Ethics, and Prospects.

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Friday, May 2, 2008

In Our Time, Podcast Review

BBC's In Our Time is a great podcast about the history of ideas (or the history of thought as it was called in previous seasons). Recently I have found that issues of In Our Time provide great supplements for history and philosophy podcasts. Especially for more drawn out university lecture series, In Our Time can help you get acquainted and receive the head start needed in order to more thoroughly enjoy the in depth content.

A relative disadvantage with In Our Time is that it has no feed history. Only the latest issue is kept in the feed. However, all previous chapters can be heard on-line from the archives. For a 40 minute listen, not so bad after all.

W.B. YeatsI thought In Our Time would always put the latest program in the feed and by persistently downloading I would have the archive on my computer, but last week (Yeats and Irish Politics) no such thing occurred. There was a legal issue and this one could only be heard on line. Moreover, a recent computer crash wiped out my carefully built up archive and so I am stuck with listening in front of the PC.

Today there was a discussion about the Enclosures that rationalized land use in Britain, made possible an agricultural revolution and gave way to industrialization. The development was much lamented by those in love with pastoral sights, but how bad was it?

Last week Materialism was discussed and it had one of the finest quotes from an old source, but still loaded for ignition:
If we go back to the beginning we shall find that ignorance and fear created the gods; that fancy, enthusiasm, or deceit adorned or disfigured them; that weakness worships them; that credulity preserves them, and that custom, respect and tyranny support them.

Yeats I already mentioned and since my last review there has also been discussion of the Norman Yoke. William the Conqueror brought the Normans to rule England, but was it a yoke after all?

In Our Time is regularly reviewed on this blog. It can be tracked with the label In Our Time. The podcast is one of the best that is around and fit to almost all audiences. All reviews are listed here. The most recent are:
King Lear,
Ada Lovelace,
The Social Contract,
Plate Tectonics,
The Fisher King.

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Thursday, May 1, 2008

129 Podcasts Reviewed - Anne is a Man!

UPDATE: we now have 217 podcasts reviewed. (link)



It is the first of the month again and so I post in alphabetical order all podcasts I reviewed linked to the last post and relevant labels:

