iii

Mfg Eng III

Savannah, GA United States - Bachelor's Degree in Mechanical, Manufacturing Engineering or related curriculum required or equivalent combination of education and experience sufficient to successfully perform the essential functions of the job. 4 years manufacturing engineering, planning, ... View




iii

Mfg Eng III

Savannah, GA United States - Bachelor's Degree in Mechanical, Manufacturing Engineering or related curriculum required or equivalent combination of education and experience sufficient to successfully perform the essential functions of the job. 4 years manufacturing engineering, planning, or r... View




iii

Росстат: рост ВВП России в III квартале предварительно составил 3,1%



  • Экономика / Макроэкономика и бюджет


iii

A Mn(III)-catalyzed arylboronic acid-based cascade reaction via a nonclassical organometallic-radical mechanism

Org. Chem. Front., 2024, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/D4QO00244J, Research Article
Hui-Min Qian, Jian-Dong Zhang, Shun-Jun Ji, Xiao-Ping Xu
An efficient Mn(III)-catalyzed cascade reaction of arylboronic acids, o-cyanoaryl isocyanides, and indoles was developed. The mechanism was fully investigated and elucidated.
To cite this article before page numbers are assigned, use the DOI form of citation above.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




iii

Three-component Friedel–Crafts-type difunctionalization of ynamides with (hetero)arenes and iodine(III) electrophile

Org. Chem. Front., 2024, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/D4QO00489B, Research Article
Open Access
Jun Kikuchi, Toya Nagata, Shingo Ito, Naohiko Yoshikai
A three-component Friedel–Crafts type difunctionalization of ynamides with an iodine(III) electrophile and electron-rich (hetero)arenes has been developed, enabling regio- and stereoselective synthesis of densely functionalized enamides.
To cite this article before page numbers are assigned, use the DOI form of citation above.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




iii

Metal-Free Cascade O-H Double Insertion Between I(III)/S(VI)-Ylides, Carboxylic Acids, and Alcohols: Modular Access to Unsymmetrical α,α-O,O-Substituted Ketones

Org. Chem. Front., 2024, Accepted Manuscript
DOI: 10.1039/D4QO00453A, Research Article
Shang-Shi Zhang, Jiaohang Wei, Wen-Xuan Zou, Qiong Hu, Mei-Zhu Bao, Dan-Ting Shen, Lin Xiao, Jia-Lin Song, Xiang Liu
The synthesis of unsymmetrical α,α-O,O-substituted ketones via O-H double insertion is appealing but remains constrained due to the lack of compatible coupling partners or uncontrollable selectivity. Herein, we present a...
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




iii

Iron(III)/quinoxaline-derived N,N-ligand catalyzed oxygen transfer reaction of N-vinyl nitrones through selective 4π-electrocyclization and N–O bond cleavage

Org. Chem. Front., 2024, 11,2277-2282
DOI: 10.1039/D3QO01999C, Research Article
Yan-Jiao Lu, Feng-Lan Lu, Jin-Qi Zhang, Chun-Hua Chen, Cui Liang, Xiao-Pan Ma, Dong-Liang Mo
We describe an iron(III)/quinoxaline-derived N,N-ligand promoted O-transfer reaction of N-vinyl nitrones through selective O-4π-electrocyclization and N–O bond cleavage to prepare a variety of 2,5-dihydrooxazoles in good yields.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




iii

In situ analysis of the oxygen evolution reaction on the CuO film in alkaline solution by surface interrogation scanning electrochemical microscopy: investigating active sites (CuIII) and kinetics

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2024, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/D4TA00628C, Paper
Seokjun Han, Jinoh Yoo, Won Tae Choi
Surface interrogation scanning electrochemical microscopy was employed to assess the electrocatalytic activity of CuO films for the oxygen evolution reaction in an alkaline solution.
To cite this article before page numbers are assigned, use the DOI form of citation above.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




iii

Metro Rail services to be extended to Medchal and other parts of northern Hyderabad under Phase-III: Telangana CM




iii

Neoproterozoic-Cambrian stratigraphy of the Mackenzie Mountains, northwestern Canada, part III: measured sections from Neoproterozoic and Cambrian formations, NTS 96-D

