Separation Videos
Ellen Cooper, Tarasha Darden-McKoy & Cheryl Vallee Interview Topic-Parenting 11-4-09
from recent posts tagged divorce - blip.tv (beta) on November 04, 2009
Duration: 875
Duration: 875
Ellen and Tarasha represent the Cornell Cooperative Extension and tell us about the program "Parenting After Separation or Divorce -- Helping Children Adjust". Cheryl represents Schenectady County and tells us about "Child Focus, A Parent Education Program". Websites: www.nycourts.gov; www.ccealbany.com; www.SchenectacyCounty.com
also in: Children Divorce Separation Health
Mitch Joel on Marketing Yourself
from WatchMojo.com Business & Technology on November 02, 2009
Duration: 0
Duration: 0
We learn from author Mitch Joel that the days of networking in business are over, thanks to online social media.
also in: Author Business Companies Consumers Facebook Internet LinkdIn Mitch Joel Networking Pixels Separation Six Social media Twist image Twitter
Ek Vivaah Aisa Bhi - 5/13
from YouTube :: Tag // bollywood on October 31, 2009
Duration: 589
Duration: 589
Author: rajshri Keywords: Hindi Movies movie in parts part cinema films film Bollywood entertainment music melodious songs Ek Vivaah Aisa Bhi Rajshree Rajshri Productions Vivah bi Isha Alok Nath Eesha Koppikhar Esha Kopikar Koppikar Sonu Sood Suraj Sooraj Barjatya Ravindra Jain Kaushik Ghatak 2008 latest love romance prem guitar singer life seperation song passion responsibilities marriage separation Shreya Ghoshal Shaan musical pure eternal Vishal Malhotra Amrita Prakash Vallabh Vyas Anang Desai Added: October 31, 2009
also in: 2008 Aisa Alok Amrita Anang Barjatya Bhi Bollywood Cinema Desai Eesha Entertainment Esha Eternal Film Films Ghatak Ghoshal Guitar Hindi Isha Jain Kaushik Kopikar Koppikar Koppikhar Latest Life Love Malhotra Marriage Melodious Movie Movies Music Musical Nath Part Parts Passion Prakash Prem Productions Pure Rajshree Rajshri Ravindra Responsibilities Romance Separation Seperation Shaan Shreya Singer Song Songs Sonu Sood Sooraj Suraj Vallabh Vishal Vivaah Vivah Vyas
Roots
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta) on October 31, 2009
Duration: 618
Duration: 618
Our foundations must be sound
also in: Foundational Truths Devils People Devil Satan Separation Gods Gospel Religion
Should I Confront The Other Woman?
from recent posts tagged divorce - blip.tv (beta) on October 29, 2009
Duration: 86
Duration: 86
http://www.yourtango.com | Smart Talk About Love Got a question? Ask it now at http://www.yourtango.com/questions Featuring America's Love Experts Matt Titus and Tamsen Fadal. http://www.askmattandtamsen.com Twitter: http://twitter.com/yourtango Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/YourTango YourTango is your source for smart talk about love, sex, dating and relationships. Whether you're married, single, taken, engaged or "it's complicated," check out our videos for the best love and relationship news, entertainment and advice. http://www.yourtango.com | Smart Talk About Love
also in: Ask Confront Divorce Fight Love Matt Movies and Television Other Relationship Separation Tamsen Woman Yourtango
Should I Confront The Other Woman?
from YourTango | Relationship Videos on October 29, 2009
Duration: 86
Duration: 86
How to deal with your husband's affair.Keywords: advice, ask, ask yourtango, divorce, fight, love, matt, other woman, relationship, separation, tamsenBookmark/Share this post with: read more
also in: Breakups Divorce In the Middle Infidelity Non-Monogamy Infidelity Advice Ask Ask YourTango Confront Divorce Fight Love Matt Other woman Relationship Separation Tamsen Taken Engaged Married Starting Over
donna summer - love is the healer - remix by jonathan peters - part 2 - Rated "PG"
from YouTube :: Tag // brazil on October 28, 2009
Duration: 584
Duration: 584
Author: thedancetuber Keywords: music baraka donna summer love is the healer six degrees of separation deforestation disease famine hate ignorance blind humanity Added: October 28, 2009
also in: Music Baraka Donna Summer Love Healer Six Degrees Separation Deforestation Disease Famine Hate Ignorance Blind Humanity
The Real i 26: October 20, 2009
from MedicCast Podcast on October 21, 2009
Duration: 0
Duration: 0
On the latest episode of The Real i: A Good Economic Forecast for Google, Some Paranormal Activity on the Web, A Baby Rocks the Computer, Some Workers Rock the Office, A Non-Profit Does Good Through Six Degrees of Separation, Sarah Silverman Attempts to End World Hunger, A Music Site Offers Five Dollar Unlimited Downloads, Another Music Site Lets People Listen According to their Mood, Pirates Hijack Windows 7, Augmented Reality Becomes Reality, A Website Recycles Old Stuff, A Site Shows us Where the Free Goods are and a Blog Helps us Design. Plus, our online music video pick of the week!