  1. 12 Byzantine Rulers, history podcast

  2. Africa (Stanford Travel), geography


  3. Africa Past and Present, geography

  4. Ancient and Medieval Podcast, history podcast

  5. Are we alone?, science,

  6. Arizona, University of: Introduction to Language, language


  7. BBC History Magazine, BBC history podcast

  8. Bike Radar, tour


  9. Binge Thinking History, history podcast

  10. Bioethics podcast, science, law and society

  11. the Biography Show, history podcast

  12. Biota Podcast, science

  13. Bommel Hoorspel, NL radio

  14. British History 101, history podcast

  15. Car Talk,


  16. Celtic Myth Podshow


  17. CFR Podcast, law and society

  18. Chronicles Radio Dispatches

  19. Dan Carlin's Common Sense,


  20. Dan Carlin's Hardcore History, history podcast

  21. David Kalivas' World History, history podcast

  22. Distillations, history podcast science

  23. the Economist,

  24. Engines of our Ingenuity, science

  25. English 117S, language

  26. Everything Lincoln, history podcast

  27. Exploring Environmental History, science, history podcast

  28. F1Cast


  29. Fresh Air (NPR)


  30. From our own Correspondent, BBC geography

  31. Geography 130, geography

  32. Geography of World Cultures (Stanford), geography history podcast

  33. Global Geopolitics, geography

  34. Hank's History Hour, history podcast

  35. Hannibal (Stanford), history podcast


  36. Haring Podcast, NL radio

  37. Historical Jesus (Stanford), history podcast יהדות

  38. History 106B, Berkeley history podcast

  39. History 167B, Berkeley history podcast

  40. History 181B, Berkeley history podcast

  41. History 2311, history podcast

  42. History 2312, history podcast

  43. History 4A, Berkeley history podcast

  44. History 5 (Anderson), Berkeley history podcast

  45. History 5 (Laqueur), Berkeley history podcast

  46. History 7B, Berkeley history podcast

  47. History according to Bob, history podcast

  48. History Network, history podcast

  49. History of Rome, history podcast

  50. History of the International System (Stanford), history podcast

  51. History Podcast, history podcast

  52. Historypod, history podcast

  53. Historyzine, history podcast

  54. ICT Update,


  55. In Our Time, In Our Time BBC (science) history podcast

  56. In the Media (WNYC)

  57. Inspired Minds (Deutsche Welle)


  58. Interview Vrijdag, NL radio

  59. Irving Poetry podcast


  60. ITV, tour

  61. Jung Podcast, psychology

  62. KMTT, יהדות

  63. KQED Forum

  64. Language (UCSD), language

  65. Librivox: History of Holland, history podcast

  66. Marathon Interview, NL radio

  67. Matt's Today In History, history podcast

  68. Medieval & Renaissance Studies Events, history podcast

  69. Medieval Podcast, history podcast

  70. Midwest Writer, language


  71. Military History Podcast, history podcast

  72. Missing Link, history podcast science

  73. MMW 3, the medieval heritage (Chamberlain), history podcast

  74. MMW 3, the medieval heritage (Herbst), history podcast

  75. My Three Shrinks, psychiatry


  76. Napoleon 1O1, history podcast

  77. National Archives Podcast, history podcast

  78. NRC FM,


  79. Only in America, history podcast יהדות

  80. Open Source


  81. OVT, history podcast NL radio

  82. Oy Mendele!, יהדות

  83. PACS 164A, Berkeley


  84. Parnell's History Podcast, history podcast

  85. Peopletalk's Podcast, history podcast

  86. Physics for future Presidents, Berkeley science

  87. Phil 7 (Berkeley), Berkeley philosophy

  88. Philosophy 103, philosophy

  89. Philosophy 7 (Berkeley), Berkeley philosophy

  90. Philosophy Bites, philosophy


  91. the Philosophy Podcast, philosophy

  92. Prosperity show

  93. Podcasts on Medieval Texts, history podcast

  94. Podwatch


  95. Radiolab (WNYC), science

  96. Rav Dovid's, יהדות

  97. Redborne History, history podcast

  98. Rhetoric 10 (Berkeley), Berkeley language

  99. Rpgmp3

  100. Sex History Podcast, history podcast

  101. the Skeptics' Guide to the Universe, SGU science

  102. Šimek 's Nachts, simek NL radio

  103. Social Innovation Conversations,


  104. Sonic Society, creative writing

  105. Speaking of Faith, יהדות

  106. Shrink Rap Radio, shrinkrapradio psychology

  107. Stanford U History, history podcast

  108. Sunday Sundown


  109. Talking Robots, science


  110. TdF London, tour

  111. Teaching American History, history podcast

  112. TED Talks, vodcast


  113. That Podcast Show


  114. Times Talks,

  115. Tudorcast, history podcast

  116. The Word Nerds, TWN language

  117. UCLA Israel Studies, Israel


  118. University Channel Podcast, science

  119. Volkskrant Podcasts, tour

  120. We the People Stories, history podcast

  121. What is Judaism?, יהדות

  122. Wise Counsel, Wise Counsel psychology

  123. the Writing Show, Writing Show language

  124. Wynyfryd's meditation room

  125. the Your History Podcast, history podcast

  126. Your Purpose Centered Life


  127. zencast

  128. zoem, psychology


  129. האוניברסיטה המשודרת, גלי צה"ל

If you know of interesting podcasts that you think should be reviewed, please let me know through the comments page. Or send me mail...

Thanks in advance,

Anne Frid de Vries (in one word)

AT

Yahoo DOT co DOT uk



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Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Tomorrow on Anne is a Man!

Tomorrow is the first of the month and this when I give my full list of podcasts that were ever reviewed on this blog. By now we have reached 129 podcasts reviewed. The list becomes a bit unmanageably long and so I am on the look out of improving the formula. If you have any suggestions, I'd love to hear about them.