MacNaughton, R B. Geological Survey of Canada, Open File 8771, 2021, 39 pages, https://doi.org/10.4095/328118
<a href="https://geoscan.nrcan.gc.ca/images/geoscan/gid_328118.jpg"><img src="https://geoscan.nrcan.gc.ca/images/geoscan/gid_328118.jpg" title="Geological Survey of Canada, Open File 8771, 2021, 39 pages, https://doi.org/10.4095/328118" height="150" border="1" /></a>




iii

Топоры гномов III. Лучшая защита (1059K) - Вячеслав Ипатов - Боевая фантастика

Путь назад отрезан, Завеса пала. И теперь ничто не защищает земли Далина от враждебного мира... Так могли посчитать его враги, однако сам тан не намерен прятаться и ждать. Ведь лучшая защита — это нападение!
Ссылка на первый том:
https://author.today/reader/67567/531137
LitRPG-стратегия по мотивам "Героев меча и магии".




iii

Стратегия Московской Руси. Как политическая культура XIII–XV веков повлияла на будущее России (1616K) - Тимофей Вячеславович Бордачев - История

Российская государственность и внешнеполитическая стратегия появились не вдруг и не по воле конкретного властителя или правящей династии. У них не было одного автора-демиурга, они – результат череды усилий, вереницы сменявших друг друга побед и неудач. Борьба с даннической зависимостью от Золотой Орды постепенно перетекла в наступление на прежних захватчиков, а отражение крестоносной агрессии на Балтике незаметно сменилось уже русским давлением на западных соседей. Разделить хронологически эти этапы международных отношений Русских земель практически невозможно, но к концу XV в. в северной части Евразии возникла колоссальная держава со своим уникальным взглядом на мир и себя в этом мире.
Наша внешняя политика как продукт естественного развития народа и его государства представляется собой культурное явление не в меньшей степени, чем литература, зодчество или изобразительное искусство.
Бордачев Тимофей Вячеславович (1973) – российский ученый-международник, доктор политических наук, профессор Национального исследовательского университета «Высшая школа экономики», программный директор клуба «Валдай».
В формате А4 PDF сохранён издательский макет.




iii

Wikipedia: Thomas Cranmer (2 July 1489 - 21 March 1556 A.D.) -- was a leader of the English Reformation and Archbishop of Canterbury during the reigns of Henry VIII, Edward VI and, for a short time, Mary I -- During Cranmer's tenure as Archbishop of C

Book of Common Prayer (1548-1549) -- The 1549 Book of Common Prayer: As the use of English in worship services spread, the need for a complete uniform liturgy for the Church became evident. Initial meetings to start what would eventually become the Book of Common Prayer were held in the former abbey of Chertsey and in Windsor Castle in September 1548. The list of participants can only be partially reconstructed, but it is known that the members were balanced between conservatives and reformers. These meetings were followed by a debate on the Eucharist in the House of Lords which took place between 14 and 19 December. Cranmer publicly revealed in this debate that he had abandoned the doctrine of the real presence and believed that the Eucharistic presence was only spiritual. Parliament backed the publication of the Prayer Book after Christmas by passing the Act of Uniformity 1549; it then legalised clerical marriage. -- It is difficult to ascertain how much of the Prayer Book is actually Cranmer's personal composition. Generations of liturgical scholars have been able to track down the sources that he used, including the Sarum Rite, writings from Hermann von Wied, and several Lutheran sources including Osiander and Justus Jonas. More problematic is determining how Cranmer worked on the book and with whom he worked. Despite the lack of knowledge of whom might have helped him, however, he is given the credit for the editorship and the overall structure of the book. -- The use of the new Prayer Book was made compulsory on 9 June 1549. This triggered a series of protests in Devon and Cornwall, the Prayer Book Rebellion. By early July, the uprising had spread to other parts in the east of England. Bucer had just taken up his duties in Cambridge when he found himself in the middle of the commotion and had to scurry to shelter. The rebels made a number of demands including the restoration of the Six Articles, the use of Latin for the mass with only the consecrated bread given to the laity, the restoration of prayers for souls in purgatory, and the rebuilding of abbeys. Cranmer wrote to the king a strong response to these demands in which he denounced the wickedness of the rebellion. On 21 July, Cranmer commandeered St Paul's Cathedral where he vigorously defended the official Church line. A draft of his sermon, the only extant written sample of his preaching from his entire career, shows that he collaborated with Peter Martyr on dealing with the rebellion.