also in: The real i Melissa mccormick Avericom Bad lieutenant Sink or swim Google Paranormal activity Trailer Blair witch project Twitter Tweat your scream Linux baby rocker Six Degrees Separation Sfeder331 Day Office End world hunger Sell the vatican Technology Podcasting Technology Podcasting
Russell Blackford - 50 Voices of Disbelief
from Point of Inquiry on October 02, 2009
Duration: 1706
Duration: 1706
Russell Blackford is an Australian writer, philosopher, and critic, and editor-in-chief of The Journal of Evolution and Technology. His new book, edited with Udo Schuklenk, is 50 Voices of Disbelief: Why We Are Atheists. In this interview with D.J. Grothe, Russell Blackford explains the need for 50 Voices of Disbelief. He argues that there can be no more important question than whether religion and faith deliver on their promises. He explores whether religion will persist. He contends that religious leaders are not our society's moral leaders. He discusses a number of contributed essays in the 50 Voices collection, such as James Randi's, entitled "A Magician Looks at Religion," which explores how a background in magic may inform one's understanding of religion, and Peter Adegoke's essay, which argues that religion is impeding Nigeria's social, economic and scientific progress. He talks about how the book includes contributions from people all over the world and from every continent, except Antarctica. He discusses essays by Sumitra Padmanabhan and Prabir Ghosh that explore the harms that religion cause in India, and alternatives to religion, such as humanism. He talks about how the diversity of views in the essay collection show that there is "no party-line of atheism."Â He comments on essays by psychologist and parapsychologist Susan Blackmore ("Giving Up Ghosts and Gods"), and philosopher Philip Kitcher ("Beyond Disbelief"). He discusses recent controversies over CFI's International Blasphemy Day, and opposing views of Paul Kurtz and Ron Lindsay regarding criticism of religion, and whether "moderate religion" should be criticized or viewed as an ally to advance secular, pro-science values. He talks about the relationship between atheism and progressive social values. And he argues that religion should not be allowed to remain private, and therefore beyond public scrutiny and critique.
also in: Secular Humanism Science Freethought Skepticism Skeptical Inquiry Atheism Religion Philosophy Paranormal Aliens Pseudoscience Fringe Fundamental Theology Politics Church State Separation Humanist Values Morality Science Medicine Social Sciences Religion Spirituality Society Culture Podcasts
Ben Radford - Skepticism 2.0
from Point of Inquiry on September 25, 2009
Duration: 2488
Duration: 2488
Ben Radford is is one of the world's few science-based paranormal investigators, and has done first-hand research into psychics, ghosts and haunted houses, exorcisms, Bigfoot, lake monsters, UFO sightings, crop circles, and other topics. He is managing editor of Skeptical Inquirer magazine and author of Media Mythmakers: How Journalists, Activists, and Advertisers Mislead Us, and Lake Monster Mysteries: Investigating the World's Most Elusive Creatures (with Joe Nickell). He also writes online at LiveScience.com, MediaMythmakers.com and Monsterscience.com. In this discussion with D.J. Grothe, Ben Radford surveys the current issue of Skeptical Inquirer magazine, which is focused on "Skepticism 2.0" and the future of the skeptical movement. He describes various articles by contributors to the issue such as Daniel Loxton, Jeff Wagg, Karen Stollznow, Blake Smith, Heidi Anderson, Reed Esau, Tim Farley and others. He talks about blogging, podcasts and youtube and the opportunities they present for new skeptical outreach. He explores ways national skeptical organizations can collaborate. He talks about why it is important to build on the important work of skeptical luminaries such as Carl Sagan, Ray Hyman, James Randi, Martin Gardner and Joe Nickel, and how to do so. And he also talks about his sacrilegious board game Playing Gods.
also in: Aliens Atheism Church Freethought Fringe Fundamental Humanism Humanist Inquiry Morality Paranormal Philosophy Podcasts Politics Pseudoscience Religion Religion Spirituality Science Science Medicine Secular Separation Skeptical Skepticism Social Sciences Society Culture State Theology Values
Greg Craven - What's the Worst That Could Happen?
from Point of Inquiry on September 18, 2009
Duration: 2181
Duration: 2181
Greg Craven is a high school science teacher and climate change activist from Oregon. His new book is What's the Worst That Could Happen? A Rational Response to the Climate Change Debate. In this conversation with D.J. Grothe, Greg Craven discusses the youtube video on global warming he created that now has nearly 8 million views. He talks about applying game theory to the "decision paralysis" people have surrounding the global warming debate, using a "decision grid." He explores misunderstandings most people have about the nature of science, and whether or not science can provide certainty about important questions facing society. He emphasizes as a starting point the acknowledgement, whether one is a skeptic of global warming or a "panicked activist," that one could be wrong about global warming. He argues that the evidence is not what is most important in the climate change debate, because each side has "evidence" to support its conclusions. He talks about "confirmation bias," and how it makes it difficult to find out the truth about global warming. He explains why it is less important to personally live "green," and why others kinds of social environmentalist activism is more important. He details why America's mobilization in World War II and also modern social networking on the internet are the only two things that give him hope regarding responsibly responding to climate change.