New additions this month are the following:

Are we alone?. A new science podcast tackling the issue of exterrestrial life. I have found this podcast thanks to the recommendation of a reader.
Global Geopolitics. A new geography and geopolitics and a bit history podcast from Stanford. As usual, this new gem was noted on Open Culture, one of my favorite sources of good quality podcasts.
Speaking of favorites. My all time favorite is History 5. This lecture series from Berkeley I have separated into two entries in my list. Giving credit to the spring lecturer Margaret Lavinia Anderson, and to autumn lecturer Thomas Laqueur, each in their own right.
Language (UCSD). A course in reasoning which I found thanks to a reader's comment. The comment was actually about another podcast, but from one search came another and so the whole list of San Diego podcasts popped up - which incidentally gave more entries than just this one.
MMW 3 (Chamberlain). A history lecture series explaining the middle ages mostly from the perspective of religions.
MMW 3 (Herbst). A parallel series choosing a more traditional perspective, but exceptionally good no less.
Thanks to yet another reader, I started listening to an old Berkeley series about existentialism. This one is a tad different from the new one that runs as we speak and which I have begun to follow.
Philosophy 7 is the current series on existentialism. Berkeley professor Huber Dreyfuss takes you in with a very personalized, almost vulnerable style.
Rhetoric 10 a reader comment on the Word Nerds review suggested looking at this course. A good one, although I have had a bit too much (legal) arguing in my life to fill my free time extensively with it again.
Your History Podcast was actually already reviewed in march, but somehow omitted from the previous list.

Some time tomorrow, or over the weekend, the blog will switch to its new style. I have a couple of tiny picture adjustments and coloring issues I want to take care of. Then the tricky part of the migration will happen. In theory this will be no more than a minute of down time for the blog, but that is a best case theory. In any case, do not despair if you cannot connect for a couple of hours. It'll all be OK. If worst comes to worst I will revert to the old style.

Language - podcast lectures reviewed

Here is short review of two university lecture series on language.

Berkeley: Rhetoric
Daniel Coffeen tries a provocative approach to get you to know rhetoric, not just by learning it, but also by experience. Coffeen is not a regular university professor and the style and form of the course this is tangible and make a refreshing impact. This is not classical rhetoric; he is not going to rely on logic. Coffeen is more of a relativistic persuasion, where the rhetoric is not intended to persuade people to truth, or at least an agreement, but rather one that rhetoric is the goal, which in a way is a celebration of argument, rather than agreement.

Argument Clinic

UC San Diego: Language
An unfortunate start to this series is that the first 7 lectures were not podcast. So we enter the course right in the middle of studying syllogisms. By now we have reached the thirteenth lecture and we are still with reasoning. In comparison to the previous is much more classical. I am not sure whether this course should be identified more as logic than as rhetoric.

Other language and writing reviews:
Getting Published,
King Lear in podcast,
A Rhetorics Series by The Word Nerds,
A funny thing with letters,
What main stream language use won't show.

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Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Descriptive and prescriptive mapping

In Stanford's Global Geopolitics course (feed) professor Martin Lewis makes a remark which reminded me of a very similar one in a language podcast. I wrote about it; one can approach grammar prescriptively and descriptively. The same thing Lewis states about maps. Maps can be made to carefully describe the situation on the ground, also geopolitically, but maybe more often they are prescriptive and represent the area as it ought to be. One may safely assume that any map that attempts to merely describe a geopolitical situation has prescriptive implications.

What we are seldom aware of is that even the simplest standard maps are prescriptive and Lewis tries to bring the point home by giving descriptive maps for example of Somalia (divided up in separately ruled area and just as many unruly, clan-controlled regions) or of the Western Sahara, or of Kashmir (divided up between India, Pakistan and China).

Jammu and Kashmir

The course will successively address the various global regions and thus, by means of maps, give some insight in the major, sometimes even hardly known or forgotten geopolitical contests. A very fascinating course, especially for map lovers and a great successor to the previous Geography of World Cultures (feed). So far we have had three lectures; an introduction and exposes about East-Asia and South-Asia and thus far, we can see it has considerable overlap with the previous course. In many ways that should not surprise us as naturally the geopolitical tensions are rooted in much of the cultural, religious and linguistic divisions in the world.

Relevant other reviews:
Global Geopolitics - Martin Lewis,
A listener's guide to Geography of World Cultures,
Geography of World Cultures by Martin W. Lewis,
The End of Hegemony,
Prescriptive and descriptive grammar.

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