  • Christian Church History Study
  • 3. 1522 A.D. to 1880 A.D. - Indigenous Bible translations and Church Doctrines era - The Reformation

iii

Grünenthal and Averitas Pharma announce completion of recruitment for Phase III clinical trial with QUTENZA® in post-surgical neuropathic pain

- The Phase III trial AV001 aims to evaluate QUTENZA® in post-surgical neuropathic pain (PSNP), a debilitating complication of surgery occurring after approximately 10 percent of all surgical procedures[1], thus affecting more than 3 million people with surgical procedures per year in the U.S.[2]




iii

Recursive WITH, part III: IS_LEAF

articles: 

The CONNECT BY syntax provides a useful pseudocolumn, CONNECT_BY_ISLEAF, which identifies leaf nodes in the data: it’s 1 when a row has no further children, 0 otherwise. In this post, I’ll look at emulating this pseudocolumn using recursive WITH.

Let’s continue with the example from my previous posts about hierarchical data: the skeleton from the old song “Dem Dry Bones”.

UPDATE skeleton SET connected_to_the=NULL WHERE bone='head';
SELECT * FROM skeleton;

BONE                                     CONNECTED_TO_THE
---------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------
shoulder                                 neck
back                                     shoulder
hip                                      back
thigh                                    hip
knee                                     thigh
leg                                      knee
foot                                     heel
head
neck                                     head
toe                                      foot
arm                                      shoulder
wrist                                    arm
ankle                                    leg
heel                                     ankle
finger                                   wrist
a rib                                    back
b rib                                    back
c rib                                    back

With CONNECT BY, we can use the CONNECT_BY_ISLEAF pseudocolumn to identify leaf nodes:

SELECT bone, level, 
ltrim(sys_connect_by_path(bone,' -> '),' -> ') AS path
FROM skeleton
WHERE connect_by_isleaf=1
START WITH connected_to_the IS NULL
CONNECT BY prior bone=connected_to_the 
ORDER siblings BY 1;

BONE      LEVEL PATH                                                                                            
--------- ----- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
finger        6 head -> neck -> shoulder -> arm -> wrist -> finger                                              
a rib         5 head -> neck -> shoulder -> back -> a rib                                                       
b rib         5 head -> neck -> shoulder -> back -> b rib                                                       
c rib         5 head -> neck -> shoulder -> back -> c rib                                                       
toe          12 head -> neck -> shoulder -> back -> hip -> thigh -> knee -> leg -> ankle -> heel -> foot -> toe

This pseudocolumn takes a little more thought to replicate using recursive WITH than the LEVEL pseudocolumn and the SYS_CONNECT_BY_PATH, which, as we saw in my last post, fall naturally out of the recursion.

We can imitate CONNECT_BY_ISLEAF by searching DEPTH FIRST and using the LEAD function to peek at the next row’s the_level value. If the next row’s level is higher than the current row, then it’s a child of the current row; otherwise, it’s not a child. Since, with DEPTH FIRST, all the children of a row come out before any siblings, if the next row isn’t a child, then the current row is a leaf.

WITH skellarchy (bone, parent, the_level) AS
 ( SELECT bone, connected_to_the, 0  FROM skeleton 
   WHERE bone = 'head'                         
 UNION ALL
   SELECT s.bone, s.connected_to_the , r.the_level + 1
   FROM skeleton s, skellarchy r
   WHERE r.bone = s.connected_to_the           
 )
SEARCH DEPTH FIRST BY bone SET bone_order
CYCLE bone SET is_a_cycle TO 'Y' DEFAULT 'N'
SELECT lpad(' ',2*the_level, ' ') || bone AS bone_tree , the_level,
  lead(the_level) OVER (ORDER BY bone_order) AS next_level,
  CASE 
    WHEN the_level < lead(the_level) OVER (ORDER BY bone_order) THEN NULL
    ELSE 'LEAF'
  END is_leaf
FROM skellarchy
ORDER BY bone_order;