also in: Aliens Atheism Church Freethought Fringe Fundamental Humanism Humanist Inquiry Morality Paranormal Philosophy Podcasts Politics Pseudoscience Religion Religion Spirituality Science Science Medicine Secular Separation Skeptical Skepticism Social Sciences Society Culture State Theology Values
J.D. Trout - The Science of the Good Society
from Point of Inquiry on September 11, 2009
Duration: 1788
Duration: 1788
J.D. Trout is a professor of philosophy at Loyola University Chicago, and an adjunct professor at the Parmly Sensory Sciences Institute. He writes on the nature of scientific and intellectual progress, as well as on the contribution that social science can make to human well-being. He is the author of Measuring the Intentional World, and co-author of Epistemology and the Psychology of Human Judgment. His most recent book is The Empathy Gap: Building Bridges to the Good Life and the Good Society. In this discussion with D.J. Grothe, J. D. Trout argues for using science to engineer society in ways that help people overcome their natural cognitive biases. He notes that whether or not we know it, we are always participants in the social experiments, often experiments conducted by unqualified elected officials. He details a number of small experiments that have public policy implications, such as using social science to trick people into keeping hospitals more germ-free, public bathrooms cleaner, and prescriptions from being filled erroneously. He explores the tensions between the unfettered free market and governmental regulation in this regard, and argues that in many cases it is an empirical question as to whether the free market can solve a particular problem. He discusses the anti-vax movement, and the best strategies to adopt in order to overcome suspicions public health measures such as widespread vaccination programs. He argues that the evidence is overwhelming that the general public lacks the cognitive resources to consistently make good decisions about its well-being, and he defends this view from charges that it is "Big Brother." He makes a distinction between the public making good decisions about what priorities to pursue, and good decisions about the means to pursue them. He tells why he thinks the U.S. Government should create something like a House Committee on Social Science, and how such a Committee would offer an alternative to failed "Blue Ribbon" panels such as the Meese Commission on Obscenity and Pornography. He contends that the United States Government should have tax-payer funded "well being programs," similar to countries in Europe, as a public health measure (because happy people are healthier people). He he explains how the Obama Administration is allied with such proposals to use science to better engineer society, because Obama is an "Enlightenment President," who believes in the power of science to transform society for the better. And he describes what science activists can do to advance such an agenda.
also in: Secular Humanism Science Freethought Skepticism Skeptical Inquiry Atheism Religion Philosophy Paranormal Aliens Pseudoscience Fringe Fundamental Theology Politics Church State Separation Humanist Values Morality Science Medicine Social Sciences Religion Spirituality Society Culture Podcasts
J.D. Trout - The Empathy Gap
from Point of Inquiry on September 04, 2009
Duration: 1777
Duration: 1777
J.D. Trout is a professor of philosophy at Loyola University Chicago, and an adjunct professor at the Parmly Sensory Sciences Institute. He writes on the nature of scientific and intellectual progress, as well as on the contribution that social science can make to human well-being. He is the author of Measuring the Intentional World, and co-author of Epistemology and the Psychology of Human Judgment. His most recent book is The Empathy Gap: Building Bridges to the Good Life and the Good Society. In this interview with D.J. Grothe, J. D Trout draws distinctions between empathy and sympathy. He talks about the "empathy gap," which is a set of natural, evolved limits on empathy, and how these limits negatively affect society, such as difficulties people experience when trying to empathize with others who are religiously, culturally or psychologically different from themselves. He talks about how the results of empathy can actually be crippling for an individual. He talks about how we should use new research in the social sciences to overcome the empathy gap. He explores if new social science questions basic capitalistic assumptions of the American Dream and also philosophical concepts, such as free-will. He explains how new social science research supports the Enlightenment outlook. He details a number of well-researched cognitive biases that lead people to make bad decisions, such as the base-rate effect, overconfidence bias, the omission bias, the hindsight bias, and the availability bias, among others. He shares his skepticism that education about cognitive biases, or the adoption of "inside strategies," can diminish the negative effect of such biases. He proposes that society adopt "outside strategies," which is the government or institutions adopting policies and strategies to help the public overcome their cognitive biases, because he argues individuals will not be very successful on their own in counteracting them. And he explores to what extent these kind of institutional or governmental strategies and policies are "social engineering."
also in: Secular Humanism Science Freethought Skepticism Skeptical Inquiry Atheism Religion Philosophy Paranormal Aliens Pseudoscience Fringe Fundamental Theology Politics Church State Separation Humanist Values Morality Science Medicine Social Sciences Religion Spirituality Society Culture Podcasts
Studio Lighting Shiny Metal or Reflective Object
from Favorites of dawnrboucher on June 17, 2008
Duration: 0
Duration: 0
Photography tutorial on lighting shiny metal and reflective objects as part of the basic lighting class for professional photography students at the Art Institute of Colorado.The video incorporates the use of diffusers and discusses the principle of angle of incidence equals angle of reflection.
also in: Howto Photography Lighting Studio 4x5 Large Format Reflective Objects Separation Thomas Christopher Moore









