-
linzelj added to a playlist 1 month ago
TEDxPSU - Michael Mann - A Look Into Our Climate: Past To Present To Future
Michael Mann is a professor in the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences, a climatologist, and the director of the Earth System Science Center at P...
-
Lee Cronin: Making matter come alive
http://www.ted.com Before life existed on Earth, there was just matter, inorganic dead "stuff." How improbable is it that life arose? And -- could ...
-
Ben Goldacre: Battling Bad Science
http://www.ted.com Every day there are news reports of new health advice, but how can you know if they're right? Doctor and epidemiologist Ben Gold...
-
TEDxEastsidePrep - Shawn Cornally - The Future of Education Without Coercion
Shawn Cornally's tagline to his blog sums him up well: "Dealing with the fear of being a boring teacher." Clearly Shawn is successfully combating t...
-
Simon Sinek: How great leaders inspire action
http://www.ted.com Simon Sinek presents a simple but powerful model for how leaders inspire action, starting with a golden circle and the question ...
-
Janine Benyus: Biomimicry in action
http://www.ted.com Janine Benyus has a message for inventors: When solving a design problem, look to nature first. There you'll find inspired desig...
-
Janine Benyus: 12 sustainable design ideas from nature
http://www.ted.com In this inspiring talk about recent developments in biomimicry, Janine Benyus provides heartening examples of ways in which nat...
-
Tony Robbins: Why we do what we do, and how we can do it better
Tony Robbins discusses the "invisible forces" that make us do what we do -- and high-fives Al Gore in the front row.
TEDTalks is a daily video pod...
-
-
linzelj added to a playlist 1 month ago
TEDxPSU - Michael Mann - A Look Into Our Climate: Past To Present To Future
Michael Mann is a professor in the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences, a climatologist, and the director of the Earth System Science Center at P...
-
linzelj added to a playlist 1 month ago
Circulation 1of3
Bill Nye the Science Guy
Circulation 1of3
-
Parts of a cell
Parts of a cell: nucleus, ribosomes, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi bodies, mitochondria, chloroplasts, vacuoles, and vesicles
-
-
linzelj added to a playlist 1 month ago
David Attenborough - Wonderful World - BBC
**KOOP GEEN GECENSUREERDE DVD'S OF BLU-RAYS BIJ DE EO!!!**
**Do not buy DVD's or Blu-Rays censored by EO!!! Evolution is a fact.**
* Frozen Planet ...
-
Alexander Tsiaras: Conception to birth -- visualized
http://www.ted.com Image-maker Alexander Tsiaras shares a powerful medical visualization, showing human development from conception to birth and be...
-
Parts of a cell
Parts of a cell: nucleus, ribosomes, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi bodies, mitochondria, chloroplasts, vacuoles, and vesicles
-
Diffusion and Osmosis
Diffusion and Osmosis
-
-
linzelj added to a playlist 4 months ago
Discovering the Great Tree of Life
The Earth is inhabited by millions of different life forms, and all have been connected through common ancestry in The Tree of Life. The Tree descr...
-
How scientists know about punctuated equilibria
Is punctuated equilibria real? You bet. An engaging mini-documentary about punctuated equilibria, featuring Stephen Jay Gould and Niles Eldredge. D...
-
-
linzelj added to a playlist 6 months ago
Sir Ken Robinson: Do schools kill creativity?
http://www.ted.com Sir Ken Robinson makes an entertaining and profoundly moving case for creating an education system that nurtures (rather than u...
-
Daniel Pink on the surprising science of motivation
http://www.ted.com Career analyst Dan Pink examines the puzzle of motivation, starting with a fact that social scientists know but most managers do...
-
Craig Venter at TEDMED 2010
Craig Venter explains the steps his team took to create the first synthetic cell and what this means for the future of vaccines.
-
Jack Horner: Building a dinosaur from a chicken
http://www.ted.com Renowned paleontologist Jack Horner has spent his career trying to reconstruct a dinosaur. He's found fossils with extraordinari...
-
Larry Lessig: How creativity is being strangled by the law
http://www.ted.com Larry Lessig, the Nets most celebrated lawyer, cites John Philip Sousa, celestial copyrights and the "ASCAP cartel" in his argu...
-