BONE_TREE                                      THE_LEVEL NEXT_LEVEL IS_L
--------------------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ----
head                                                   0          1
  neck                                                 1          2
    shoulder                                           2          3
      arm                                              3          4
        wrist                                          4          5
          finger                                       5          3 LEAF
      back                                             3          4
        a rib                                          4          4 LEAF
        b rib                                          4          4 LEAF
        c rib                                          4          4 LEAF
        hip                                            4          5
          thigh                                        5          6
            knee                                       6          7
              leg                                      7          8
                ankle                                  8          9
                  heel                                 9         10
                    foot                              10         11
                      toe                             11            LEAF

Watch out for Cycles

The first point of caution about this solution concerns cycles. In my last post, I had created a cycle by making the ‘head’ node’s parent the ‘toe’ node. If I’d left the cycle in the data, the toe node wouldn’t be a leaf any more, but this query would falsely identify the head as a leaf:

UPDATE skeleton SET connected_to_the='toe' WHERE bone='head';

BONE_TREE                                      THE_LEVEL NEXT_LEVEL IS_L
--------------------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ----
head                                                   0          1
  neck                                                 1          2
    shoulder                                           2          3
      arm                                              3          4
        wrist                                          4          5
          finger                                       5          3 LEAF
      back                                             3          4
        a rib                                          4          4 LEAF
        b rib                                          4          4 LEAF
        c rib                                          4          4 LEAF
        hip                                            4          5
          thigh                                        5          6
            knee                                       6          7
              leg                                      7          8
                ankle                                  8          9
                  heel                                 9         10
                    foot                              10         11
                      toe                             11         12
                        head                          12            LEAF
 
19 rows selected.

This can be corrected for by adding WHERE IS_A_CYCLE=’N’ to the query.

Respect the order of evaluation…

A second point of caution: if I add a WHERE clause to the query that limits the number of levels, the last line of the resultset will always be identified as a leaf.

WITH skellarchy (bone, parent, the_level) AS
 ( SELECT bone, connected_to_the, 0  FROM skeleton 
   WHERE bone = 'head'                         
 UNION ALL
   SELECT s.bone, s.connected_to_the , r.the_level + 1
   FROM skeleton s, skellarchy r
   WHERE r.bone = s.connected_to_the           
 )
SEARCH DEPTH FIRST BY bone SET bone_order
CYCLE bone SET is_a_cycle TO 'Y' DEFAULT 'N'
SELECT lpad(' ',2*the_level, ' ') || bone AS bone_tree , the_level,
  lead(the_level) OVER (ORDER BY bone_order) AS next_level,
  CASE 
    WHEN the_level < lead(the_level) OVER (ORDER BY bone_order) THEN NULL
    ELSE 'LEAF'
  END is_leaf
FROM skellarchy
WHERE the_level < 8 
ORDER BY bone_order;

BONE_TREE                                                     THE_LEVEL NEXT_LEVEL IS_L
------------------------------------------------------------ ---------- ---------- ----
head                                                                  0          1
  neck                                                                1          2
    shoulder                                                          2          3
      arm                                                             3          4
        wrist                                                         4          5
          finger                                                      5          3 LEAF
      back                                                            3          4
        a rib                                                         4          4 LEAF
        b rib                                                         4          4 LEAF
        c rib                                                         4          4 LEAF
        hip                                                           4          5
          thigh                                                       5          6
            knee                                                      6          7
              leg                                                     7            LEAF      <<<=====

The leg is falsely identified as a leaf, and NEXT_LEVEL comes out as NULL, even though the ‘leg’ row has a child row. Why is that? It’s because this solution uses the LEAD analytic function. With analytic functions, WHERE clauses are evaluated before the analytic functions.

Highlighting the relevant bits from the query:

WITH skellarchy AS ...[recursive WITH subquery]...
SELECT ... LEAD(the_level) OVER (ORDER BY bone_order) AS next_level ... --analytic function
FROM skellarchy
WHERE the_level < 8 ...                                                 --where clause

To quote the documentation:

Analytic functions compute an aggregate value based on a group of rows…. The group of rows is called a window and is defined by the analytic_clause. For each row, a sliding window of rows is defined. The window determines the range of rows used to perform the calculations for the current row…. Analytic functions are the last set of operations performed in a query except for the final ORDER BY clause. All joins and all WHERE, GROUP BY, and HAVING clauses are completed before the analytic functions are processed.

In the query above, “where the_level < 8" will be evaluated before LEAD(the_level). The EXPLAIN PLAN shows this very clearly:

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Id  | Operation                                | Name     | Rows  | Bytes | Cost (%CPU)| Time     |
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|   0 | SELECT STATEMENT                         |          |     2 |    76 |     8  (25)| 00:00:01 |
|   1 |  WINDOW BUFFER                           |          |     2 |    76 |     8  (25)| 00:00:01 |  <<=== LEAD
|*  2 |   VIEW                                   |          |     2 |    76 |     8  (25)| 00:00:01 |  <<=== filter("THE_LEVEL"<8)
|   3 |    UNION ALL (RECURSIVE WITH) DEPTH FIRST|          |       |       |            |          |
|*  4 |     TABLE ACCESS FULL                    | SKELETON |     1 |    24 |     2   (0)| 00:00:01 |
|*  5 |     HASH JOIN                            |          |     1 |    49 |     5  (20)| 00:00:01 |
|   6 |      RECURSIVE WITH PUMP                 |          |       |       |            |          |
|   7 |      TABLE ACCESS FULL                   | SKELETON |    18 |   432 |     2   (0)| 00:00:01 |
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Predicate Information (identified by operation id):
---------------------------------------------------
 
   2 - filter("THE_LEVEL"<8)
   4 - filter("BONE"='head')
   5 - access("R"."BONE"="S"."CONNECTED_TO_THE")

The WINDOW BUFFER (analytic window) is evaluated after the VIEW which filters on “THE_LEVEL”<8. So, "lead(the_level) over (order by bone_order)" will be null where the_level=7, and the 'leg' wrongly identified as a leaf node. What we actually want is for the analytic function LEAD to run over the whole resultset, and only then limit the results to show the levels 0-7. The obvious way to do this is to wrap the query in a second SELECT statement:

SELECT * FROM (
  WITH skellarchy (bone, parent, the_level) AS
   ( SELECT bone, connected_to_the, 0  FROM skeleton 
     WHERE bone = 'head'                         
   UNION ALL
     SELECT s.bone, s.connected_to_the , r.the_level + 1
     FROM skeleton s, skellarchy r
     WHERE r.bone = s.connected_to_the           
   )
  SEARCH DEPTH FIRST BY bone SET bone_order
  CYCLE bone SET is_a_cycle TO 'Y' DEFAULT 'N'
  SELECT lpad(' ',2*the_level, ' ') || bone AS bone_tree , the_level,
    lead(the_level) OVER (ORDER BY bone_order) AS next_level,
    CASE 
      WHEN the_level < lead(the_level) OVER (ORDER BY bone_order) THEN NULL
      ELSE 'LEAF'
    END is_leaf
  FROM skellarchy
  ORDER BY bone_order
) WHERE the_level < 8;

BONE_TREE                                                     THE_LEVEL NEXT_LEVEL IS_L
------------------------------------------------------------ ---------- ---------- ----
head                                                                  0          1
  neck                                                                1          2
    shoulder                                                          2          3
      arm                                                             3          4
        wrist                                                         4          5
          finger                                                      5          3 LEAF
      back                                                            3          4
        a rib                                                         4          4 LEAF
        b rib                                                         4          4 LEAF
        c rib                                                         4          4 LEAF
        hip                                                           4          5
          thigh                                                       5          6
            knee                                                      6          7
              leg                                                     7          8

Now, the analytic function in the inner query is evaluated first, before the WHERE clause in the outer query. We can see this in the EXPLAIN PLAN too, of course. Now the WINDOW BUFFER (analytic window) is evaluated before the VIEW with filter(“THE_LEVEL”<8) :

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Id  | Operation                                 | Name     | Rows  | Bytes | Cost (%CPU)| Time     |
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|   0 | SELECT STATEMENT                          |          |     2 |  4068 |     8  (25)| 00:00:01 |
|*  1 |  VIEW                                     |          |     2 |  4068 |     8  (25)| 00:00:01 |  <<=== filter("THE_LEVEL"<8)
|   2 |   WINDOW BUFFER                           |          |     2 |    76 |     8  (25)| 00:00:01 |  <<=== LEAD
|   3 |    VIEW                                   |          |     2 |    76 |     8  (25)| 00:00:01 |
|   4 |     UNION ALL (RECURSIVE WITH) DEPTH FIRST|          |       |       |            |          |
|*  5 |      TABLE ACCESS FULL                    | SKELETON |     1 |    24 |     2   (0)| 00:00:01 |
|*  6 |      HASH JOIN                            |          |     1 |    49 |     5  (20)| 00:00:01 |
|   7 |       RECURSIVE WITH PUMP                 |          |       |       |            |          |
|   8 |       TABLE ACCESS FULL                   | SKELETON |    18 |   432 |     2   (0)| 00:00:01 |
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Predicate Information (identified by operation id):
---------------------------------------------------
 
   1 - filter("THE_LEVEL"<8)
   5 - filter("BONE"='head')
   6 - access("R"."BONE"="S"."CONNECTED_TO_THE")

This is one case of the general point that, as Tom Kyte explains in this Ask Tom answer,“select analytic_function from t where CONDITION” is NOT THE SAME AS “select * from (select analytic_function from t) where CONDITION”.

So, to sum up my last few posts, we can do everything that CONNECT BY can do with the 11g recursive WITH syntax. Plus, the recursive WITH syntax makes it easy to express simple recursive algorithms in SQL.


Republished with permission. Original URL: http://rdbms-insight.com/wp/?p=135




iii

Fantasy Impact: Cleveland Browns sign Robert Griffin III

Mark Morales-Smith discusses the Fantasy Football impact of the Cleveland Browns' most recent signing of QB Robert Griffin III.




iii

It's Taboo - Part III

A continuation of the previous Sun Blog thread, "It's Taboo, Prabhu".




iii

Affordable Kebaya III


Kebaya - Self coloured embroidery on kasar robia / speckled voile.




iii

Samsung Galaxy S III научили заряжаться от беспроводной зарядки Palm Touchstone




iii

Internet Identity Workshop XXXVIII Report

Summary: This spring's IIW was full of interesting people and interesting discussions with people from around the globe.

We recently completed the 38th edition of the Internet Identity Workshop. We had 330 people from around the world who called 169 sessions. As usual there was lots of energy and thousands of side conversations. IIW is a place to get things done and it showed in the energy and the comments people made to me about how much they enjoyed it.

Tuesday opening (click to enlarge)

As you can see by the pins in the map at the top of this post, there were attendees from all over the world. Not surprisingly, most of the attendees were from the US (241), followed by Canada (11). Germany, India, and Switzerland rounded out the top five with 9, 8, and 7 attendees respectively. Attendees from India (5), Thailand (3), and Korea (3) showed IIW's diversity with attendees from APAC. And there were 4 attendees from South America this time. Sadly, there were no attendees from Africa again. Please remember we offer scholarships for people from underrepresented areas, so if you'd like to come to IIW39, please let us know. If you're working on identity, we want you there.

Demo hour on Wednesday (click to enlarge)

For states and provinces, California was first with 122. Washington (16), Utah (10), Texas (10) and New York (10) rounded out the top five. San Francisco (14) Oakland (13), San Jose (12), Seattle (11), and New York (9) were the top cities.

Drummond Reed conducts a session (click to enlarge)

In addition to sessions, we have a demo hour on Wednesday that is a little like speed dating. There were 20 different projects highlighted. There's always more than one session that I want to attend in any given time slot and choosing is hard. That's a common refrain. Luckily we have sessions notes that we publish in a Book of Proceedings.

Here's pictures from all three days courtesy of Doc Searls

 

You belong at IIW! IIW is where you will meet people to help you solve problems and move your ideas forward. Please come! IIW 39 will be held October 29-31, 2024 at the Computer History Museum. We'll have tickets available soon.

Tags:




iii

Coronation of King Charles III

On May 6, 2023 King Charles III and Queen Camilla were crowned in a historic coronation ceremony at Westminster Abbey.  




iii

Time and Despondency Part III: Regaining the Present

Today we talk about various antidotes to the passion of despondency, which all have the effect of bringing us back to the present moment of heart.




iii

Is there Time in Heaven? Part III

In the last episode of this miniseries, we talk about "ages" and the phrase "unto the ages of ages" as it is used to signify eternity in the New Testament. Along the way, we'll tackle interstellar space, two-dimensional cubes, and other perplexing boundaries of human knowledge. Moral of the story: keep wonder alive.​




iii

Interview with Nicholas Kosar on Colonel Philip Ludwell III

Frederica Mathewes-Green interviews Nicholas Kosar about Colonel Philip Ludwell III, the first known American convert to Orthodoxy.




iii

Luke 3:21-22, Part III

Fr. Evan discusses the Holy Trinity.




iii

Luke 3:21-22, Part VIII

Fr. Evan discusses the meaning of Christ’s baptism and begins part one of his discussion of our baptism.




iii

Luke 3:21-22, Part XIII

Fr. Evan continues his discussion of the service of Holy Baptism and its connection to the baptism of Christ.




iii

The Book of Pastoral Rule of Saint Gregory the Great, Part Three (III)

This episode shares the "Admonitions" twenty-one to twenty-nine of Part Three of St. Gregory's Book of Pastoral Rule. In it, St. Gregory gives advice on how to pastor people based on their varying personalities. Going beyond the basic, "comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable," he explains how to adjust the medicine to the exact needs of each type of patient. This is good and useful stuff! The version read is from The Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, Vol. 12. Edited by Philip Schaff and Henry Wace. (Buffalo, NY: Christian Literature Publishing Co., 1895.). Enjoy the show!




iii

Sex Talk III - Scriptural and Canonical Protections

In this episode Fr. Anthony talks with Fr. Harry, the Canonist for the UOC-USA, about the scriptural and canonical context and instructions about sex. Framing it within the context of holiness, they address real issues that Christians need to understand and deal with in the materialist and sex-saturated age. Warning: some graphic terms were used (e.g. fornication, masturbation, adultery).




iii

Frankish Christendom and the Estrangement of East and West III

Fr. John examines the tendency toward eucharistic piety in Frankish Christendom.




iii

Papal Reformation and the Great Schism: III

In this conclusion to his account of the Great Schism, Fr. John reviews the leading controversies that aggravated relations between Rome and Constantinople during Pope Leo IX's military confinement, and how they resulted in the latter's posthumous act of excommunicating Patriarch Michael Cerularius in 1054.




iii

Papal Supremacy and the Parting of the Ways III

In this episode, Fr. John discusses the coming of the crusades and the decisive role played by Pope Gregory VII.




iii

A New Christendom III

In this episode, Fr. John describes the revolutionary changes that came to characterize western monasticism after the Great Schism, leading to the rise of the Franciscans, Dominicans, and Templars.




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The Rise of Anthropological Pessimism III

Fr. John addresses the foundations in the West of a growing pessimism about man's condition, paying particular attention to Augustine.




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Continuity and Catastrophe in the Old Christendom III: The Second Triumph of Orthodoxy

In this episode, Fr. John describes why Saint Gregory's defense of hesychasm against the westernized Barlaam represented a defense not only of Orthodoxy, but of Christendom itself.




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The Third Rome III: The Possessor Controversy and Its Consequences

In this episode, Fr. John discusses an important and fateful development in the history of Russian Christendom before modern times, the Possessor Controversy.




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The Fall of Paradise III: The Case of John Calvin

In this episode Fr. John explores the life of Protestant father John Calvin and the reformer's contribution to the Reformation project.




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The Fall of Paradise VIII: The Wars of Western Religion

In this final episode of Part 2 of the podcast, Fr. John discusses the catastrophic wars that broke out in western Christendom during the Reformation age. These wars, along with other forces unleashed by developments in the Reformation and earlier, would ultimately result in the loss of Christianity's legitimacy, leading to the rise of a modern, secularized form of Christendom centered upon the experience of utopia.




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When Christendom Was Born Again III: The Origins of the Saeculum

Modern historians often bring attention to the effects of secularization on the West. Once traditional Christianity ceased to influence Western culture, the experience of the kingdom of heaven naturally diminished, something the famous German sociologist Max Weber called the "disenchantment of the world." In this episode, Fr. John describes how the concept of the saeculum, a kind of neutral cultural space cut off from the life of the Church, first appeared, and how, with Petrarch, it became a haven for humanists fleeing the pessimism of the fourteenth century.




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Solving Post-Christian Christendom's Transcendence Problem III: The Architects of Nationalist Ideolo

Fr. John Strickland concludes his account of the origins of modern political ideology with the rise of nationalism, a force that not only proved to be a counterfeit to traditional Christianity, but the cause of one of utopian Christendom's greatest tragedies.




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The Making of an Antichrist III: An Anti-Gospel

In his continued account of Friedrich Nietzsche, Fr. John discusses the megalomaniac philosopher's effort to replace the Gospel with an atheistic "transvaluation of all values."




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Presenting latest products and outcomes: a successful GEO XIII Plenary for EU BON

The GEO XIII Plenary in St. Petersburg  enjoyed a huge interest and support from many member governments, agencies and networks with around 400 registered participants this year.

Having taken place from 7-10 November 2016, the event featured a plenary, a number of side events and exhibition to give a chance to participants to meet up and discuss ideas and progress.

  
Left: The EU BON booth at the GEO exhibition - F. Wetzel, Ch. Häuser, H. Saarenmaa; Right: Director General  J.E. Smits and Christoph Häuser; Credits: F. Wetzel

On the sidelines of the Plenary the Director-General for Research and Innovation of the European Commission, Robert-Jan Smits, personally informed himself in a conversation with Dr. Christoph Häuser, project lead of EU BON on the success and performance of the EU BON project.

At the GEO Exhibition 45 participating organizations and agencies presented their current achievements in the realm of earth observation products. EU BON was part of the European Commission’s area where GEO-related projects were shown. The project showcased its latest products as well as provided live demonstrations by Dr. Hannu Saarenmaa of the beta-version of the European Biodiversity Portal.

Taking place just before the plenary, around 20 side events gave an interesting overview of current GEO-related projects and topics. One of the side events was targeted on citizen science and EU-funded projects, where EU BON’s coordinator Christoph Häuser presented the developments of the network with regards to its citizen science activities, particularly its developments of mobile apps for collecting citizen science data.


Christoph Häuser presenting  citizen science related activities of EU BON; Credit: F. Wetzel. 

Learn more about the portal in the relevant policy brief, or test it at: http://biodiversity.eubon.eu/

For more information about EU BON products and research, you can also watch the project video:

 

 





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GEO XIII Plenary, St. Petersburg

The GEO XIII Plenary will take place on 9 & 10 Nov 2016 in St. Petersburg, Russia. More information to follow.







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“Alack, I Love Myself”: Shakespeare’s Globe’s Richard III

Shakespeare’s Globe’s Richard III, directed by Elle While, is an entertaining, poignant, and timely rendition of a history play...




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Five things to watch for in Super Bowl LIII

Sunday's Super Bowl pits the New England Patriots against the Los Angeles Rams. LA's talent-packed offense gives New England's head coach Bill Belichick a tough choice on who to target.




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SCOPE III, Nov. 15

SCOPE III is an experimental audio-visual concert featuring six new works by graduate composers at UC Berkeley. The concert will take place in the newly renovated Wu Performance Hall, which is located in Morrison Hall room 125 on the UC Berkeley campus. Works by: Andrew Blanton Alois Cerbu Nathan Corder Luke Dzwonczyk Kevin Lo Aine Nakamura Poster by Eda Er




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Workshop 26: Andre Dubus III

Andre Dubus III's memoir Townie told the story of his violent childhood on the wrong side of the tracks. Writing was his way out, and he's made more than good, with multiple NYT bestsellers, an Oprah’s Book Club pick, and an Oscar-nominated film adaptation (for his novel The House of Sand and Fog). And he gets out there, as a public speaker and writing instructor for graduate programs, seminars and retreats. We caught up with him at New Hampshire Writers’ Project's annual Writers’ Day. Photo of Virginia & Andre by Karen Kenney Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices