Zakazane produkcje
Znajdź zawartość
Wyświetlanie wyników dla tagów 'TTC' .
Znaleziono 92 wyników
-
Free Download TTC - The Neuroscience of Everyday Life Published 2019 MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44 KHz Language: English | Size: 15.14 GB | Duration: 18h 1m 6s | Lesson (36) Discover what the exciting field of neuroscience reveals about how the intricate inner workings of the human brain produce all the experiences of daily life. Your nervous system is you. All the thoughts, perceptions, moods, passions, and dreams that make you an active, sentient being are the work of this amazing network of cells. For many centuries, people knew that this was true. But no one was sure how it happened. Now, thanks to the exciting new field of neuroscience, we can chart the workings of the brain and the rest of the nervous system in remarkable detail to explain how neurons, synapses, neurotransmitters, and other biological processes produce all the experiences of everyday life, in every stage of life. From the spectacular growth of the brain in infancy to the act of learning a skill, falling in love, getting a joke, revising an opinion, or even forgetting a name, something very intriguing is going on behind the scenes. For example, groundbreaking research in the past few decades is now able to explain such phenomena as these Decisions: Studies of decision making at the level of neurons show that our brain has often committed to a course of action before we are aware of having made a decision-an apparent violation of our sense of free will. Memory: Memory is composed of many systems located in different parts of the brain, which means that you can forget your car keys (information stored in the neocortex) but still remember how to drive (a learned skill requiring the striatum and cerebellum). Willpower: Willpower is more than a metaphor; it's a measurable trait that draws on a finite mental resource, like a muscle. While any given individual has a consistent willpower capacity throughout life, it can be strengthened through training-again, just like a muscle. Religion and spirituality: Three mental traits appear to be essential for the development of organized religion: the search for causes and effects, the ability to reason about people and motives, and language. Mystical experiences also trace to specific activities of the brain. Opening your eyes to how neural processes produce the familiar features of human existence, The Neuroscience of Everyday Life covers a remarkable range of subjects in 36 richly detailed lectures. You will explore the brain under stress and in love, learning, sleeping, thinking, hallucinating, and just looking around-which is less about recording reality than creating illusions that allow us to function in our environment. Your professor is distinguished neuroscientist and Professor Sam Wang of Princeton University, an award-winning researcher and best-selling author, public speaker, and TV and radio commentator. Professor Wang's insightful and playful approach makes this course a joy for anyone who wants to know how his or her own brain works. And his vivid, richly illustrated presentation assumes no background in science. Fact or Fiction? Professor Wang points out that a lot of what we think we know about our brains turns out to be wrong. While bringing you up to date on the latest discoveries in the field, he debunks the following persistent myths We use only 10% of our brains: Your brain is actually running at 100%! The myth about idle brain power has been promoted by self-help gurus and doesn't stand up to evidence from cases of brain damage, which always cause deficits in function. Mozart makes babies smarter: Playing classical music may help calm you down around an infant, but it's not doing anything for the baby. The better strategy is to have children learn to play a musical instrument when they're older, which does improve brain development. Women are moodier than men: Studies show that the sexes are tied in the moodiness contest, with men reporting just as frequent mood swings as women. However, both men and women tend to remember women's mood swings better. We lose brain cells as we age: The brain is supposedly unique as an organ because it stops adding new cells after birth. In fact, some parts of the brain keep producing new neurons throughout life. The brain shrinks somewhat with age, but its neurons live on. Tune Up Your Brain! Operating on about the power consumed by an idling laptop, the brain has often been compared to a computer. But this, too, is a myth. Computers are logically straightforward in design, whereas the brain is a marvel of evolutionary makeshift, with layer upon layer of systems that started out with one function and then were adopted for something completely different. Some of the most primitive functions of the brain, such as the fight-or-flight response to danger, resist being overridden by the brain's powerful reasoning center, which evolved more recently. Indeed, much of what the brain does is beyond our conscious control. Yet in some cases, there are ways to intervene. Here are some tips that Professor Wang offers to make your brain run at its optimum How to stick to a health regimen: If you use your nondominant hand to brush your teeth for two weeks, this can lead to a measurable increase in your willpower capacity. People who do this are then able to follow a diet or exercise program better. Efficient learning: Don't cram! Spread out your study over several sessions. This allows your brain time to process what you've learned, which requires no additional effort on your part and greatly increases your retention of information. Resetting your biological clock: The best way to beat jet lag is to use light, which cues your brain to where it is in the day/night cycle. For a flight between the United States and Europe, in either direction, a dose of afternoon sunlight after you arrive should help you adjust. The best brain exercise is real exercise: Cognitive functions that normally deteriorate with age, such as memory and response time, can be boosted by aerobic exercise. The effect is largest if you are active starting in middle age, but it's never too late to start. The Research Subject Is You Turning from processes that are merely hidden to those that are utterly mysterious, The Neuroscience of Everyday Life also sheds light on these phenomena Love: Prairie voles are a fascinating model for studying human mating, since, unlike most other mammals, they are monogamous. For them as well as for us, the neurotransmitters oxytocin and vasopressin control the expression of pair bonding, better known as love. Humor: Smiles and laughter are two emotional components of humor that have deep roots as social signals. Another component is characterized by the sudden flash of insight that occurs when we "get"a joke; brain scanners show where this happens. Haunted houses: Neurological phenomena that people have associated with haunted houses, such as the feeling of an invisible presence, also occur from carbon monoxide poisoning-a once-common problem in houses lit with gas. Reports of haunted houses have dropped sharply with the decline in gas lighting. Consciousness: Our conscious awareness extends to only a fraction of the stimuli registered by our brains, like a spotlight focusing on a tiny portion of a flood of data. Experiments show that we often act on unconscious information without being aware of it. Professor Wang notes that it was his fascination with consciousness, free will, and other big ideas that led him to switch from physics, which he studied as an undergraduate, to a field he regards as even more alive with possibilities for breakthroughs that will change our worldview in fundamental ways. That field, of course, is neuroscience. The Neuroscience of Everyday Life is your chance to explore a discipline that is now going through its golden age, with the advantage that the subject is not some abstract entity. It's you. Homepage https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/neuroscience-of-everyday-life [b]AusFile[/b] https://ausfile.com/jldatx463rvn/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part01.rar.html https://ausfile.com/9wyfjj67jw6z/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part02.rar.html https://ausfile.com/shtwru3y2imq/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part03.rar.html https://ausfile.com/2qilujedbggv/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part04.rar.html https://ausfile.com/6wwklu9qtjwb/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part05.rar.html https://ausfile.com/m90gzpv6joae/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part06.rar.html https://ausfile.com/pywnwt6s29ot/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part07.rar.html https://ausfile.com/c6awdcofny8f/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part08.rar.html https://ausfile.com/an38h5flv6nx/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part09.rar.html https://ausfile.com/prcqymwj3doz/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part10.rar.html https://ausfile.com/2wpe4gxh5f6z/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part11.rar.html https://ausfile.com/cp82i2dmzukt/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part12.rar.html https://ausfile.com/hqiu6apgkgxw/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part13.rar.html https://ausfile.com/nlu35k6042ji/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part14.rar.html https://ausfile.com/6nj6b2h4ftxz/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part15.rar.html https://ausfile.com/557dwq2of3or/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part16.rar.html https://ausfile.com/b3e9vg92pnr9/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part17.rar.html https://ausfile.com/ppfjt1jph0a9/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part18.rar.html Fileaxa https://fileaxa.com/wpkv93i3s0ry/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part01.rar https://fileaxa.com/3eeyfjwooj17/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part02.rar https://fileaxa.com/k7wogm4kwwiy/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part03.rar https://fileaxa.com/qfpjbavlaz4p/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part04.rar https://fileaxa.com/6pxh80zwkbbc/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part05.rar https://fileaxa.com/enjwfki5bh39/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part06.rar https://fileaxa.com/o6hl0d8w56ei/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part07.rar https://fileaxa.com/0rwji9ftjw3p/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part08.rar https://fileaxa.com/fc05lzl2rxah/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part09.rar https://fileaxa.com/ura6q89a5ws0/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part10.rar https://fileaxa.com/fc4r0s7zlkg4/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part11.rar https://fileaxa.com/1snjim96q313/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part12.rar https://fileaxa.com/qulbvi7xcmf6/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part13.rar https://fileaxa.com/ft7bpmeez5k5/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part14.rar https://fileaxa.com/f7eh3oqywbhb/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part15.rar https://fileaxa.com/a3byxhd04ith/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part16.rar https://fileaxa.com/bz4gy3vqrwkm/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part17.rar https://fileaxa.com/8ikmqibl1kcx/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part18.rar TakeFile https://takefile.link/utzz73hz74n8/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part01.rar.html https://takefile.link/x17o7vx5srqt/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part02.rar.html https://takefile.link/t6sm306j7nc0/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part03.rar.html https://takefile.link/9lofcbmiiyzy/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part04.rar.html https://takefile.link/ir44ondjkzw1/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part05.rar.html https://takefile.link/t1zk74x3zrp3/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part06.rar.html https://takefile.link/8unvkrvbc3bl/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part07.rar.html https://takefile.link/eoupe8ezzzqf/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part08.rar.html https://takefile.link/ln9nak55h734/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part09.rar.html https://takefile.link/srhlc9bdpj7h/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part10.rar.html https://takefile.link/1o7ebvg9kiz6/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part11.rar.html https://takefile.link/ugw33t20nsn3/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part12.rar.html https://takefile.link/vimofnguehxy/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part13.rar.html https://takefile.link/p800278f1ab1/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part14.rar.html https://takefile.link/2str4vdyx3dk/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part15.rar.html https://takefile.link/48o9uo6kwofc/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part16.rar.html https://takefile.link/7vrlxgbod3eo/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part17.rar.html https://takefile.link/bnayqimte8qc/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part18.rar.html Rapidgator https://rapidgator.net/folder/8039173/TTCTheNeuroscienceofEverydayLife.html http://peeplink.in/98739b0f09ae Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/xs6ejBmr0L/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part01.rar.html https://fikper.com/GQ1KVHEdLW/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part02.rar.html https://fikper.com/GfSGt21lFh/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part03.rar.html https://fikper.com/irZ2u25Stn/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part04.rar.html https://fikper.com/DNytpEx4Ws/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part05.rar.html https://fikper.com/ntZAp55t7L/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part06.rar.html https://fikper.com/uV2Zm5GIaE/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part07.rar.html https://fikper.com/aHY0xTDplO/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part08.rar.html https://fikper.com/EN0uYazfNd/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part09.rar.html https://fikper.com/0hIu0gYTUV/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part10.rar.html https://fikper.com/mmi2H7wlVl/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part11.rar.html https://fikper.com/MP0AvCBDyv/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part12.rar.html https://fikper.com/YOWROWf5Kh/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part13.rar.html https://fikper.com/BjwVubQJKv/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part14.rar.html https://fikper.com/8X1TznEsvs/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part15.rar.html https://fikper.com/cZ0VATFZrs/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part16.rar.html https://fikper.com/GulclhTPza/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part17.rar.html https://fikper.com/gXXN1fk37T/qxqbr.TTC..The.Neuroscience.of.Everyday.Life.part18.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
- TTC
- Neuroscience
-
(i 2 więcej)
Oznaczone tagami:
-
Free Download TTC - Freelancing 101 Turning your Side Hustle into Cash Published 2/2023 MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44 KHz Language: English | Size: 1.55 GB | Duration: 2h 6m 3s | Lesson (11) How to earn income as a freelancer, no business degree required. This class will empower you to take your skills and monetize them as a freelancer. After this class, you will be able to identify competitors, price your services, and develop skills to network so that you can land that next deal. Homepage https://www.thegreatcoursesplus.com/freelancing-101-turning-your-side-hustle-into-cash?tn=192_grid_Course_1_97_22929&pos=2_25 [b]AusFile[/b] https://ausfile.com/rd47opjxr57a/evvhp.TTC..Freelancing.101.Turning.your.Side.Hustle.into.Cash.part1.rar.html https://ausfile.com/21flebogrg3r/evvhp.TTC..Freelancing.101.Turning.your.Side.Hustle.into.Cash.part2.rar.html Fileaxa https://fileaxa.com/ivkvbmmg9684/evvhp.TTC..Freelancing.101.Turning.your.Side.Hustle.into.Cash.part1.rar https://fileaxa.com/z65ts02v1o9t/evvhp.TTC..Freelancing.101.Turning.your.Side.Hustle.into.Cash.part2.rar TakeFile https://takefile.link/12bf0jjcvqe0/evvhp.TTC..Freelancing.101.Turning.your.Side.Hustle.into.Cash.part1.rar.html https://takefile.link/xeotjri00ndf/evvhp.TTC..Freelancing.101.Turning.your.Side.Hustle.into.Cash.part2.rar.html Rapidgator https://rapidgator.net/folder/8039172/TTCFreelancing101TurningyourSideHustleintoCash.html http://peeplink.in/4a1d3d179a8b Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/sdgbgsY51e/evvhp.TTC..Freelancing.101.Turning.your.Side.Hustle.into.Cash.part1.rar.html https://fikper.com/nS6IqoQtqf/evvhp.TTC..Freelancing.101.Turning.your.Side.Hustle.into.Cash.part2.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
- TTC
- Freelancing
-
(i 3 więcej)
Oznaczone tagami:
-
Free Download TTC - How to Create Comics Published 2022 MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44 KHz Language: English | Size: 4.40 GB | Duration: 5h 18m 8s | Lesson (12) If a picture is worth a thousand words, then just imagine the stories you can tell with comics. From political cartoons and the newspaper funny pages to emotionally resonant biographies and multi-volume superhero epics, the scope of comics is a broad one. While many people may still hold onto the outdated idea that comics are silly or childish, the truth is comics comprise a multi-billion-dollar industry with an immense, world-spanning fanbase of all ages and from all walks of life. Whether you consume them as syndicated strips on cheap newsprint or as serialized arcs in glossy, collector's edition volumes (often labeled "graphic novels"), comics have something to offer everyone. Comics in the US began in earnest at the tail end of the 19th century, with the first newspaper comic strip in 1896. However, if you look back to political cartoons and other forms where text and image collide, you could actually say comics have been around, in one form or another, for centuries. Since the early 20th century, iconic characters like Superman and Captain America have leapt from the pages of comics and onto the screen, culminating in comic books as the source material for some of our most successful films, television shows, and video games. Comics have also proven to be an ideal form for memoirs, biographies, historical narratives, and other more "serious" literature, with many titles becoming bestsellers and even finding their way into school curricula. So, how are comics made? What are the rules of the medium? How would a writer or an illustrator-or both-begin creating their own comics? These and other questions are what you will explore in the 12 inspiring lessons of How to Create Comics. Taught by Peter Bagge, a cartoonist and award-winning comics creator, these lessons will show you how comics are made and why they have become so enduringly successful. Like any wide-ranging and long-lived medium, comics creators put certain technical and creative tools to use when they produce their stories. You will get a firsthand look at how these tools are used-and how digital tools have changed the comics landscape. Whether you want to create your own comics or simply better understand the medium as a fan, this course will give you the tools and the insight to see how comics work and to start you on your way to creating your own stories. Tips, Tricks, and Tools of the Trade To create comics, you first need to understand them. While comics are not the only medium to use text and imagery together to tell a story, they are unique in the ways they use prose and illustration in a special kind of harmony. In other words, comics are not simply illustrated texts; rather, they fuse the written word and imagery together in such a way that one can't work without the other. Many comics creators both write and draw their own work, from newspaper comic strip creators to literary memoirists. It is often easier to have a singular vision in your comics when you are the one controlling all aspects of the work. But there are also numerous comics created by multiple individuals with different roles. In the case of many of the biggest and longest-running superhero comics, there are writers, illustrators, colorists, letterers, and a host of other roles, all filled by different people who must work together to create the finished product. Whether you want to be a single creator or fill a role in a larger production, Professor Bagge will give you a thorough understanding of how each of the parts of a comic must come together, and how to consider every aspect of storytelling when you create-or enjoy-comics. There is no one way to make comics-the medium is far too broad and inclusive to claim there is a singular "right" way to tell stories. But there are technical aspects, materials, and terminology any would-be creator should know, such as Panels and Layouts. Comics use specific page layouts and individual panels in different arrangements to tell their stories. Understanding the traditional rules of formatting and constructing comics can give you much-needed structure-and can also show you which rules are worth breaking for the effects that you would like to achieve. Color Palettes and Schemes. Some comics are created in monochrome, some in full-color, and others fall somewhere in-between. You will learn to better understand how color serves your drawings and how you can create moods with different color choices and contrasts of light and dark. Character Design. The characters you will create for your comics, whether they are realistic or not, are something you will have to reproduce again and again, so it is important to understand what details you should include and what you can leave out. Professional Supplies. The range of art supplies available can be overwhelming if you are unfamiliar with them, so Professor Bagge will show you what professionals use and why they often favor certain kinds of paper, pencils, pens, brushes, and more. Word Bubbles. Speech bubbles, thought clouds, and text boxes are all an iconic part of comics, but they can become overwhelming if they are relied on too heavily. Understanding how to balance words and images is a vital component of making a comic work as more than an illustrated text. Analog vs. Digital. We live in a world where many comics are no longer produced solely by hand, with paper and pen. In the new digital landscape, it is important to understand how digital comics are made and distributed, and how to decide when you want to work with physical media, digital tools, or both. From the Sunday Supplement to the Pulitzer Prize As you explore the ins and outs of creating comics, Professor Bagge taps into his own comics expertise while also touching on the work and influence of some of the medium's greatest creators, including Charles Schultz; Art Spiegelman; Marjane Satrapi; Jack Kirby; Steve Ditko; Stan Lee; Crumb; Michael DeForge; Roz Chast, and many more. Many of these comics artists and writers have won awards and have seen their work published around the world. Comics have entertained, influenced popular culture, and engaged readers of all ages for decades. Creators like Stan Lee and Jack Kirby have created iconic characters that have achieved general pop culture significance beyond their pulp comic roots. And some have even helped readers to better understand and process the more difficult moments in history. In 1980, Art Spiegelman created the graphic novel Maus to tell the story of his father's experiences in World War II. Spiegelman's masterpiece is taught in schools around the world and is the first (and, so far, only) comic to win a Pulitzer Prize. Maus is both a testament to the power of comics as an effective mode to tell meaningful stories, and a demonstration of how far comics have come since their earliest days as simple newspaper supplements and disposable pulp magazines. With the deep knowledge, experience, and technical guidance you will get from Professor Bagge in How to Create Comics, you will be able to start creating your own comics, whether you simply want to make people laugh or you want to tell a deeper story. Along the way, you will also develop a stronger appreciation for comics as a varied and ever-changing medium that offers an astonishing array of storytelling tools and endless possibilities for creativity and imagination. As the late, great comics legend Stan Lee would say, "Excelsior!" Homepage https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/how-to-create-comics [b]AusFile[/b] https://ausfile.com/td2ks508duet/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part1.rar.html https://ausfile.com/r8scrrg8orah/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part2.rar.html https://ausfile.com/31kr15ofimlo/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part3.rar.html https://ausfile.com/s1w5o4v9tkx7/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part4.rar.html https://ausfile.com/p1l7d9ol1w4q/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part5.rar.html https://ausfile.com/s4vmvhg28wk8/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part6.rar.html Fileaxa https://fileaxa.com/p6vapz52o2k9/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part1.rar https://fileaxa.com/bkpp2179kipk/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part2.rar https://fileaxa.com/dkunuy6uqpb0/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part3.rar https://fileaxa.com/3fdzrcwzqkqr/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part4.rar https://fileaxa.com/us5keo9wwybo/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part5.rar https://fileaxa.com/7ut7c74sfdpg/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part6.rar TakeFile https://takefile.link/kxb7zw0mwf2v/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part1.rar.html https://takefile.link/lf78mbdnmz6n/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part2.rar.html https://takefile.link/zdfv0ywzq60b/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part3.rar.html https://takefile.link/xfh62vhewmwr/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part4.rar.html https://takefile.link/hies3wr2cqts/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part5.rar.html https://takefile.link/eofjpyll2hy8/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part6.rar.html Rapidgator https://rapidgator.net/folder/8039171/TTCHowtoCreateComics.html http://peeplink.in/1a7bec95b0c1 Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/WErvF2vR82/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part1.rar.html https://fikper.com/8bjukL0kWn/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part2.rar.html https://fikper.com/VLg4oII1tL/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part3.rar.html https://fikper.com/79NKj6acHz/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part4.rar.html https://fikper.com/KF8E1i45Fs/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part5.rar.html https://fikper.com/K7PhLuPXkr/lbaqn.TTC..How.to.Create.Comics.part6.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
Free Download TTC - Why Economies Rise or Fall Published 2010 MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44 KHz Language: English | Size: 10.19 GB | Duration: 12h 8m 1s | Lesson (24) Explore a fundamental question in economics that has a tremendous impact on the lives of billions of people. How can a nation create the conditions for economic growth and prosperity, improving people's lives on both the individual and national levels? And what, once these conditions are achieved, can it do to sustain this progress? Do any of the many "isms" under which we organize our economic philosophies hold the answer? While an insightful understanding of different economic approaches has always been essential for policymakers, it is equally important for those of us who might not steer the economy but must still live and function within it. Such an understanding is the key to making sense of not only economic events but of "noneconomic" news as well, allowing us to anti[beeep]te the economic consequences that can impact both the nation's economy and one's personal economy. And, of course, it sharpens the judgment you already bring to your own discussions of the issues. In the 24 lectures of Why Economies Rise or Fall, Professor Peter Rodriguez of the University of Virginia guides you through a stimulating and, above all, accessible examination of what economists know and don't know about this elusive search for economic prosperity. Discover the Truths of Economic Success and Failure The last 200 years of economic history have offered us a wealth of information useful in probing the question of why economies rise or fall. Much of this information is rooted in several influential theories, developed by such famous thinkers as Adam Smith, Karl Marx, and John Maynard Keynes. Yet while economic theories are useful, in order to truly understand how economies grow, thrive, and potentially fall, you must also look at how individual countries use and apply these theories. Sometimes they strictly adhere to these theories; sometimes they adapt these theories to their own cultural history; and sometimes they take these theories and branch off into new economic territory. In Why Economies Rise or Fall, you'll learn how countries as widely different as the United States and Vietnam have grown their economies; how countries like China and India were able to recover from economic reverses; and, most important, why the critical test of any economic policy is its ability to productively alter human behavior for everyone's ultimate benefit. By looking at economic growth as the result of incentivizing such productive behavior-"making productivity more profitable than all the alternatives"-Professor Rodriguez clears up an often-shrouded economic landscape. The result is a course that brings the economic strategies chosen by nations down to street level by adding a newfound clarity to key issues Why economies succeed or fail, what secrets lie beneath the generalized "banner" of a particular ideology, and what might happen when you mix them together How economic bubbles are created, why they burst, and how nations recover from them The challenges posed by the hyperconnected world economy created by globalization The damage that factors like corruption and even the "informal" economy represented by colorful vendors and street bazaars can do to a nation's prospects for growth How everything we know about economic and financial hegemony may change with the rise of China and the deep structural issues facing mature Western economies Your Chance to Connect the Dots That Link Economics to People In lecture after lecture, Professor Rodriguez shows you how to connect the economic dots of causes and effects with an approach that joins historical example with contemporary understanding. To explain the impact of the Industrial Revolution on both growth and people, for example, he begins not in its urban factories but in the fields of rural farmlands, driving home how it was the lesser-hailed Agricultural Revolution that made that more famous revolution possible. By dramatically increasing agricultural productivity, it freed farm workers from their daily struggle for subsistence and made them available for the cities and their factories. The results, of course, are with us to this day, and Professor Rodriguez examines both sides of the picture history has painted. He looks at some of the most successful economies in recent history, including those of the United States, China, Japan, and the so-called "Asian Tigers" of South Korea, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Taiwan. He takes an equally penetrating look at economies that have experienced both pronounced successes and failures, including the former Soviet Union, Vietnam, and India. And he also examines those that have struggled mightily but have failed to grow at all, like Nigeria and Venezuela. In a nutshell, notes Professor Rodriguez, "You'll see the world and how it operates." Just as important, you'll be viewing that world not through the often-clouded lens of any "ism" or ideology unrelated to real-world human activity but from the perspective of the lives they actually impact. "What all of these conversations and all of these schools of thought and ideas really intend to teach us is about how to get what we want. They're about a means to an end ... the chance to live a little bit better year by year, getting us to places that have equality for lots of people, or at least something near it; if not equality, then justice and fairness, hope for a better life, for stability." To bring those lessons home, Professor Rodriquez brings a wealth of experience, not only from the classroom, where he has been repeatedly honored for his teaching skills, but from the world of business, as well. There, he has focused on international business and economic development, with a special interest in the economic consequences of corruption. Corruption, in fact, becomes the focus of a fascinating lecture that reveals the key distinction between corruption that is merely pervasive and corruption that is arbitrary, as well as the profoundly different impacts each can have. In the same way, he opens your eyes to the often-ignored consequences of the "informal economy" represented by open-air markets, unlicensed street vendors, and casual storefronts. Rather than being mere examples of local color, they can, in fact, be indicators of troubling factors in an economy. And they can exert a profound drain on productivity and growth. Your exposure to this ground-level view of how economies really function when the "isms" and ideology are peeled away prepares you for a more nuanced understanding of the factors we see everyday in the economic world. By course's end, you'll understand as never before both the benefits granted and the costs extracted by the "instant economy" that technology and globalization have brought us. You'll grasp what China's expected economic dominance may soon mean. And you'll have a new appreciation of the juggling act policymakers perform as they fashion each new "experiment," trying to heed history's latest lesson in balancing the roles of the state, the market, and the individual in achieving national growth and maximum human happiness. Homepage https://www.thegreatcoursesplus.com/why-economies-rise-or-fall?tn=192_grid_Course_1_100_22851&pos=1_26 [b]AusFile[/b] https://ausfile.com/wx23rec4jk0y/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part01.rar.html https://ausfile.com/cgckz0elcyeg/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part02.rar.html https://ausfile.com/2cwum9thhfae/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part03.rar.html https://ausfile.com/axwc2kjkvsw7/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part04.rar.html https://ausfile.com/8ivqhbrl3iud/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part05.rar.html https://ausfile.com/n6tbavhe2ltq/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part06.rar.html https://ausfile.com/yfwy9e7fndm3/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part07.rar.html https://ausfile.com/d19hkquttxyt/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part08.rar.html https://ausfile.com/xjowml2dmdsm/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part09.rar.html https://ausfile.com/yl0r8lx25rq2/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part10.rar.html https://ausfile.com/b0w0s4riwqun/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part11.rar.html https://ausfile.com/dji304flv6px/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part12.rar.html Fileaxa https://fileaxa.com/1sowzoeeaulj/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part01.rar https://fileaxa.com/t7ud2xbc7u7x/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part02.rar https://fileaxa.com/shhfaq9xspld/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part03.rar https://fileaxa.com/a662047w5wdp/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part04.rar https://fileaxa.com/tchqbugmue8l/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part05.rar https://fileaxa.com/czjy7xk1izr7/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part06.rar https://fileaxa.com/l41l7eanlo0a/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part07.rar https://fileaxa.com/bdi7gtjyij18/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part08.rar https://fileaxa.com/9aheflaupykv/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part09.rar https://fileaxa.com/szrnuby01on5/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part10.rar https://fileaxa.com/0uf513ydvo2e/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part11.rar https://fileaxa.com/y3bkcly701rs/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part12.rar TakeFile https://takefile.link/55yucetgojyy/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part01.rar.html https://takefile.link/i2r8mkyckskk/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part02.rar.html https://takefile.link/suggi5cbhp3v/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part03.rar.html https://takefile.link/9obg7umsrdhk/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part04.rar.html https://takefile.link/7q8kt2qlx8ew/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part05.rar.html https://takefile.link/jfpxbq902ilf/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part06.rar.html https://takefile.link/m01ni2ym14xc/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part07.rar.html https://takefile.link/s12k9gdpct69/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part08.rar.html https://takefile.link/k6a2ubzqgt2f/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part09.rar.html https://takefile.link/aybby9z0mo5z/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part10.rar.html https://takefile.link/xsrsstroizi4/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part11.rar.html https://takefile.link/eya36u71zn9j/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part12.rar.html Rapidgator https://rapidgator.net/folder/8039170/TTCWhyEconomiesRiseorFall.html http://peeplink.in/40b6ed781511 Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/VbVTemjX7j/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part01.rar.html https://fikper.com/knlRnV8Sfo/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part02.rar.html https://fikper.com/36BBI9XWBE/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part03.rar.html https://fikper.com/Ocx2zOyFh1/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part04.rar.html https://fikper.com/YhuFNqAfSj/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part05.rar.html https://fikper.com/8AKFoVsDxH/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part06.rar.html https://fikper.com/wmZJPdBki3/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part07.rar.html https://fikper.com/RTFnbZmUky/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part08.rar.html https://fikper.com/DlPOXB1uuh/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part09.rar.html https://fikper.com/cxeWi9qrEM/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part10.rar.html https://fikper.com/gGrT0gPgKy/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part11.rar.html https://fikper.com/Udtc0wSlZP/mdzkb.TTC..Why.Economies.Rise.or.Fall.part12.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
Free Download TTC - Great Tours Ancient Cities of the Mediterranean Released 4/2025 By Darius Arya, PhD The American Institute for Roman Culture MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch Level: Beginner | Genre: eLearning | Language: English + subtitle | Duration: 24 Lessons ( 11h 41m ) | Size: 9.6 GB The region of the Mediterranean is one of the great wellsprings of human civilization. Here, in the lands surrounding the Mediterranean Sea, many of the seminal cultures of antiquity took shape, from the Phoenicians and the Greeks to the Romans, the Carthaginians, the Egyptians, the Anatolians, and more. In many ways, these cultures thrived because of their relationship to the great body of water that surrounded them, which facilitated exploration, communication, trade, and conquest. The region of the Mediterranean is one of the great wellsprings of human civilization. Here, in the lands surrounding the Mediterranean Sea, many of the seminal cultures of antiquity took shape, from the Phoenicians and the Greeks to the Romans, the Carthaginians, the Egyptians, the Anatolians, and more. In many ways, these cultures thrived because of their relationship to the great body of water that surrounded them, which facilitated exploration, communication, trade, and conquest. Central to the history of the ancient Mediterranean are the splendorous cities that flowered around the region-bases of power that saw innovation, commerce, expansion, and the building of great empires. Many of these cities have become icons of the ancient world and exemplars of the cultures, conquests, and ways of life that have built western civilization. In The Great Tours: Ancient Cities of the Mediterranean, you'll embark on a lavish and wide-ranging travelogue through the ancient societies that ruled the Mediterranean world. These 24 compelling lectures take you to a rich range of superlative cities across the Mediterranean-a thrilling panorama of the preeminent and historically pivotal urban centers of the ancient world. Your guide is Dr. Darius Arya of The American Institute for Roman Culture, an expert scholar of the Mediterranean world as well as a prolific host of television series exploring its ancient cultures. His deep knowledge of the region and long dedication to unearthing its treasures make this course a revelation of the richness, the sophistication, and the remarkable diversity of the societies that thrived across this singular part of the earth. The course spans the entire Mediterranean region, introducing you to ancient cities, both legendary and less familiar, of the Italian peninsula, the Adriatic Sea and Dalmatian coast, Greece and the Aegean, Israel and the Levant, and North Africa, as well as ancient Anatolia (Turkey), Gaul (France) and Iberia (Spain). These richly illustrated video segments offer you a wonderful blueprint for travel, highlighting many of the most impressive and unforgettable sites in the Mediterranean world, as well as an inspiring resource for learning, enrichment, and enjoyment at home. Discover Glories of Antiquity In numerous ways, the cities of the ancient Mediterranean are illuminating keys to the cultures they represent and offer enlightening and nuanced perspectives on the rise of Western civilization, European culture, and the origins of much of the world we know today. In addition, these cities bear witness to some of the western world's most fascinating history and most incredible human achievements. Some of the cities survive as fantastic ruins; others have largely vanished. But all of them have left their mark on history and richly reward our attention today. Extraordinary and historically significant cities of the ancient Mediterranean include Athens. Shining jewel of Greek civilization, whose political system, philosophy, architecture, art, and culture still enthrall the world. Petra. In today's Jordan, one of the world's most stunning archaeological sites, whose sublime rock-cut tombs speak of a great trading culture which connected the Mediterranean with Arabia. Knossos. On the island of Crete, the mysterious, palatial seat of the Minoan civilization, famed for the legend of King Minos and the Minotaur. Carthage. The imposing North African capital of the maritime empire that famously rivaled Rome, and one of the greatest cities of the ancient world. Leptis Magna. In coastal Libya; known as one of the most beautiful cities of the Roman Empire, and now an amazingly preserved UNESCO World Heritage site. Resplendent Capitals of State, Commerce, and Culture Across the span of the course, you'll delve into the history, lore and achievements of the premier cities of the ancient Mediterranean, taking in sites such as Rome. In two lectures on the awe-inspiring world of ancient Rome, take the measure of the city that was the beating heart of a vast empire. Explore its monumental edifices, ingenious infrastructure, grand commercial centers, and its massive port of Ostia Antica. Jerusalem. Find how this landlocked metropolis was deeply connected to Mediterranean trade routes, making it a major center of commerce as well as of culture. Marvel at its majestic architecture built under the Jewish kings and the later Herod the Great. Ephesus. In today's Turkey, one of the most magnificent Greco-Roman cities of the ancient Mediterranean, and a dazzling archaeological site to visit today. Walk through the city at its height, and visualize its greatness as a center of trade, learning, and art. Alexandria. Founded by Alexander the Great on the shores of Egypt, and perhaps the greatest cultural center of Mediterranean antiquity. Witness its rise under the Ptolemaic pharaohs as a capital of learning and scholarship, and the site of the fabled Library of Alexandria. Constantinople. Discover this incredible city as Byzantium, under the Greeks, and then as Constantinople under Roman rule. Travel its fabulous urban landscape in the time of the Roman emperors, and grasp why, for centuries, it was one of the most important cities of the Mediterranean. Hidden Urban Wonders In addition to the most renowned urban complexes of the region, you'll encounter a wide spectrum of cities that are less familiar, but which also commanded the attention and influenced the unfolding of the economic, political, and cultural landscape of the Mediterranean. On the Dalmatian Coast of Croatia, you'll discover the treasures of Aquileia, one of the wealthiest cities of the late Roman Empire. In Lebanon, you'll visit the Phoenician city of Sidon, celebrated for its literature, glassware, and dyes. You'll uncover the fortified city and architectural gems of Dyrrachium in today's Albania; the spectacular Roman ruins of Nemausus in France; the sacred healing center of Kos (Greece), the transcendent art and architecture of Ravenna (Italy); the UNESCO World Heritage sites of Tipasa and Timgad in Algeria; and many more. Throughout the course, Dr. Arya highlights memorable and often astonishing details of life in the sites visited, shedding light on the extraordinary resourcefulness and sophistication of the ancient peoples of the Mediterranean. As you range across the region, you'll stop at several of the Seven Wonders of the ancient world, now lost, taking detailed looks at what is known about the Colossus of Rhodes, the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus, the Mausoleum of Halicarnassus, and the Pharos (Lighthouse) of Alexandria. You'll also look at some of the amazing engineering feats that undergirded the cities in question, such as the great complex of 16 water wheels in Arelate (France), which ground grain for 10,000 people; the gladiatorial arena of Pola (Croatia), equipped with massive tanks of perfumed water to be sprayed over the spectators on hot summer days; the Basilica Cistern of Constantinople, a cavity the size of a cathedral, holding 20 million gallons of water; and the artificial, manmade harbor of Caesarea Maritima near Jerusalem, built with Roman hydraulic concrete. Finally, you'll discover a rich range of the masterworks of art found in the ancient cities, from the exquisite golden artifacts of Taras (Italy) and the Laocoön Group by Agesander of Rhodes, one of the most technically sophisticated sculptures of antiquity, to the glorious mosaics of the basilicas of Ravenna and the breathtaking Hagia Sophia of Constantinople. In The Great Tours: Ancient Cities of the Mediterranean, you'll discover some of history's greatest marvels and most fascinating cultures, at the fountainhead of Western civilization. What Will You Learn? Trace the development of some of the most interesting urban centers-some that are thriving metropolises today and others that are just ruins echoing their glorious past Journey from the harbors of Spain to the shores of Turkey, from the Greek islands to the North African hinterlands, and all sorts of places in between Walk through thousands of years of history, from the earliest trading settlements of the stone age to the emerging centers of Christianity in late antiquity Find out how the Mediterranean has allowed for a tangled web of interconnected cultures and cities to form along its coasts and into the countryside Homepage: https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/great-tours-ancient-cities-of-the-mediterranean [b]AusFile[/b] https://ausfile.com/4k6hfejownj3/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part01.rar.html https://ausfile.com/lh3geh37a76v/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part02.rar.html https://ausfile.com/bd74f6merstq/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part03.rar.html https://ausfile.com/usotbfgp8y4e/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part04.rar.html https://ausfile.com/p9bazsnureku/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part05.rar.html https://ausfile.com/yvet55uv0vhp/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part06.rar.html https://ausfile.com/ghq4qoov7bhg/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part07.rar.html https://ausfile.com/k9x94pr92s3p/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part08.rar.html https://ausfile.com/rmx7kymvu49f/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part09.rar.html https://ausfile.com/547o42wz7ael/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part10.rar.html Fileaxa https://fileaxa.com/14rit4jf7s1c/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part01.rar https://fileaxa.com/cu5ccesf36bl/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part02.rar https://fileaxa.com/e9ay234ok2hh/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part03.rar https://fileaxa.com/w55nfi5j8hkc/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part04.rar https://fileaxa.com/x4vaqcsndd3w/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part05.rar https://fileaxa.com/6n7v77nps0of/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part06.rar https://fileaxa.com/v31lz6w56jxv/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part07.rar https://fileaxa.com/nvk48hmmybjk/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part08.rar https://fileaxa.com/pi4oclwwxaj3/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part09.rar https://fileaxa.com/k0vmtr0y2tc0/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part10.rar TakeFile https://takefile.link/bhyr91xza8as/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part01.rar.html https://takefile.link/5kvgp3l5hx8i/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part02.rar.html https://takefile.link/e8a0p4hao58u/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part03.rar.html https://takefile.link/lx9syv95ram1/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part04.rar.html https://takefile.link/gkuv2j211fhv/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part05.rar.html https://takefile.link/dw0m4m7buehv/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part06.rar.html https://takefile.link/vj4enrrh63mc/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part07.rar.html https://takefile.link/a86f78uru8be/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part08.rar.html https://takefile.link/jpauxgvhqqum/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part09.rar.html https://takefile.link/c8i2o353d4hy/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part10.rar.html Rapidgator https://rg.to/folder/8038034/TTCGreatToursAncientCitiesoftheMediterranean.html http://peeplink.in/ba3a0e055350 Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/TFnAzdY4wm/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part01.rar.html https://fikper.com/Knsfu5VclM/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part02.rar.html https://fikper.com/UrPOxsX73K/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part03.rar.html https://fikper.com/G7ZektyZhO/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part04.rar.html https://fikper.com/GQLuDTIgpu/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part05.rar.html https://fikper.com/0Ph9t7jJar/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part06.rar.html https://fikper.com/H1GvSg3dAX/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part07.rar.html https://fikper.com/lpm4xg8MIv/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part08.rar.html https://fikper.com/o7a9ERNCaz/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part09.rar.html https://fikper.com/RA4FqpSYyL/zimvl.TTC..Great.Tours.Ancient.Cities.of.the.Mediterranean.part10.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
Free Download TTC - Lighting 101 by Pye Jirsa Published: 4/2024 MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44 KHz Language: English | Size: 7.3 GB | Duration: 8h 52m 59s | Lesson (65) Let an expert photographer guide you through the basics and intricacies of lighting, in this helpful, engaging course delivered like a creative workshop. When it comes to the art of photography, lighting is everything. It doesn't matter what your subject is or how your composition is structured, or whether you're shooting in a studio or outdoors. If you don't have great lighting, you can't have a great photograph. Knowing how to use this vital tool-how to take advantage of light, how to create it, and even how to shoot around it-is a crucial skill for anyone with a camera to learn, hone, and master. What are some prevalent myths about using your camera's flash? How can you play with ambient light for more dramatic effects? What tips should you keep in mind when using a direct flash? How can you color light for creative and corrective effects? These are just a few of the many pressing questions about lighting answered in Lighting 101. Photography expert Pye Jirsa guides you through the basics and intricacies of lighting in a way that makes this critical aspect of photography approachable and understandable. Delivered like a creative workshop, where you're the star student, these lesssons empower you with the knowledge and confidence to light your compositions, and to discover new levels of artistry in the photos you take. Take Control of Your Lighting Throughout these lessons, Pye teaches you how to get over any uncertainty you might have about lighting, and how to master light sources to take your photography to bold new heights of dramatic and creative expression. The lessons and virtual workshops that make up Lighting 101 are designed to cover all the fundamentals of lighting, including How your camera's flash can help when you're going for natural-type images, How to balance flash with ambient lighting to capture a subject's motion, What are real-world applications and principles of the inverse square law of light, What is the most important lighting gear for your camera-and when to use it, How to shoot in setups involving multiple bounce points for camera flash, What is the easy-to-learn art of coloring light for corrective effect in your photographs, and How flash modifiers can help shape light and create different looks for a single shot. Explore Case Studies in Lighting After you've built a fantastic foundation in lighting, flash, and flash modification, you'll spend several lessons at the end of Lighting 101 focusing on specific case studies in lighting. You'll learn the step-by-step strategies and techniques a master photographer uses to arrive at breathtaking shots of desert sunsets, family portraits, and more. You'll also gain insights into how photographers in unexpected situations use their knowledge and tools they have on hand when they just have to visually capture something in front of them. "You're always going to be in situations where you don't necessarily have the gear you might need with you," Pye says. "Or maybe you're just in a situation where you've got to get a shot quick. You have to just use what you have available to you." Developing a photographer's eye and intuition are key parts of this course as much as lighting is. More than just training you how to shoot like a photographer, the in-depth case studies will train you how to think like one, too. Ultimately, the best way to learn the art and craft of lighting is to get out there and practice. Using the principles, tutorials, techniques, and insider tricks in Lighting 101, the next time you're out in the world (or in a studio) with your camera, you'll have the confidence to shoot like a professional. What You'll Learn in This Course Lighting 101 is organized into a series of lessons composing eight chapters that each focus on a particular aspect of the essential element of lighting. Chapter One: Flash Fundamentals. Focus on starting out with just one camera flash, including a solid understanding of situations where flash can truly help you out, common myths and misunderstandings about flash, and some of the challenges involved in working with flash. Chapter Two: Flash Fundamentals Continued. Build on your solid flash foundation with a look at the differences between strobe and constant lighting, flash balancing and modification for more natural-looking images, and the surprising importance of the duration of your camera flash. Chapter Three: Lighting Types and Patterns. Learn about topics including primary and secondary key light patterns, how to change between soft and hard types of light, as well as the importance of the inverse square law to lighting (both in theory and in practice). Chapter Four: Lighting Gear. Learn about mastering your gear. You'll learn how to use your camera's different functions, on-board versus hot-shoe flash, the benefits of using manual mode whenever you're using flash, the strengths of different light filters, and more. Chapter Five: Lighting Modifications. Zero in on tips for when and when not to use direct flash, some direct flash modifications that create different looks for a studio shoot, and some lighting effects you can create with your flash's freezing capabilities. Chapter Six: Direct Flash vs. Bounce Flash. Take your learning a step further in this group of lessons that compare and contrast direct flash and bounce flash. Along the way, you'll learn to create different types of light setups and even some techniques to use when you think you have no options. Chapter Seven: Refining Existing Light. Turn now to filling and refining existing light in situations that are good-but not quite great yet. Using helpful case studies, you'll get to learn vital skills for using multi-point light bounce setups, coloring light for corrective effect, and more. Chapter Eight: Lighting Case Studies. Learn about case studies and analyses that will help you better understand how expert photographers set up their shots, pose and light their subjects, and work toward a final captivating image that's nothing short of unforgettable. Homepage: https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/lighting-101 [b]AusFile[/b] https://ausfile.com/kcjbfvuqp2sm/cshha.L.101.s.s.part1.rar.html https://ausfile.com/c16pfg4j8dh8/cshha.L.101.s.s.part2.rar.html https://ausfile.com/mglelos4hpul/cshha.L.101.s.s.part3.rar.html https://ausfile.com/n4oyfg1anspq/cshha.L.101.s.s.part4.rar.html https://ausfile.com/pdkw7xgxjccd/cshha.L.101.s.s.part5.rar.html https://ausfile.com/0hzvo7smt7s9/cshha.L.101.s.s.part6.rar.html https://ausfile.com/uk4ss208qd9t/cshha.L.101.s.s.part7.rar.html https://ausfile.com/5zsi00k1xuqg/cshha.L.101.s.s.part8.rar.html Fileaxa https://fileaxa.com/rl4jbseyeifc/cshha.L.101.s.s.part1.rar https://fileaxa.com/4qmb4l3uhu9r/cshha.L.101.s.s.part2.rar https://fileaxa.com/224gw1jbni7k/cshha.L.101.s.s.part3.rar https://fileaxa.com/vhktierz4203/cshha.L.101.s.s.part4.rar https://fileaxa.com/no08ixgrg3xv/cshha.L.101.s.s.part5.rar https://fileaxa.com/ensftb7nlcsu/cshha.L.101.s.s.part6.rar https://fileaxa.com/epa167w63wvr/cshha.L.101.s.s.part7.rar https://fileaxa.com/l0gl49s587gu/cshha.L.101.s.s.part8.rar TakeFile https://takefile.link/g9mie7fhb23i/cshha.L.101.s.s.part1.rar.html https://takefile.link/zaz1bk3tf8uu/cshha.L.101.s.s.part2.rar.html https://takefile.link/o5ehhhw0oxum/cshha.L.101.s.s.part3.rar.html https://takefile.link/7ob4pud978yq/cshha.L.101.s.s.part4.rar.html https://takefile.link/3fmwefccfy69/cshha.L.101.s.s.part5.rar.html https://takefile.link/xmlvriuex3o6/cshha.L.101.s.s.part6.rar.html https://takefile.link/2p3x4yh67xo3/cshha.L.101.s.s.part7.rar.html https://takefile.link/72wqy8glvp6o/cshha.L.101.s.s.part8.rar.html Rapidgator http://peeplink.in/dca8a2795715 Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/fqBYDmEeyl/cshha.L.101.s.s.part1.rar.html https://fikper.com/p7D49HChuR/cshha.L.101.s.s.part2.rar.html https://fikper.com/UFrw25z61Z/cshha.L.101.s.s.part3.rar.html https://fikper.com/sAXPbwwOOG/cshha.L.101.s.s.part4.rar.html https://fikper.com/3xbQYLTK4z/cshha.L.101.s.s.part5.rar.html https://fikper.com/I1C42oTGRc/cshha.L.101.s.s.part6.rar.html https://fikper.com/RUPihKyVaD/cshha.L.101.s.s.part7.rar.html https://fikper.com/W6J8J2tZOJ/cshha.L.101.s.s.part8.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
Free Download TTC - The Future of Space Exploration Released 3/2025 By Ariel Ekblaw, PhD Aurelia Institute; MIT Media Lab; Yale Center for Collaborative Arts and Media MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 12 Lessons ( 5h 37m ) | Size: 4.67 GB More than half a century after humans first walked on the Moon, exciting new space adventures are in the works. Thanks to major advances in rocketry, robotics, and other space technologies, humanity is on the verge of returning to the Moon, exploring Mars, building permanent orbiting space stations, expanding space tourism, and pushing the boundaries of exploration throughout the solar system and beyond More than half a century after humans first walked on the Moon, exciting new space adventures are in the works. Thanks to major advances in rocketry, robotics, and other space technologies, humanity is on the verge of returning to the Moon, exploring Mars, building permanent orbiting space stations, expanding space tourism, and pushing the boundaries of exploration throughout the solar system and beyond. After decades of incremental progress, we now stand on the brink of a transformative expansion in space projects, ushering in possibilities once dreamed of only in science fiction. Consider these developments Reusable rockets: Once deemed technically impractical due to extreme launch and reentry stresses, reusable rocket stages are now a reality thanks to firms like SpaceX and Blue Origin, significantly reducing the cost of delivering payloads to space. Lunar base: While Apollo missions were limited to just three days on the Moon, the Artemis program plans to extend lunar stays by up to a month, with astronauts living inside a pressurized habitat. The ultimate goal is a sustainable human lunar presence. Mars missions: Improvements in rocketry, life support systems, radiation protection, and habitat design are bringing human trips to Mars within reach, despite the challenges. With current technology, a roundtrip mission will take approximately two years. This is only a sample of the visionary initiatives now underway at NASA, aerospace companies, research labs, think tanks, and space start-ups. The Future of Space Exploration is your guide to this pioneering endeavor, reported by space architect and aerospace engineer Dr. Ariel Ekblaw, cofounder and CEO of Aurelia Institute and the founder and past director of the Space Exploration Initiative at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Throughout these 12 informative half-hour episodes, Dr. Ekblaw is joined by colleagues in different fields of space research and technology who contribute their own unique perspectives on this greatest of all adventures. After watching The Future of Space Exploration, you will have a deeper understanding of the challenges, innovations, and possibilities of space exploration-and may want to get involved yourself! New Technology for New Missions The Apollo expeditions to the Moon between 1968 and 1972 were an astonishing achievement, but ultimately transient. Astronauts planted flags, collected samples, and left. Scientists learned a great deal about the formation of the Moon and planets, but the infrastructure that made the landings possible was abandoned, largely because it was so expensive and specialized. By contrast, the Artemis program is designed for flexibility and permanence. Astronauts will not only explore but also build the foundation for future missions-turning the Moon from a destination into a stepping stone for Mars and beyond. Two dozen astronauts parti[beeep]ted in the Apollo lunar missions, while the Artemis program will likely involve many times that number, including non-astronauts. The Future of Space Exploration investigates the rockets, orbital stations, landing systems, and living quarters required for Artemis and other space ventures. You also learn about lesser-known hardware, such as BioSuit: Future lunar and Martian explorers will be outfitted with a formfitting spacesuit that is lighter and more mobile than the puffy, heavily padded, traditional spacesuit, which is like wearing a personal airbag. In comparison, the BioSuit resembles a scuba wetsuit. TESSERAE: Developed at Dr. Ekblaw's Aurelia Institute, this modular habitat autonomously self-assembles in space, much like crystals or molecules forming in nature. This hands-off approach will be invaluable for building space stations and interplanetary outposts. AstroAnt: Another of Dr. Ekblaw's research projects is a miniature robot for inspecting and diagnosing the outside surfaces of satellites, rovers, and landers. Like the swarms of autonomous robots in science fiction, AstroAnt is designed to work in teams. The Next Giant Leap Past spaceflights have been notoriously short on creature comforts, with cramped quarters, recycled air and water, limited hygiene, and highly processed food, not to mention lack of privacy and the mixed blessing of microgravity, which can induce vertigo in many astronauts. Although space travel will never be luxurious, upcoming missions will be far more livable than Apollo or even the International Space Station, which is the premier space project to date. Improvements in the works include More spacious habitats Visually appealing interiors Artificial gravity and exercise upgrades Better food and fresh produce Enhanced mental well-being and entertainment More comfortable sleep stations If that sounds like a resort advertisement, it's no coincidence-some space planners are already thinking about the future of space tourism. One of the early parti[beeep]nts in commercial space travel, space industry executive Dylan Taylor, shares his experience in this course. In 2021, he flew on a Blue Origin mission, replicating Alan Shepard's historic 1961 flight-the first American journey into space. During his 10-minute suborbital trip, Taylor experienced four and a half minutes of weightlessness, which he spent glued to the window: "I was essentially hovering over the Earth in zero gravity with nothing to see but the Earth beneath me," he reports. "And that was an incredibly powerful moment!" For Taylor and all prospective space tourists, this is just a taste of what's in store. His company is helping build one of NASA's next-generation space stations-a project developed in partnership with Hilton Hotels to radically redefine the space experience. The Future of Space Exploration hears from a wide range of other hands-on experts who are shaping our future in space-engineers, architects, designers, and entrepreneurs. As Dr. Ekblaw notes, "Humanity is at its best when we are striving to reach distant but attainable goals. Space exploration is just that. We're striving to bring to life a visionary, aspirational future that can be accessed by all of us." What Will You Learn? Discover how the space age is rapidly advancing toward goals once imagined only in science fiction Explore the Artemis program's mission to send astronauts to the Moon for extended research stays Examine the challenges of a human mission to Mars and back, and the innovative technologies being developed to overcome them Gain insights from a dozen engineers, architects, executives, and other experts who are shaping the future of space exploration Learn about the cutting-edge upgrades being integrated into the next generation of orbiting space stations Homepage: https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/the-future-of-space-exploration [b]AusFile[/b] https://ausfile.com/iajfp3s95v53/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part1.rar.html https://ausfile.com/ummutus1rlpa/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part2.rar.html https://ausfile.com/bp3fy2t20kxj/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part3.rar.html https://ausfile.com/sbz2a8jxdg1g/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part4.rar.html https://ausfile.com/v200s7pw0vtq/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part5.rar.html Fileaxa https://fileaxa.com/j71gjdivtn30/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part1.rar https://fileaxa.com/3gw7yp96q1tj/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part2.rar https://fileaxa.com/2r1izoqf1ru4/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part3.rar https://fileaxa.com/g79wswz9oyrc/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part4.rar https://fileaxa.com/gaf4ka56c3km/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part5.rar TakeFile https://takefile.link/qz9ozexnsst7/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part1.rar.html https://takefile.link/zz1vn6641y4i/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part2.rar.html https://takefile.link/rujki5txwy6z/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part3.rar.html https://takefile.link/qghr3qtmudqs/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part4.rar.html https://takefile.link/imo4ks4x38qm/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part5.rar.html Rapidgator https://rg.to/folder/8023653/tycazTTCTheFutureofSpaceExploration.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/WhZytSAZsB/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part1.rar.html https://fikper.com/B2T2bazgTs/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part2.rar.html https://fikper.com/3r45rq1YIi/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part3.rar.html https://fikper.com/dMpGdqU59Q/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part4.rar.html https://fikper.com/WChqxTiRHJ/tycaz.TTC..The.Future.of.Space.Exploration.part5.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
Free Download TTC - Theory of Evolution - A History of Controversy Last updated: 3/2025 By Edward J. Larson, Ph.D., J.D. Professor, Pepperdine University MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 12 Lessons ( 6h 7m ) | Size: 5.12 GB Charles Darwin's theory of organic evolution-the idea that life on earth is the product of purely natural causes, not the hand of God-set off shock waves that continue to reverberate through Western society, and especially the United States. What makes evolution such a profoundly provocative concept, so convincing to most scientists, yet so socially and politically divisive? The Theory of Evolution: A History of Controversy is an examination of the varied elements that so often make this science the object of strong sentiments and heated debate. Professor Edward J. Larson leads you through the "evolution" of evolution, with an eye toward enhancing your understanding of the development of the theory itself and the roots of the controversies that surround it. In these lectures you will Explore pre-Darwinian theories of the origins of life, from Genesis and the ancient Greeks to such 18th- and 19th-century scientists as Georges Cuvier and Chevalier de Lamarck Follow the life and work of Charles Darwin, and the impact of his 1859 masterpiece, On the Origin of Species. Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection was immediately recognized as a threat to traditional religion, but was quickly accepted (the first printing of Origin of Species sold out on the first day) Examine the history of evolutionary science after Darwin-a fascinating story that includes the "rediscovery," after 35 years, of Gregor Mendel's work on genetic variation; the unearthing of prehominid, or early human, fossils by Raymond Dart in 1925 and the Leakey family in the 1950s; and the confusion Created by: the sensational, but later discredited, discovery of Piltdown Man-a fake evolutionary "missing link"-in 1912 Trace the history of religious objections to evolution, from those of Darwin's own time to contemporary efforts to teach creation science in American schools. This includes a detailed discussion of the famous Scopes "monkey trial," which in fact was a staged media event, designed to create publicity for the town of Dayton, Tennessee. Are Our Genes more Important than We Are? This course makes it clear that the history of controversy surrounding evolution is not limited to a dispute between science and religion. Even within the scientific community, the fine details of the theory of evolution have long been a matter of passionate dispute. In fact, in the last third of the 19th century, the prin[beeep]l objections were scientific, not religious. Although the fossil record was a key piece of evidence for evolution, it had gaps that could be used to argue against the theory. And both proponents and critics wondered how altruistic human qualities such as love and generosity could possibly have evolved through the competitive, often harsh, processes that Darwin described. From Professor Larson's presentation, you will learn that new ideas in evolution science have often created new controversies. For example, is it truly possible, as some scientists now maintain, that humans exist merely to ensure the survival of their genes? Such research has created disagreement among scientists about the degree to which evolution drives human behavior, and has further alienated many segments of the public. Evolution's "Dark Side": Social Darwinism In these lectures, you will review perhaps the most sinister controversy associated with the theory of evolution: social Darwinism. From the beginning, the Darwinian theory of evolution has been linked to economic and political views. Thomas Malthus's theories of population growth and competition for limited resources even inspired Darwin's thinking on natural selection. Unfortunately, later supporters of evolution carried this line of thinking too far. Beginning with Herbert Spencer, who coined the term "survival of the fittest," Darwin's ideas were used as evidence for a wide range of social beliefs, from laissez-faire capitalism to racism, colonialism, and, in perhaps the worst application, Nazism. In the United States, social Darwinism has served as a basis for the creation of IQ tests and for eugenics programs that resulted in the forced sterilization of thousands of mentally ill or retarded Americans. Unsettling Implications: The Growing Gulf Between Science and Religion During the late 19th century, largely through the efforts of scientists who sought to integrate evolutionary science with spiritual belief, evolution was widely accepted by the religious community in the United States. Today, this is hardly the case. In his last four lectures, Professor Larson examines the trends that have, since 1920, widened the gulf between science and religion. These include an increase in fundamentalist Protestantism, the weakening of liberal Protestantism as a counteracting force, and the growing power of a firmly conservative South. In the 1960s, federally funded neo-Darwinian textbooks provoked a conservative backlash. Beginning with the publication of Henry M. Morris's The Genesis Flood, efforts to gain equal time for the teaching of creation science, based on biblical teachings, gathered strength. Rebuffed by the courts, creationism continues to thrive through the increasing numbers of private Christian schools and through home schooling. The growing gulf between science and religion has unsettling implications for our society. Large segments of the American population reject the naturalism of current evolutionary thinking. Nine of 10 Americans believe in spiritual causes for life, with only 10 percent accepting the purely naturalistic explanations espoused by evolution. Strikingly, these statistics are almost exactly the opposite among the scientific community. A Pulitzer Prize-Winning Teacher As both a historian of science and a professor of law, Professor Edward J. Larson brings exceptional qualifications to this subject. His book, Summer for the Gods: The Scopes Trial and America's Continuing Debate Over Science and Religion, won the 1998 Pulitzer Prize in History. His analysis provides an invaluable perspective on the volatile history of what is arguably the single most significant idea of modern times. Homepage: https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/theory-of-evolution-a-history-of-controversy [b]AusFile[/b] https://ausfile.com/k0zudhapdxdp/mzikp.TTC..Theory.of.Evolution.A.History.of.Controversy.part1.rar.html https://ausfile.com/44dr8d2znniw/mzikp.TTC..Theory.of.Evolution.A.History.of.Controversy.part2.rar.html https://ausfile.com/8v5lj5dwinz0/mzikp.TTC..Theory.of.Evolution.A.History.of.Controversy.part3.rar.html https://ausfile.com/7nlnpxa32vpf/mzikp.TTC..Theory.of.Evolution.A.History.of.Controversy.part4.rar.html https://ausfile.com/rd100x7brpn0/mzikp.TTC..Theory.of.Evolution.A.History.of.Controversy.part5.rar.html https://ausfile.com/wv6o97bb64qr/mzikp.TTC..Theory.of.Evolution.A.History.of.Controversy.part6.rar.html TakeFile https://takefile.link/uzeasqzwfhuq/mzikp.TTC..Theory.of.Evolution.A.History.of.Controversy.part1.rar.html https://takefile.link/z1ngsm8ugovp/mzikp.TTC..Theory.of.Evolution.A.History.of.Controversy.part2.rar.html https://takefile.link/uprjx65scldw/mzikp.TTC..Theory.of.Evolution.A.History.of.Controversy.part3.rar.html https://takefile.link/3wf0cabyw7iz/mzikp.TTC..Theory.of.Evolution.A.History.of.Controversy.part4.rar.html https://takefile.link/ckfwlqbvkzbv/mzikp.TTC..Theory.of.Evolution.A.History.of.Controversy.part5.rar.html https://takefile.link/psxtnorvb5u1/mzikp.TTC..Theory.of.Evolution.A.History.of.Controversy.part6.rar.html Rapidgator https://rg.to/folder/8014066/TTCTheoryofEvolutionAHistoryofControversy.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/Zq5hefqTXb/mzikp.TTC..Theory.of.Evolution.A.History.of.Controversy.part1.rar.html https://fikper.com/cC3PomQ2tw/mzikp.TTC..Theory.of.Evolution.A.History.of.Controversy.part2.rar.html https://fikper.com/PTuCorBm3H/mzikp.TTC..Theory.of.Evolution.A.History.of.Controversy.part3.rar.html https://fikper.com/djUgiLMcHg/mzikp.TTC..Theory.of.Evolution.A.History.of.Controversy.part4.rar.html https://fikper.com/SOhRuPkQx7/mzikp.TTC..Theory.of.Evolution.A.History.of.Controversy.part5.rar.html https://fikper.com/k2NLIT2zTs/mzikp.TTC..Theory.of.Evolution.A.History.of.Controversy.part6.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
Free Download TTC - Money and Banking - What Everyone Should Know Last updated: 3/2025 By Michael K. Salemi, Ph.D. Professor, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 36 Lessons ( 18h 11m ) | Size: 15.2 GB From the invention of coins by the ancient Lydians to the 21st-century eurozone, human history tells the story of ingenious financial systems and the never-ending quest for economic solutions. Today, our global economy is both fascinating and dizzyingly complex-challenging even experts to comprehend it fully. But one thing remains clear: Money and finance play a deeply fundamental role in your life. Money is a social contract that affects the decisions of nations and individuals. Our financial institutions drive our political systems and the growth of nations. And money and banking are indispensable in both your daily financial transactions and your most essential long-term plans. A working knowledge of money and banking systems is critically useful in several ways It helps you understand the complex and often bewildering world of finance. It helps you to "read" the current economic climate, to make sense of what you see in the media, and to gauge where the economy is headed. It gives you key insights into society and the economic issues in life. It allows you to comprehend integral aspects of history and the way civilization developed. Perhaps most important, it helps you to plan your own life and to make key financial decisions for yourself and your family. Speaking to all of this in Money and Banking: What Everyone Should Know, economist and award-winning Professor Michael K. Salemi of The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill leads you in a panoramic exploration of our monetary and financial systems, their inner workings, and their crucial role and presence in your world. In 36 incisive and detailed lectures, he gives you a penetrating look at the financial institutions that are fundamental to your life and well-being. Beginning with the colorful history of money, including the monetary history of the United States, you investigate pivotal topics, including the crucial role of public confidence in the stability of our financial system; how money is Created by: commercial and central banks; how "Wall Street" and "Main Street" are inextricably intertwined, each requiring the success of the other; the dramatic history and causes of hyperinflation; the uses of "local" currencies and nontraditional monetary systems; the thorny problem of financial firms that are deemed "too big to fail," and why being named "TBTF" gives firms an incentive to engage in risky investments; the irrational psychology of stock market "bubbles," in which investing becomes speculative gambling; and why the value of the dollar depends on interest rates elsewhere in the world. Dr. Salemi reveals all of this and more as a great and rousing human story, with remarkable details of how financial systems came into being, the problems they're designed to solve, and how they've evolved and changed. While those with knowledge of economics will find rich depth in these lectures, the course is also a welcoming entry for those with no background in finance. Explore the Core Institutions of Economic Life As a guiding theme of the course, you observe the ways in which economies require efficient and evolving financial institutions and markets to fulfill their potential. In building a full view of our financial system, you delve into these vital subjects Central banks and the Federal Reserve: You learn in depth about the roles and functions of central banks, how they oversee economies and control money supply, and what makes the Fed and the European Central Bank the most powerful financial institutions in the world. Commercial banks: You study the operation of commercial banks and other depository institutions, their asset structure, the services they perform, and the important benefits they provide for depositors, savers, and borrowers. Interest rates and interest rate policy: Five lectures are devoted to the broad subject of interest rates-the economic forces that determine them, their effects in both national and international finance, and how they impact investing and borrowing. Bond and stock markets: You investigate what securities markets offer to investors and the issuers of securities, the ins and outs of stock pricing and bond yields, and why these markets play an essential role in economies. Monetary policy: You study the function of monetary policy on the part of governments, central banks, and the International Monetary Fund in stabilizing economies, intervening in crises, and overseeing the world financial system. Foreign exchange and international banking: You explore topics such as the factors governing currency exchange, how exchange rates affect international trade, and why international banking is a crucial feature of globalization. Grasp the Workings of a Global System Across the arc of Money and Banking, you tackle key topics that shed light on the functioning of our financial system as a whole. Early in the lectures, you study the critical subject of inflation and its relationship to the consumer price index and to excess money growth. You also investigate the causes and implications of the federal deficit and the national debt. Economic growth, it turns out, is directly related to investment in a nation's "capital stock"-the buildings, equipment, and human resources used in the production process. In the international arena, you learn what happens when a nation imports more than it exports, and the implications of trade deficits in global economic relationships. You consider the important matter of how central banks steer clear of political pressures and the question of monetary policy coordination between nations, weighing the significant benefits to the global economy of cooperation between central banks. A Dynamic and Multilayer Resource for Learning Professor Salemi brings these lectures alive with the flair of a provocative and thoroughly engrossing storyteller. An expert in economic education, he communicates the principles of finance as compelling lessons in human ingenuity, showing you vividly how each economic innovation responds to real-life challenges and dilemmas. You engage with detailed case studies, historical incidents, and current events in understanding topics ranging from investment decisions and the regulation of financial firms to the system of "floating" currency exchange rates. You also study the underlying logic and meaning of financial concepts and the mathematical formulas that express them if you are interested in learning more about the mathematical dimension of money and banking. In addition, Professor Salemi amplifies the lectures with diagrams, graphs, and animations that clearly illustrate the course content. These helpful visual aids are also included in the course guidebook, so audio listeners can consult and take advantage of them as well. Essential Knowledge for Living In Money and Banking: What Everyone Should Know, Professor Salemi offers you the rare chance to gain a grounded understanding of our monetary and financial systems in 36 content-rich lectures. This core knowledge is permanently useful, both in comprehending economic systems at home and abroad and in making informed financial choices for yourself. Take this opportunity to grasp the vital elements of finance that directly affect our way of life, our national concerns, and your own life and future. Homepage: https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/money-and-banking-what-everyone-should-know [b]AusFile[/b] https://ausfile.com/49zojrd2z84w/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part01.rar.html https://ausfile.com/16wnalf8cwog/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part02.rar.html https://ausfile.com/amjxi9te457c/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part03.rar.html https://ausfile.com/y5gccapj5joo/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part04.rar.html https://ausfile.com/v3psa5j6xehu/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part05.rar.html https://ausfile.com/3z3otdmxy5q3/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part06.rar.html https://ausfile.com/5u4xj4fpaeq4/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part07.rar.html https://ausfile.com/hn9ubf6bxdnz/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part08.rar.html https://ausfile.com/hpfhivxe3tj8/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part09.rar.html https://ausfile.com/lt9pst5fw6ci/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part10.rar.html https://ausfile.com/9uew0xlg5mli/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part11.rar.html https://ausfile.com/04ccxzujf02t/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part12.rar.html https://ausfile.com/5vt3gpergmru/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part13.rar.html https://ausfile.com/xfan4xrlpl1y/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part14.rar.html https://ausfile.com/4815or2n5wmj/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part15.rar.html https://ausfile.com/d6j0sd0te5gw/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part16.rar.html TakeFile https://takefile.link/synbs4riq05c/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part01.rar.html https://takefile.link/8so9taxtjy9v/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part02.rar.html https://takefile.link/lzyecxcuna8g/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part03.rar.html https://takefile.link/s92d3jeksolo/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part04.rar.html https://takefile.link/s6wsrxldi6wb/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part05.rar.html https://takefile.link/q3mm9txhuwyi/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part06.rar.html https://takefile.link/0nmprisqiydo/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part07.rar.html https://takefile.link/yei4mucslp94/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part08.rar.html https://takefile.link/u49vqc2ml1so/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part09.rar.html https://takefile.link/xmlikeq7jaq0/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part10.rar.html https://takefile.link/fqgrxor01bho/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part11.rar.html https://takefile.link/4xwqkhcuzxh3/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part12.rar.html https://takefile.link/auj078gx4sq1/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part13.rar.html https://takefile.link/n7hk09kapdv4/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part14.rar.html https://takefile.link/s9y3nk7v0rpt/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part15.rar.html https://takefile.link/a53di0ezjttc/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part16.rar.html Rapidgator https://rg.to/folder/8008528/TTCMoneyandBankingWhatEveryoneShouldKnow.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/R8hDRIInXf/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part01.rar.html https://fikper.com/JlZxMg9Zaw/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part02.rar.html https://fikper.com/9WmetU8Fr3/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part03.rar.html https://fikper.com/Bz5Uwa3FpG/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part04.rar.html https://fikper.com/ZZWGIMPxmT/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part05.rar.html https://fikper.com/eLhSo4cNI3/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part06.rar.html https://fikper.com/kj1MZzZeqW/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part07.rar.html https://fikper.com/3EQhhd2eeT/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part08.rar.html https://fikper.com/q7LsjwTXAc/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part09.rar.html https://fikper.com/BlBg6VFWgF/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part10.rar.html https://fikper.com/NrENsHL9QJ/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part11.rar.html https://fikper.com/2EkOauWxak/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part12.rar.html https://fikper.com/4N0t3uUwdb/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part13.rar.html https://fikper.com/V9vnbjeRXJ/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part14.rar.html https://fikper.com/RbpGfziCEp/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part15.rar.html https://fikper.com/EK69xIQhU2/vdkoy.TTC..Money.and.Banking.What.Everyone.Should.Know.part16.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
Free Download TTC - World War I - The Great War Last updated: 3/2025 By Vejas Gabriel Liulevicius, Ph.D. Professor, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 36 Lessons ( 18h 40m ) | Size: 15.6 GB From August 1914 to November 1918, an unprecedented catastrophe gripped the world that continues to reverberate into our own time. World War I was touched off by a terrorist act in Bosnia and all too quickly expanded far beyond the expectations of those who were involved to become the first "total war"-the first conflict involving entire societies mobilized to wage unrestrained war, devoting all their wealth, industries, institutions, and the lives of their citizens to win victory at any price. The cost was ghastly: Altogether, at least nine million soldiers died. Twenty million were wounded, seven million of them permanently disabled. Some estimates put the civilian deaths at almost six million. And countless survivors suffered from psychological trauma for decades after. The world itself would never be the same. Governments had been given broad new powers to marshal resources for the battle to the death, and these powers have persisted ever since, even in peacetime. Another legacy can be seen almost daily in today's headlines, as border disputes, ethnic conflicts, and ideological arguments smolder on, almost a century after they were first ignited in the Great War. Riveting, Tragic, Cautionary World War I: The "Great War" tells the riveting, tragic, and cautionary tale of this watershed historical event and its aftermath in 36 half-hour lectures delivered by Professor Vejas Gabriel Liulevicius of the University of Tennessee. Professor Liulevicius has a gift for cutting through the tangle of historical data to uncover the patterns that make sense of complex events. And few events are as complex as World War I, which pitted the Central Powers of Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Ottoman Turkey, later joined by Bulgaria, against the Allies, prin[beeep]lly France, Great Britain, Russia, Italy, Japan, and, after 1917, the United States. Most narratives of the war focus on the Western Front in France and Flanders, with its mazelike trenches, gas attacks, constant shelling, assaults "over the top" into withering machine gun fire, and duels of dog-fighting aviators in the sky. Professor Liulevicius devotes great attention to this theater, which has become emblematic of World War I in the popular imagination. But the war had other important arenas of engagement that you will also explore in depth, including Eastern Front: In his writings Winston Churchill called this theater the "Unknown War," and its battles throughout Eastern Europe were much more fluid than those in the West-but certainly equally bloody. Southern Fronts: In a disastrous attempt to break the stalemate in the West, the Allies landed troops at Gallipoli in the Turkish Dardanelles in 1915. Major action also raged in the southern Alps, Serbia, and northern Greece. War at Sea: The war introduced submarines as a potentially decisive strategic weapon, particularly as deployed by Germany against Allied shipping. On the Allied side, Great Britain used its naval supremacy to blockade German ports. Arab Revolt: Aided by archaeologist turned intelligence officer T. E. Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia), the British encouraged Arab attacks against Turkish forces in the Middle East, feeding the cause of Arab nationalism. Communist Revolution: A battle-exhausted Russia succumbed to the Bolshevik seizure of power in the fall of 1917, introducing a new factor into world politics: the ideologically guided utopian state, which would cast a dark shadow over subsequent history. Armenian Massacre: The war formed the backdrop for the first full-scale modern genocide: the 1915 Armenian massacres in Ottoman Turkey, in which as many as one million men, women, and children of the Armenian minority were killed or died from abuse. Spanish Influenza: As a crowning horror in the concluding stages of the conflict, a worldwide pandemic swept the globe. The Spanish Influenza killed an estimated 50 million people, exceeding the war itself in lethality.What You Will Learn Professor Liulevicius combines chronological and thematic approaches for a sweeping survey of World War I's many dimensions. In Lectures 1-6 he depicts the state of Europe and the world in 1914 as the war approached. In Lectures 7-9 he examines the Western Front and the horrors of trench warfare. Then in Lectures 10 and 11 he covers the Eastern and Southern Fronts. Lectures 12-15 are devoted to various war themes: the military and political objectives of the combatant nations; the experience of those living under foreign occupation; the wounds, psychological suffering, and medical treatment of ordinary soldiers; the fate of prisoners of war; the phenomenon of storm troopers and other enthusiasts for battle; and the technological advances that produced ever greater bloodshed through innovations such as the machine gun, poison gas, and recoilless artillery. Lectures 16-18 explore the battleground in the air, at sea, and around the globe. Lectures 19-23 investigate issues on the home front: how different nations reacted to the war; the effects of propaganda, privation, and stress on the civilian populations; popular dissent; and the efforts of war leaders to remobilize domestic support in the last years of the struggle. Lectures 24-28 examine some of the dramatic departures in world history brought about by the conflict: the Armenian massacres; the Communist revolution; and the entry of the United States into the fighting and how this affected life in America and the war's outcome. Lectures 29-33 cover the path to peace and the aftershocks worldwide. Finally, in Lectures 34-36 Professor Liulevicius looks at the deeper and lasting impact of the war, which some scholars have called a civil war, or even a suicide attempt, of Western civilization. You will also explore these themes The surprising eagerness of all parties to plunge into mutual slaughter The unexpected endurance of societies undergoing total war The radically different hopes and hatreds that the war evoked, with remarkable contrasts between Western and Eastern Europe The meanings that the different sides ascribed to the war, both during the conflict and after The way the war normalized previously unparalleled levels of violence, including against civilians The role of various ideologies in the war's course and conduct. World War I Is Still Part of Us World War I has left its mark in many ways, both small and large. Mundane objects such as trench coats and wristwatches were popularized to meet the practical demands of the front lines. Expressions such as "in the trenches" and "No Man's Land" also trace to this experience. The war gave us Daylight Savings Time and the staple Western civilization courses in American colleges, introduced to inculcate young minds with the values that Americans were fighting to preserve. The British royal family is now called the House of Windsor because during the war hostility to all things German led them to change their name from Saxe-Coburg-Gotha. The same trend in the United States led to a temporary substitution of the word "liberty" in expressions that had quite innocent German associations. Hamburgers became liberty sandwiches. Sauerkraut became liberty cabbage. And German measles became liberty measles. On the most significant level, the war led to changes in the status of the state, society, and the individual. Ironically, the widespread disillusionment engendered by the war produced an ideological style of politics with extremist views brooking no neutrality that culminated in the even worse disaster of World War II. Important figures in that conflict were molded by their experiences in the Great War, including Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini, Winston Churchill, Charles de Gaulle, and Harry Truman. World War I is still part of us. Paradoxically, the totality of the war is difficult for us to grasp precisely because our own identities, our own understandings of ourselves in the world, have been shaped by the experience of that total war and the totality it revealed. Homepage: https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/world-war-i-the-great-war [b]AusFile[/b] https://ausfile.com/0j1qfd36am2p/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part08.rar.html https://ausfile.com/19vr0i35z8y8/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part13.rar.html https://ausfile.com/5g1d107aan75/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part01.rar.html https://ausfile.com/5oxqfdr133qr/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part03.rar.html https://ausfile.com/a2uzzbkv0ea1/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part12.rar.html https://ausfile.com/b0qeme2s1jla/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part14.rar.html https://ausfile.com/bw57ij36rxal/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part06.rar.html https://ausfile.com/cnlfho0apjvq/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part04.rar.html https://ausfile.com/e30dixz0aagu/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part11.rar.html https://ausfile.com/eaz2n4tx4ksw/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part15.rar.html https://ausfile.com/ktk3ywckyw2q/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part09.rar.html https://ausfile.com/ned6m2wn9auc/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part02.rar.html https://ausfile.com/pzikouxksltl/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part17.rar.html https://ausfile.com/qtufylwx11f9/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part16.rar.html https://ausfile.com/vcgoz21878z9/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part07.rar.html https://ausfile.com/waznyosecy75/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part05.rar.html https://ausfile.com/xowhn0prsyfc/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part10.rar.html TakeFile https://takefile.link/0qmtzfppxpxk/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part04.rar.html https://takefile.link/2127q3zee05u/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part08.rar.html https://takefile.link/46rpo9s4owwx/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part13.rar.html https://takefile.link/7kt9q1mljmfw/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part02.rar.html https://takefile.link/8j0pxn1aydj1/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part12.rar.html https://takefile.link/c7rsjql3deq1/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part01.rar.html https://takefile.link/clcwtib30u83/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part16.rar.html https://takefile.link/fpacscqr8ftq/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part09.rar.html https://takefile.link/i9fx6vanemvq/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part03.rar.html https://takefile.link/ibm2zk5h1dw9/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part06.rar.html https://takefile.link/kerbtw5q7gxu/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part17.rar.html https://takefile.link/lavedz2lkvir/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part11.rar.html https://takefile.link/lptryfw76c5h/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part10.rar.html https://takefile.link/poxjpppezrtm/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part05.rar.html https://takefile.link/q4dzk6y1vw7x/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part07.rar.html https://takefile.link/rp803abb4hvg/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part14.rar.html https://takefile.link/u1rroi4444tb/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part15.rar.html Rapidgator https://rg.to/folder/8003361/TTCWorldWarITheGreatWar.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/44En9it41q/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part06.rar.html https://fikper.com/4FtgnX1okk/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part10.rar.html https://fikper.com/5qJBxc6yRD/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part08.rar.html https://fikper.com/68aPJwHZBE/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part05.rar.html https://fikper.com/7duNwbcxhQ/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part02.rar.html https://fikper.com/IxJvYNLoJE/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part17.rar.html https://fikper.com/JTZtgESCJl/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part04.rar.html https://fikper.com/NtYzLCMcua/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part07.rar.html https://fikper.com/PnUgMXQSp0/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part03.rar.html https://fikper.com/V6CX7U0mMg/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part11.rar.html https://fikper.com/VEys4c05Rs/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part09.rar.html https://fikper.com/VgAqyErQ3z/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part01.rar.html https://fikper.com/X29sKH4TVZ/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part14.rar.html https://fikper.com/XdEf4SO7h0/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part13.rar.html https://fikper.com/YlioDnO3Nj/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part12.rar.html https://fikper.com/rZeuXa9a7O/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part15.rar.html https://fikper.com/xFkpHYYvra/tzpcr.TTC..World.War.I.The.Great.War.part16.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
Free Download TTC - Books That Matter Meditations Released 3/2025 By Massimo Pigliucci, PhD Professor, The City University of New York MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 12 Lessons ( 6h 3m ) | Size: 5 GB One day, about 18 centuries ago, a man with the weight of the world on his shoulders wrote some notes to himself in a journal. He wrote about becoming a better man. How should he act? What would a truly good life look like? How did he feel about death? One day, about 18 centuries ago, a man with the weight of the world on his shoulders wrote some notes to himself in a journal. He wrote about becoming a better man. How should he act? What would a truly good life look like? How did he feel about death? Over several years, he would fill a dozen notebooks with thoughts on these and similar questions. The author of these journals never intended to publish a book. He gave it no title, no internal structure, and took no care to remove his many redundancies. But none of that mattered. He wrote for himself, and his only goal was self-improvement. We now know these writings as Meditations, penned by Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, Stoic philosopher and Roman emperor of the second century CE. It is estimated that many millions of people have read his "private" philosophical journals and that several million people worldwide follow Stoic philosophy today. What is it about Stoicism that Marcus found so important then-and that millions find relevant today? In the 12 fascinating lectures of Books That Matter: Meditations, professor Massimo Pigliucci explores the questions Marcus believed were crucial to address in a life of value, alongside the answers he proposed and the many ways in which you can apply Stoic philosophy to your own life. What Can Meditations Teach Us? Marcus did not invent Stoicism, although he was familiar with the philosophy before he wrote a word in his now-famous journals. He grew up in a wealthy home, and his family made sure he had a broad education. But, of everything he studied, nothing attracted him more than philosophy. His tutors included the major Stoics of the day, as well as proponents of other philosophical schools, and he drew on their teachings throughout his life. Experts believe Marcus wrote what would become Meditations during the 170s CE, while he was emperor and leading the fight against several Germanic tribes. He certainly could have journaled about issues faced by military or government leaders. Instead, Marcus wrote down his thoughts about the meaning of life and death in a manner that is useful to all people. Marcus' writings centered around three broad questions throughout Meditations What is a person? He answers that a person is made of flesh, spirit, and intelligence. Of these, he says intelligence is most important because it allows us to understand the cosmos and to live according to that understanding. How should we think about the past, present, and future? Marcus says we should focus our efforts in the present because that is the only place we can act. We cannot change the past, and when the future arrives, we will be able to influence it only then. What is the real difference between virtue and vice? He concludes that vice is the only real problem to overcome, and virtue the only appropriate guide in life. Practicing an Action-Oriented Philosophy Marcus was not interested in philosophy for its own sake; philosophy had value only if it could guide him to become a better man. In Meditations, he is clear that he doesn't plan to theorize about the world and simply wait for Plato's (or any other) utopia to arrive. Instead, he is happy to work toward incremental improvements in this world. But what is the best way to do that? Although Marcus was the single most powerful person in the Mediterranean world, he wrote about himself as simply one individual member of the entire human family: the cosmopolis. Meditations tells us that we came into this world for each other's sake. To live up to our true nature, then, we need to be kind and helpful and recognize that the only thing we can control in this world is our own decisions. But self-control is not an easy task-especially for an emperor who was known to have anger-management issues. Consequently, Marcus includes many spiritual exercises in Meditations to help him stay focused on the virtuous tasks at hand. Dr. Pigliucci shares detailed directions for practicing the following exercises, among others Take Another's Perspective. We tend to think that other people's actions are reflections of their character, while our own actions always have some kind of justification. As a result, we forgive ourselves quite often but are much less charitable toward others. Question Every Action. This exercise is meant to improve Stoic mindfulness-to train ourselves to always think before acting. Why are we planning to take a particular action? Is it rational and social-minded? Catch and Examine Your Judgments. This exercise helps us make sure that our actions are undertaken with temperance and with the understanding that the outcome of those actions might not be in our control. The Impact of Stoicism in the Modern World There are many references to God and gods in Meditations. But these are neither the traditional Roman gods nor the God of any monotheistic religion. For the Stoics, there is one God, which is the cosmos itself, and we are literally bits and pieces of that cosmic deity. With so many references to God, the soul, and piety, could Stoicism be considered a religion? Experts say no. When Stoics ask, "What makes a good life?" their answers never include worship, faith, or prayer. Instead, Stoics focus on rational thought and action. However, Stoicism has had significant impact on religion, especially the nascent religion of Marcus' time-Christianity. In fact, we can see the impact of Stoicism in many aspects of our modern world, including Christian Spiritual Life. Ignatius of Loyola's book Spiritual Exercises, written in the latter Middle Ages, is used worldwide today by Christian spiritual directors and retreat leaders. Many of the exercises he included came directly from the Stoics. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT). Stoicism-particularly the version articulated by Epictetus and Marcus-was the inspiration for the beginnings of CBT in the 1950s and early 1960s. CBT focuses on cognitive restructuring of negative thought patterns or irrational beliefs, with an emphasis on compassion and emotional regulation, all concepts central to Stoic philosophy. Some consider it one of the best evidence-based psychotherapies ever devised. Self-Help and 12-Step Programs. Many 12-step programs use the famous Serenity Prayer, written by a Protestant theologian in 20th century, with the idea borrowed from the Stoics-understanding how to act for the good when you can, and recognizing situations over which you have no control. Meditations was originally written for an audience of just one. But what Marcus wanted to examine certainly still applies to us today. What exactly should we be mindful of in life? To act reasonably and with others in mind is the Stoic approach to a life worth living. What Will You Learn? Discover how Stoic philosophers view the meaning of life Learn how to apply the spiritual exercises of Meditations to your own life Be introduced to Marcus Aurelius' personal Ten Commandments Homepage: https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/books-that-matter-meditations [b]AusFile[/b] https://ausfile.com/1ey36xrfet4d/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part1.rar.html https://ausfile.com/obd5iqcx9slu/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part2.rar.html https://ausfile.com/a3efahpf9v7x/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part3.rar.html https://ausfile.com/3kjwmk6kn10l/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part4.rar.html https://ausfile.com/di4wmzm5w4xs/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part5.rar.html https://ausfile.com/dkkvsk05g6ta/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part6.rar.html TakeFile https://takefile.link/qjc531bv81hj/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part1.rar.html https://takefile.link/weeyqk53xj0f/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part2.rar.html https://takefile.link/d6i2etgieplm/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part3.rar.html https://takefile.link/u20blfin0o22/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part4.rar.html https://takefile.link/krj0xos3evya/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part5.rar.html https://takefile.link/9gn1hfxyz1fa/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part6.rar.html Rapidgator https://rg.to/file/79a5f331ee741bc700abe76de4b9f7cc/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part1.rar.html https://rg.to/file/0fd2886090460ed65e57273047ebc7a9/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part2.rar.html https://rg.to/file/825f9522d922b3f11af3b19c383199fb/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part3.rar.html https://rg.to/file/80ebd9dac9e57152cfffb7a9b25177f1/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part4.rar.html https://rg.to/file/4e40b17c9ca76ee8c55a4d38f07ccae8/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part5.rar.html https://rg.to/file/8c14c2e4a4d1b9ef2ba766021d21990b/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part6.rar.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/zC9wItQX1S/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part1.rar.html https://fikper.com/YOCV0G3MKo/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part2.rar.html https://fikper.com/XetqoGqyAw/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part3.rar.html https://fikper.com/ezdLaTv1Ar/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part4.rar.html https://fikper.com/JyDwpsGJpe/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part5.rar.html https://fikper.com/aPZO2GHRqO/nngoo.TTC..Books.That.Matter.Meditations.part6.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
Free Download TTC - American Civil War By Gary W. Gallagher Last updated: 3/2025 By Gary W. Gallagher, Ph.D. Professor, University of Virginia MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 48 Lessons ( 24h 21m ) | Size: 20.4 GB Between 1861 and 1865, the clash of the greatest armies the Western hemisphere had ever seen turned small towns, little-known streams, and obscure meadows in the American countryside into names we will always remember. In those great battles streams ran red with blood, and the United States was truly born. Between 1861 and 1865, the clash of the greatest armies the Western hemisphere had ever seen turned small towns, little-known streams, and obscure meadows in the American countryside into names we will always remember. In those great battles streams ran red with blood, and the United States was truly born. Leading Civil War historian Professor Gary W. Gallagher richly details the effects of the Civil War on all Americans. You'll learn how armies were recruited, equipped, and trained. You'll learn about the hard lot of prisoners. You'll hear how soldiers on both sides dealt with the rigors of camp life, campaigns, and the terror of combat. You'll understand how slaves and their falling masters responded to the advancing war. And you will see the desperate price paid by the families so many left behind. Blue and Gray, Soaked in Red Gettysburg. Antietam. Bull Run. Shiloh. After you absorb these lectures, the hallowed names of Civil War battles will be more than merely evocative. You will have a solid understanding of what happened and why. Although this is not simply a course on Civil War battles and generals, about half of the lectures are devoted to the strategic and tactical dimensions of military campaigns. We must never forget: The number of dead exceeded the combined total for American wars from the 17th century through the midpoint of the Vietnam War. Professor Gallagher's recounting of the great battles and campaigns is compelling. From Fort Sumter and First Manassas to Sherman's March and Appomattox, Dr. Gallagher brings complex patterns of events into clear focus, identifies opportunities lost or seized, and quotes memorably from firsthand accounts to give you a clear idea what it was like to be "at the sharp end" of the war's battlefields. The Players: Leaders, Allies, Fools Extraordinary leaders and incompetent tyrants served on both sides. Their power to fascinate, to inspire, or to exasperate remains undimmed. With powerful and telling portraits, Professor Gallagher brings to life the character of Abraham Lincoln, Jefferson Davis, Ulysses S. Grant, Robert E. Lee, William Tecumseh Sherman, Stonewall Jackson, and others. Consider this example from Lecture 12 "Stonewall Jackson is one of the great bizarre characters from the Civil War and is just a bundle of oddities and eccentricities as a person. "He was a hypochondriac. He had all kinds of worries about his body. He would often hold his right hand up in the air because he thought he didn't have an equilibrium of blood in his body, and if he held his right hand up, then the blood would flow down and re-establish equilibrium, as he put it. An interesting notion. "He would not eat pepper because he thought it weakened his left leg-not his right leg, just his left leg. He wouldn't let his back touch the back of a chair because he said it jumbled his organs, and it was important to sit upright so the organs were naturally atop of one another. "He's a very odd fellow. He's in his late 30s early in the war and about to embark on a campaign that will make him the most famous Confederate military leader." At Work in History's Great Forces These men-some heroes, some fools-toiled in a typhoon of broader forces. Grasping this dynamic relationship among the battlefield, the home front, and the diplomatic front is absolutely essential if you hope to understand the Civil War. You also find revealing explanations of how military events affected crucial political factors, including the morale of the Northern and Confederate peoples, the policies of their governments, and the attitudes of key European powers such as Britain and France. The Millions Who Paid Dearly The course vividly recounts the sacrifices made by all Americans in this struggle. Half of all men of military age in the North mustered as soldiers in the Civil War. It appears that roughly 80 percent of all military age men in the South served. (The South was able to spare a greater percentage of men partly because there were slaves left behind who did the daily work.) The battles soldiers fought were savage, presaging the slaughter of World War I, where similar military tactics were used. Off the battlefield, life was not much better. Professor Gallagher recounts: "A ration in Lee's army in the winter of 1863-64 consisted of a quarter of a pound of meat a day and a pint of cornmeal. Two-thirds of all the men who died during the war, on both sides, died of disease, and some of the greatest killers were what we would now call childhood diseases: mumps and measles. One-third died from battlefield wounds or were killed outright on the battlefield." On the home front, circumstances were often nearly as desperate. "In May 1864, a pair of pants cost $100 in Richmond," Professor Gallagher explains. "Bacon was $9 a pound, beans were $4 a quart, chickens were $15 each. A Confederate soldier earned $11 a month for much of the war. Congress very reluctantly increased that in June 1864 to $18 a month. One chicken would eat up more than a soldier's monthly pay, as you get toward the middle of the war." Pivotal Questions Among the many questions you'll explore in this course have to do with the history of the war and the American Republic. What were the war aims of the Union and the Confederacy? Why did each side choose the strategy it did, and how well did each mobilize its resources behind that approach? How close did the South come to winning? By what threads did Lincoln's presidency hang in 1864? How did each side view the war? In the first heady days after Fort Sumter fell, Northerners predicted that talk of secession would dissipate, and Southerners boasted that any one of them could "whip 10 Yankees." How did those views change as the carnage reached a barely imaginable scale? A Great Teacher Professor Gallagher is aleading authority on the Civil War. He is the author of several books and dozens of scholarly articles, most recently, The Confederate War. He is a founder and was first president of the Association for the Preservation of Civil War Sites. AudioFile magazine praises Dr. Gallagher for "well-organized, spontaneous, and entertaining lectures aimed at introductory-level students but no insult to experts." Homepage: https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/american-civil-war Fileaxa https://fileaxa.com/ex63414kh6q8/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part01.rar https://fileaxa.com/h8kcwg3ey9ep/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part02.rar https://fileaxa.com/hwk3q74snqxq/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part03.rar https://fileaxa.com/hxqqymlq4w0v/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part04.rar https://fileaxa.com/xq9fqm2bg1r9/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part05.rar https://fileaxa.com/hb4qgasuidxi/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part06.rar https://fileaxa.com/plre8kwvtley/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part07.rar https://fileaxa.com/skvecroxmg0q/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part08.rar https://fileaxa.com/cx631f3tvvjf/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part09.rar https://fileaxa.com/p00dnstn9sl9/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part10.rar https://fileaxa.com/rdqvut6qejp3/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part11.rar https://fileaxa.com/nngzpleh0215/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part12.rar https://fileaxa.com/4rewgpv2bihi/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part13.rar https://fileaxa.com/vc7g347vrhlu/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part14.rar https://fileaxa.com/oiol196tce1u/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part15.rar https://fileaxa.com/aqqxhz17p60x/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part16.rar https://fileaxa.com/v3nzxkom21ax/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part17.rar https://fileaxa.com/1kqmip84m1pc/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part18.rar https://fileaxa.com/sfrsdqmqcven/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part19.rar https://fileaxa.com/lyc144cw0wpj/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part20.rar https://fileaxa.com/xd9fwzg59yzv/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part21.rar https://fileaxa.com/vkicte8zgc3f/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part22.rar TakeFile https://takefile.link/n902zdl0cjjn/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part01.rar.html https://takefile.link/bfi37k3chk4m/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part02.rar.html https://takefile.link/7mx6c9ahnoxc/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part03.rar.html https://takefile.link/m32s11wlkiyo/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part04.rar.html https://takefile.link/q6dm0eaztcrg/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part05.rar.html https://takefile.link/qoe05ejhj2qu/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part06.rar.html https://takefile.link/yxbbxitk5fgs/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part07.rar.html https://takefile.link/x0x368yb5btq/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part08.rar.html https://takefile.link/4izpvooqjqsb/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part09.rar.html https://takefile.link/on6lr6xogtk8/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part10.rar.html https://takefile.link/y7nxwkvjo9ms/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part11.rar.html https://takefile.link/m3ejpj1oxupq/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part12.rar.html https://takefile.link/6qrp8htil8yc/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part13.rar.html https://takefile.link/yuzkuokecfhj/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part14.rar.html https://takefile.link/accwn7tppq9h/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part15.rar.html https://takefile.link/zbra4c6vg3tk/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part16.rar.html https://takefile.link/8ly6kbrlzlq4/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part17.rar.html https://takefile.link/mjwdukdoh7tp/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part18.rar.html https://takefile.link/fdvrjxeh0art/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part19.rar.html https://takefile.link/1spkayt8k1el/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part20.rar.html https://takefile.link/t1vauv9gn5zb/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part21.rar.html https://takefile.link/hfnukfwgja7k/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part22.rar.html Rapidgator https://rg.to/folder/7990437/TTCAmericanCivilWarByGaryWGallagher.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/HvkLr1BjcL/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part01.rar.html https://fikper.com/n6K72tvR6c/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part02.rar.html https://fikper.com/Ya7MueAT2q/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part03.rar.html https://fikper.com/sRqSzFIhNb/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part04.rar.html https://fikper.com/y5IJzRPb3R/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part05.rar.html https://fikper.com/VKTG4328Kc/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part06.rar.html https://fikper.com/0AqbGx0yJM/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part07.rar.html https://fikper.com/3CMC9OUC4d/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part08.rar.html https://fikper.com/HshVepykVP/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part09.rar.html https://fikper.com/5fyc2FoE3r/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part10.rar.html https://fikper.com/HTrRGsvNfT/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part11.rar.html https://fikper.com/tXGpX8YObg/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part12.rar.html https://fikper.com/lHiVozgrw4/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part13.rar.html https://fikper.com/JMlygBlsam/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part14.rar.html https://fikper.com/YKQxgEqgBo/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part15.rar.html https://fikper.com/cKadVi6ZgB/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part16.rar.html https://fikper.com/KdkbQk4ePq/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part17.rar.html https://fikper.com/dFJSqJVZmi/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part18.rar.html https://fikper.com/D4tR3sh0EQ/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part19.rar.html https://fikper.com/8qkMdAWBk5/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part20.rar.html https://fikper.com/VP9WZWd7oa/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part21.rar.html https://fikper.com/SNElkQte9w/cxhjq.TTC..American.Civil.War.By.Gary.W..Gallagher.part22.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
Free Download TTC - Understanding the Marvels of Medieval Technology Released 3/2025 By Stephen Ressler, Ph.D. Professor, United States Military Academy, West Point MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 24 Lessons ( 13h 32m ) | Size: 11.1 GB The Middle Ages was an era of profound innovation that laid the foundation for the modern world. Between the 6th and 16th centuries, regions stretching from Ireland to Constantinople saw major progress in agriculture, architecture, industry, warfare, transportation, and information dissemination The Middle Ages was an era of profound innovation that laid the foundation for the modern world. Between the 6th and 16th centuries, regions stretching from Ireland to Constantinople saw major progress in agriculture, architecture, industry, warfare, transportation, and information dissemination. These changes reshaped society and paved the way for the Renaissance and beyond with inventions such as Heavy Plow: A wood-and-iron plow sturdy enough to break tough, heavy clay-rich soils greatly increased crop yields throughout Europe, enabling the cultivation of previously untillable land and setting the standard for plowing technology for centuries. Gunpowder Artillery: The combination of three natural substances-sulfur, charcoal, and saltpeter-and metallurgical advances rendered traditional castles obsolete, shifting the balance of power. Handheld firearms had a similarly devastating effect on armored knights. Printing Press: Gutenberg's breakthrough combined several existing technologies-paper, ink, movable type, and a screw press-with his own system for casting metal type to revolutionize printing and vastly accelerate the spread of knowledge. Other examples of innovation abound, from mechanical clocks to ocean-going sailing ships, from windmills to Gothic cathedrals, demolishing the popular association of "medieval" with stagnation and backwardness. In fact, the Middle Ages fostered a spirit of craftsmanship and experimentation that achieved wonders of astonishing sophistication. Acclaimed engineering educator Stephen Ressler brings this exciting era to life in Understanding the Marvels of Medieval Technology. In 24 half-hour lectures, medieval engineering achievements are analyzed with hands-on demonstrations of engineering principles and detailed 3D computer models. A registered professional engineer, Dr. Ressler is Professor Emeritus from the United States Military Academy at West Point. He is also a prolific contributor to The Great Courses. Once again, he has assembled a semester's worth of teaching aids to explore a special topic in engineering-in this case, how medieval master builders, millwrights, carpenters, blacksmiths, armorers, shipwrights, and a host of other trades practiced and advanced their crafts. The Medieval Miracle The notorious "Dark Age" that supposedly descended over Europe after the fall of the Western Roman Empire in the 5th century was indeed a period of political instability and decline, but the sophisticated engineering inheritance from ancient Rome was never entirely lost. This legacy, combined with cultural and technological interchange with Asia and the Near East, laid the groundwork for the medieval innovation revolution. Understanding the Marvels of Medieval Technology probes this transformation from five perspectives Enabling Technologies: New systems for agriculture, textile production, ironmaking, and power generation boosted the medieval economy, leading to population growth, increased trade, and flourishing cities. Military Technologies: Military innovations such as the stirrup, the crossbow, gunpowder, siege machinery, and the full-rigged warship profoundly influenced both the conduct of warfare and the structure of society. Civil and Structural Engineering: The built world of the Middle Ages is one of the lasting glories of Europe, with magnificent cathedrals, castles, bridges, timber houses, city walls, and other structures. Mechanical Systems: Medieval craftsmen were ingenious and adaptable in their use of water, wind, and other power sources to perform a multitude of tasks-from milling grain and forging iron to sawing wood and measuring time. Surprising Legacy: One important legacy of medieval technology may be on top of your nose: eyeglasses. The modern world owes a lot to the medieval quest to improve life in fundamental ways. The Enduring Middle Ages The Middle Ages ended half a millennium ago, yet many of its greatest engineering achievements survive and are among Europe's most visited attractions. Understanding the Marvels of Medieval Technology gives you a deeper insight into these enduring structures. The most notable are the hundreds of surviving buildings, including cathedrals, churches, abbeys, and town halls. Professor Ressler discusses the birth of the Gothic style with the restoration of the Basilica of Saint-Denis near Paris in the 12th century. Directed by Abbot Suger, this project was the perfect marriage of a spiritual vision with new techniques for achieving structural elegance, providing a blueprint for a new architectural ideal. No technical Descriptions of medieval construction methods have survived, but Professor Ressler shows how great Gothic structures must have been built, selecting the cathedral at Amiens, the largest in France, for his step-by-step analysis. You learn the all-important construction sequence and the role of the characteristic Gothic elements-pointed arches, flying buttresses, ribbed vaults, and stained-glass windows-and how they combined to produce an impression of grandeur and spirituality that has never been equaled. Remarkably, this impression was achieved with stone, timber, and glass using traditional building methods, with no recourse to sophisticated engineering calculations that would be indispensable today. Professor Ressler also discusses two spectacular medieval domes, which were an inheritance from classical architecture-the 6th-century dome of Hagia Sophia in present-day Istanbul and the 15th-century dome of Florence Cathedral, designed by Filippo Brunelleschi. Both were the largest domes of their respective eras and involved groundbreaking engineering techniques. In addition, the course introduces less-famous marvels of medieval ingenuity, for example Salisbury Cathedral Clock: The oldest surviving mechanical clock-dated to 1386-is on display in England's Salisbury Cathedral. At its heart is the verge escapement, called "one of the most elegant solutions ever devised to a problem in mechanical engineering." Elvet Bridge: Built over the course of several decades around 1200, the Elvet Bridge in Durham, England, demonstrates the medieval mastery of the stone arch, a technique inherited and refined from Roman engineering. Eight centuries later, the bridge is still in use. Borgund Stave Church: Also constructed around 1200, the Borgund Stave Church in Norway is a rare surviving example of a traditional Scandinavian all-wood construction method. It features an elaborate structural framework supporting a steeply sloped roof that effectively sheds the ample Nordic snowfall in winter. Naturally, some of the most popular medieval attractions in Europe are castles, with their signature moats, drawbridges, towers, and crenellated battlements, not to mention displays of armor and other knightly tools of war. Understanding the Marvels of Medieval Technology surveys Carrickfergus Castle in Northern Ireland, among other fortresses, explaining why these structures were built, how they evolved, where they were sited, and how their garrisons defended them-not always successfully, since attackers could be just as resourceful in using technology to breach, surmount, or undermine castle walls. Indeed, one of the noteworthy weapons used during sieges, the trebuchet, is a fitting metaphor for this course as a whole, since it beautifully suggests how medieval technology catapulted the world into modernity! What Will You Learn? Discover the secrets of Gothic cathedrals Analyze the simple chemistry of gunpowder and consider its transformative power over civilization Study how two seemingly impossible domes were constructed : the 6th-century dome of Hagia Sophia in Constantinople (located in present-day Istanbul) and the 15th-century dome of Florence Cathedral Learn the many steps involved in printing a book and why Gutenberg's press sparked an information revolution Examine the clever mechanism that makes mechanical clocks possible Peer into the fundamental medieval breakthrough of eyeglasses Homepage: https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/understanding-the-marvels-of-medieval-technology Fileaxa https://fileaxa.com/6htxyc1gzvz4/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part01.rar https://fileaxa.com/0a5x0sg3n6dp/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part02.rar https://fileaxa.com/4ncup7zgh12g/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part03.rar https://fileaxa.com/p7eeip6nejca/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part04.rar https://fileaxa.com/ic16s1u6539h/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part05.rar https://fileaxa.com/okv3tdlv9a8a/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part06.rar https://fileaxa.com/15nwwuygfj0x/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part07.rar https://fileaxa.com/vljhwc91acry/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part08.rar https://fileaxa.com/l5zj6slnxysa/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part09.rar https://fileaxa.com/2kqv4rzdegxa/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part10.rar https://fileaxa.com/9acfs9dl7v7l/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part11.rar https://fileaxa.com/11pp3krggnsq/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part12.rar TakeFile https://takefile.link/pndmxhpx6lge/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part01.rar.html https://takefile.link/qez5dby2wb2o/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part02.rar.html https://takefile.link/pmkuwhhm6d4p/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part03.rar.html https://takefile.link/1f26igwl1im2/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part04.rar.html https://takefile.link/zd1s4flv8w26/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part05.rar.html https://takefile.link/023bc4ute05q/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part06.rar.html https://takefile.link/ytpcprpgtxr8/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part07.rar.html https://takefile.link/u0bh6p2iq6f6/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part08.rar.html https://takefile.link/7wz5u7kxcetl/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part09.rar.html https://takefile.link/9r2akyvp9dbu/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part10.rar.html https://takefile.link/whmcrj30v03g/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part11.rar.html https://takefile.link/4att8pnr7qvd/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part12.rar.html Rapidgator https://rg.to/file/425f2c42ed6270e92ec8335dc586b2dc/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part01.rar.html https://rg.to/file/79280e924a701a4c8156a7ad78848f5c/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part02.rar.html https://rg.to/file/6c0f6c3e380ad5f4a9e566da7b6d510c/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part03.rar.html https://rg.to/file/5629c9dd8aeba9c0b95f70193f2035f2/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part04.rar.html https://rg.to/file/9773c96664ac7ed80630190cd3617f43/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part05.rar.html https://rg.to/file/52c76bc1da54df8138a80ded202256c2/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part06.rar.html https://rg.to/file/7783f55cdb130c76b363ac5bfc4d1f5f/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part07.rar.html https://rg.to/file/8cd3bdd8c4bedb373620789405e91828/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part08.rar.html https://rg.to/file/8f2c8a14f8e7032ca8c0b9a0e5dda489/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part09.rar.html https://rg.to/file/f6f73e4335d4067f812db12be8d5ac7a/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part10.rar.html https://rg.to/file/9c79b4958ef61502e31da64f0b0ce330/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part11.rar.html https://rg.to/file/f5c47dbf158468d73212bbbb7db52ebc/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part12.rar.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/YS4e6WaJRT/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part01.rar.html https://fikper.com/EegjvtN6A3/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part02.rar.html https://fikper.com/Z8w1TO8n85/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part03.rar.html https://fikper.com/HJzM0d3Nr6/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part04.rar.html https://fikper.com/Dw6YYPjzqi/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part05.rar.html https://fikper.com/VAByIRfIjQ/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part06.rar.html https://fikper.com/M3AiJGe0zA/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part07.rar.html https://fikper.com/Z4YIEuWocb/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part08.rar.html https://fikper.com/xM8HnSwWVA/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part09.rar.html https://fikper.com/2C4V8tYHt6/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part10.rar.html https://fikper.com/sLKDyazRVL/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part11.rar.html https://fikper.com/yz9y0Gn3Rg/jqyox.TTC..Understanding.the.Marvels.of.Medieval.Technology.part12.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
- TTC
- Understanding
-
(i 3 więcej)
Oznaczone tagami:
-
Free Download Ancient Empires before Alexander [TTC Audio] English | July 08, 2013 | ASIN: B00DTO6JY0 | M4B@64 kbps | 18h 19m | 503 MB Lecturer: Robert L. Dise Jr. Professor Dise immerses you in the political, administrative, and military details of these thrilling civilizations, analyzing three basic questions: How did this particular empire emerge? How was it governed and defended ? How and why did it ultimately fall? These questions raise a host of profound issues on the growth, development, and failures of vast imperial systems. Grounded in a chronological approach, you'll find no better guide through the palatial halls, administrative offices, and war-torn battlefields of these empires than Professor Dise. Each lecture is packed with a range of rich sources on which our current understanding of the ancient Near East rests, including cuneiform tablets, colorful narratives, and archaeological remains. As you comb through these intriguing records, you quickly become more informed about how the past is recorded and passed down to subsequent generations. Spanning thousands of years of human history and encompassing regions both familiar and forgotten, this course is a remarkable tour through the farthest reaches of the ancient world - in all its marvelous diversity. Rapidgator https://rg.to/file/24eb23ba6e93ed3ef8472cab5c6b2439/gzi4y.rar.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/tzT0jEcHe0/gzi4y.rar.html Links are Interchangeable - No Password - Single Extraction
-
Free Download TTC - Warping Reality Inside the Psychology of Cults Released 10/2024 MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 12 Lessons ( 6h 15m ) | Size: 5.23 GB Many of us have a deep, personal drive to seek inner fulfillment. We want to grow as individuals, explore our own potential, and make an important and lasting contribution to the world. It's easy to run into groups that promise to help us along the way, and some of these groups are sincere. When a group, or even a charismatic individual, promises to help us meet our goals but then corrupts our good intentions for their own gain-when they exploit people in an organized fashion-that's when the situation turns into something destructive. That's when you may have become a member of a cult. And it can happen much more easily than you might think. In the 12 fascinating lectures of Warping Reality: Inside the Psychology of Cults, you will learn about some of the most widely known cults of modern times. But unlike any standard news reporting or documentary about groups like The Peoples Temple, the Manson "Family," the Branch Davidians, Heaven's Gate, Children of God, Unification Church, or NXIVM, your expert, Dr. Wind Goodfriend, will help you explore the psychology of these cults. How could these cult leaders have committed such heinous crimes under the guise of "helping" members in their development? And why is it so easy for cults to bring people into the fold? There are thousands of cults in existence right now, so working to understand how cults operate-and why even skeptical, well-informed people can fall prey to their promises-is a crucial undertaking for the sake of your safety and that of your loved ones. Meeting Former Cult Members In this course, you will not only learn about cults, but you will also meet two former cult members who are willing to share their stories. They explain what led them to join these groups, what they had hoped to get from the groups versus the reality, and why they each stayed for over a decade before walking away. You'll meet Alexandra Amor, author of the award-winning Cult, A Love Story, as well as numerous other books, both fiction and nonfiction. Alexandra discusses her involvement with a cult called The Circle located in British Columbia. When she joined, it seemed to be just a group of people who were all interested in spiritual growth, with a leader who could help guide Alexandra's spiritual maturation. You'll also meet Tom Heinzen, a professor emeritus of psychology and author and coauthor of several books. Tom joined a group called Salem Acres in rural Illinois. It seemed to be a group of very loving people who were simply working the land of a rundown farm and building apartments. Alexandra and Tom eventually realized the groups they had joined were not for their benefit-not at all. Dr. Goodfriend will introduce you to the "eight deadly sins" (identified by Robert J. Lifton) that are often used to characterize cults. These traits become more than simple bullet points or guidelines when revealed through the real-world experiences of Alexandra and Tom. The traits include Milieu Control. This type of control involves the control of all communication within the group and also between the group and the outside world. Demand for Purity. Cult members receive constant judgment from the cult leader and the group members. Standards of behavior are set impossibly high, with the cult leader being the only judge. Punishments are imposed when group members step over the line. Doctrine over Person. The cult leader gaslights members to the point that they question their own instincts and perceptions, warping their own thoughts and memories. The Psychology of Cult Leaders Many books and documentaries have described cult leaders, but here you will dive below the surface to reach the "why" of these charismatic and destructive individuals. What is the psychological profile of a cult leader? What are the personality traits or circumstances that contribute to the cult leader's rare ability to amass a loyal following and their malevolent mindset? Most cult leaders suffered through a traumatic childhood. For those individuals, their childhood trauma left them with a pathological need to control everything and everyone in their environment as a way of avoiding that same hurt ever again. If that pathology is combined with the ability of a master manipulator, the individual can control a large following. When analyzing the "why" of a cult leader's behavior, you will consider three major psychological factors Narcissistic Personality Disorder. This disorder is noted in people who have a grandiose sense of their own importance and believe they are destined for greatness. Some psychologists believe this is actually a mask for deep-seated insecurity, which could be one reason they cannot tolerate anyone questioning their authority. Antisocial Personality Disorder. People with this disorder may behave impulsively and/or violently and may be manipulative and avoid responsibility. Both people with this disorder and narcissists can exhibit a chilling lack of empathy for others. Psychopathology. While "psychopath" is not an official diagnosis, it is a term often used in the criminal justice system. It can include the disordered traits listed above, as well as a superficial charm. Without this key feature of superficial charm, cult leaders wouldn't be able to attract a consistent stream of new followers. You Would Never Join a Cult . Would You? Chances are each of us is certain we would never join a cult. We like to think that we would never be so gullible as to give up all our possessions and freedoms simply because some fake guru told us to. We would never cut all communication with our family just because a charismatic grifter said our earthly ties were destroying our spiritual ascent. We would certainly never allow our children to be sexually abused by a self-proclaimed prophet who said it was for the benefit of the group's salvation. And yet many thousands have done these things-and worse. In 1978, more than 900 members of Jim Jones' Peoples Temple were murdered (including 300 children) or committed "revolutionary suicide" because Jim Jones told them to. We imagine cult members to be desperate, ignorant, hopeless individuals who would follow any leader and believe any doctrine. But that is not at all what social scientists have found. Instead, they have found that people who enter a cult are from all educational levels, religions, and economic and ethnic backgrounds. As a group, they are neither desperate nor ignorant. While a common profile of a typical cult member doesn't seem to exist, cult members do seem to have several things in common. They tend to be Going through some type of major life transition; "Seekers" who are looking for a purpose in life or a community to be a part of; and Capable, industrious, and well-liked people who believe the cult will help them become a better person or help them make the world a better place. It is not the cult members who were interested in cult membership to abuse and betray others, but it is the cult leader who has lied to, manipulated, and used their members in fraudulent and violent ways. Learning about cults, and the psychology of their leaders, is the best way to limit their ability to gain control over our communities, loved ones, and ourselves. What Will You Learn? Meet some of the most heinous cults in modern history Discover the tactics cult leaders use to control their followers Define the "eight deadly sins" that are used to identify cult-like communities Homepage https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/warping-reality-inside-the-psychology-of-cults Screenshot Rapidgator https://rg.to/file/006bbdd58dccfb2889d3cddc7b5cbf81/xavob.TTC..Warping.Reality.Inside.the.Psychology.of.Cults.part1.rar.html https://rg.to/file/008029a2c88c1f5d3b022c72162d71ca/xavob.TTC..Warping.Reality.Inside.the.Psychology.of.Cults.part3.rar.html https://rg.to/file/4a879ecd5f09b726e757e92c25accdd3/xavob.TTC..Warping.Reality.Inside.the.Psychology.of.Cults.part5.rar.html https://rg.to/file/7cb9eb63dad06aa3530d317c69219366/xavob.TTC..Warping.Reality.Inside.the.Psychology.of.Cults.part6.rar.html https://rg.to/file/beaeeeb2fec9792dcf1f6a5178fd475a/xavob.TTC..Warping.Reality.Inside.the.Psychology.of.Cults.part2.rar.html https://rg.to/file/e8bf32621ecc4b184c271066306829a7/xavob.TTC..Warping.Reality.Inside.the.Psychology.of.Cults.part4.rar.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/2bYeVW8y3M/xavob.TTC..Warping.Reality.Inside.the.Psychology.of.Cults.part5.rar.html https://fikper.com/5kxm3mq2tO/xavob.TTC..Warping.Reality.Inside.the.Psychology.of.Cults.part4.rar.html https://fikper.com/JGziayOGRe/xavob.TTC..Warping.Reality.Inside.the.Psychology.of.Cults.part1.rar.html https://fikper.com/Rey7LyckPD/xavob.TTC..Warping.Reality.Inside.the.Psychology.of.Cults.part2.rar.html https://fikper.com/jpVxWpSOHM/xavob.TTC..Warping.Reality.Inside.the.Psychology.of.Cults.part3.rar.html https://fikper.com/n7WKdqmHuP/xavob.TTC..Warping.Reality.Inside.the.Psychology.of.Cults.part6.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
Free Download TTC - History of Ancient Rome Last updated 10/2024 MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 48 Lessons ( 24h 12m ) | Size: 20.2 GB There are many reasons to study ancient Rome. Rome's span was vast. In the regional, restless, and shifting history of continental Europe, the Roman Empire stands as a towering monument to scale and stability. At its height, the Roman Empire, unified in politics and law, stretched from the sands of Syria to the moors of Scotland, and it stood for almost 700 years. Rome's influence is indelible. Europe and the world owe a huge cultural debt to Rome in so many fields of human endeavor, such as art, architecture, engineering, language, literature, law, and religion. In this course you see how a small village of shepherds and farmers rose to tower over the civilized world of its day and left an indelible mark on history. Rome's story is riveting. Professor Garrett G. Fagan draws on a wealth of primary and secondary sources, including recent historical and archaeological scholarship, to introduce the fascinating tale of Rome's rise and decline. You learn about all the famous events and personalities Horatius at the bridge Hannibal crossing the Alps during Rome's life-or-death war with Carthage Caesar assassinated before a statue of his archrival Pompey Doomed lovers Antony and Cleopatra Mad and venal emperors Nero and Caligula The conversion of Constantine, and more. From pre-Roman Italy through the long centuries of Republican and then Imperial rule, Professor Fagan interweaves narrative and analysis. Chronologically, the focus is on the years from 200 B.C.E. to 200 A.D., when Roman power was at its height. The narrative of the rise and fall of Rome is itself compelling, and Professor Fagan's richly detailed and often humorous discussions of Roman life are uniquely memorable. You study women and the family, slaves, cities, religious customs, the ubiquitous and beloved institution of public bathing, the deep cultural impact of Hellenism, and such famous Roman amusements as chariot racing and gladiatorial games. "Images and themes derived from or rooted in ancient Rome continue to exert an influence on the modern mind," says Professor Fagan. "Unlike many ancient states, Rome changed hugely in many spheres over the course of its 1,500-year history, and thus the history of Rome is an engaging, complex, and challenging subject." From Village to Monarchy to Republic The first 10 lectures of this course map the development of a group of preliterate hamlets into the Roman Republic. In them, you learn about The nature of the historical evidence for antiquity The geopolitical and cultural shape of pre-Roman Italy The foundation legends of Rome itself The cycle of stories that surrounds the kings of Rome The shape of early Roman society The fall of the monarchy at Rome and the foundation, in its wake, of the Republic (traditionally dated to 509 B.C.E.). These lectures examine two major forces that shaped the early Republic: the Struggle of the Orders and Roman military expansion in Italy. The lectures also explain how the Romans ruled their conquered territories in Italy, setting the foundations for the later acquisition and maintenance of the Empire. Early Expansion and Rapid Collision Moving outside of Italy, you next explore the expansion of Roman power in the 3rd and 2nd centuries B.C.E. In two lectures Professor Fagan charts the course of the Romans' first two titanic struggles with their archrival in the west, Carthage. In these wars, the Romans developed a large-scale navy, sent armies overseas, acquired foreign territories, and displayed what was to become one of their chief characteristics: a dogged determination to prevail, even in the face of seemingly impossible odds. This was particularly clear in the Second Punic War, when the gifted Carthaginian general Hannibal roamed freely in Italy, threatening the city of Rome itself. Greek Influence and Roman Government In Lectures 16-19, Professor Fagan pauses the narrative to examine the influence of Greek culture on Rome and the nature of the Roman Republican system of government. This latter system-complex and replete with archaisms and redundancies-has influenced the form of several modern policies, including that of the United States. Finally, Professor Fagan examines the pressures of empire on Roman society, charting considerable social, economic, and political changes brought about by Rome's overseas expansion. On the rocks of these pressures, the Republic was destined to founder. The Roman Revolution Lectures 20-27 follow the course of what modern scholars have termed the "Roman Revolution." In the century between 133 and 31 B.C.E., the Roman Republic tore itself apart. It is a period of dramatic political and military developments, of ambitious generals challenging the authority of the state, of civil wars and vicious violence, and of some of the first great personalities of European history: Marius, Sulla, Pompey, and Julius Caesar. The story is intriguing, complicated, and at times horrendous, and it illustrates perfectly the historical principle of contingency. With a few exceptions, each protagonist in the drama of the Revolution acted within the bounds of necessity or precedent, and thereby set new and dangerous precedents for later protagonists to follow. In this way, the Roman Revolution was not a staged or planned event, but a cumulative snowball of crises that combined to shatter the system of Republican government. After pausing to examine the social and cultural life of the Late Republic, you return to the last phases of the Revolution and the rise to power of the man who was to become Rome's first emperor, Augustus. The Roman Empire Lectures 31-33 examine the long reign of Augustus (31 B.C.E.-14 A.D.) and his new political order, the Prin[beeep]te. The Prin[beeep]te stood for centuries and brought stability and good government in a way that the old Republic could not. Augustus's solution to the Republic's problems was clever and subtle. It also had a flaw at its core-the issue of succession-and what happened when an emperor died was to prove the single most destabilizing factor in the Prin[beeep]te's existence. The next three lectures cover the early Imperial period, from the death of Augustus to the instability of the 3rd century. This is the era of such familiar Roman historical figures as Caligula, Claudius, Nero, and Hadrian. Finally, Professor Fagan shows how the problem of the succession combined with ominous developments among Rome's external enemies in the 2nd and 3rd centuries A.D. to generate a period of great crisis, indeed near-collapse, in the mid-3rd century A.D. Life in Classical Rome Leaving the Empire under pressure, Professor Fagan considers life in classical Roman civilization in nine lectures. He explores the broad shape of Roman society, slavery, the Roman family, the role of women in Roman society, urbanism, public leisure and mass entertainment, paganism, and the rise of Christianity. The End and a New Beginning To conclude the course, the final three lectures return to the Empire's last centuries. The Empire is restored to order and stability at the end of the 3rd century, but under an increasingly oppressive government. The institutionalization of Christianity to legitimize Imperial power and a more openly autocratic regime created, in many ways, a Roman Empire closer to medieval Europe than to the Empire of Augustus. As such, the later Empire is treated only in general terms here, since it warrants closer study by itself. The course ends with one of the great questions in history: Why did the Roman Empire fall? We see how, in the eyes of most modern scholars, the Empire did not fall at all but just changed into something very different, a less urbanized, more rural, early medieval world. Homepage https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/history-of-ancient-rome Screenshot Rapidgator https://rg.to/file/0626b123976c000bf488beec43ac2f89/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part21.rar.html https://rg.to/file/06c2fceea87b22716c21336b734d591f/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part04.rar.html https://rg.to/file/0fc482603cf2e16026b5e2de80d5c6b6/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part09.rar.html https://rg.to/file/1fc36b25d213cd93d6a0687e7b33cafa/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part08.rar.html https://rg.to/file/2860b129ea327ed0a5c2bc8955f31863/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part05.rar.html https://rg.to/file/2b5a243f028efbde2498dfa6202ef38c/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part17.rar.html https://rg.to/file/3e776d1a66a2a70b57feb8b9d77434d3/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part01.rar.html https://rg.to/file/5dd612792c546cbcdda93392cf1e6633/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part15.rar.html https://rg.to/file/669d6a6f06f7ea2522fd02ee05f422d9/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part07.rar.html https://rg.to/file/6fdddc40b729183b39536ec33a3fbe89/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part11.rar.html https://rg.to/file/701d7e8e84fabc44bca36fe90f2a588b/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part12.rar.html https://rg.to/file/7030ca389c0e7f744c8eabbe56ec6d57/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part03.rar.html https://rg.to/file/79a05cfd0916d5d14afd851afc1262df/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part14.rar.html https://rg.to/file/8a37ea43d50264bf03ff1988f3acbc47/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part02.rar.html https://rg.to/file/9cae0228ca4bae61ffa1b8149d18dc5c/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part16.rar.html https://rg.to/file/a26718db4f14db7cc3dd7bc329d4415b/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part10.rar.html https://rg.to/file/b16e6c9cd8597cf28e6e7b1c8a27a680/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part06.rar.html https://rg.to/file/b633c3a982489c29b08d69ca0120bbb4/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part20.rar.html https://rg.to/file/bf65f469377c51e695983116583a6574/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part13.rar.html https://rg.to/file/c68bb23ab75fc746e59767ad1b2208a9/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part19.rar.html https://rg.to/file/f4ca79952c8e5015d01aa18ae73adc7f/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part18.rar.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/7s20JRndwT/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part15.rar.html https://fikper.com/AFWXHgBhxv/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part06.rar.html https://fikper.com/AT44kfeLuR/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part02.rar.html https://fikper.com/BqmRHaf4ch/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part20.rar.html https://fikper.com/CeIprR2qei/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part19.rar.html https://fikper.com/DLP0ZJHy45/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part14.rar.html https://fikper.com/EJ6ppDjod2/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part04.rar.html https://fikper.com/FouBiy18AW/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part21.rar.html https://fikper.com/I0KqadvvEh/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part11.rar.html https://fikper.com/K2Pe2FuhRf/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part08.rar.html https://fikper.com/P4HqyIT6EA/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part13.rar.html https://fikper.com/dG8ovAaGkb/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part07.rar.html https://fikper.com/hFj9XEDpHF/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part03.rar.html https://fikper.com/hNwU6PPZmh/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part12.rar.html https://fikper.com/iCeQS1OxAX/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part18.rar.html https://fikper.com/jsP9rrjGrV/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part17.rar.html https://fikper.com/oGpVmUFhFk/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part01.rar.html https://fikper.com/sqCUldrYMB/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part09.rar.html https://fikper.com/tkVJbetjYZ/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part10.rar.html https://fikper.com/uiFggKcwiq/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part16.rar.html https://fikper.com/yPmDk8swtm/eueyp.TTC..History.of.Ancient.Rome.part05.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
Free Download TTC - Great Battles of the Ancient World Last updated 10/2024 MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 24 Lessons ( 12h 25m ) | Size: 10.4 GB Hollywood has gone to elaborate lengths to recreate the violence and mayhem of ancient warfare in movies such as Gladiator and Troy. But what were ancient battles really like? What weapons, tactics, armor, training, and logistics were used? And what were the crucial factors that could turn the tide of battle, giving one side victory and consigning the other to slaughter, capture, or, at best, escape to fight another day? A professor of classics and history at The Pennsylvania State University and the teacher of our immensely popular course, The History of Ancient Rome, Dr. Garrett G. Fagan has devoted extensive study to ancient warfare. In these 24 lectures he takes you into the thick of combat in some of the most notable battles fought in the Mediterranean region from prehistoric times to the 4th century A.D. Great Battles-Crucibles of History "Battles, for all their madness, are worthy of study if for no other reason than that they are the crucibles of history," says Professor Fagan, who notes that a few hours of hard fighting can determine the fates of entire empires. Among the many fateful battles you study are Marathon: This clash between Athenians and the invading Persian army in 490 B.C.E. demonstrated the fearsome effectiveness of Greek hoplite phalanxes against Persian arms. Later European history would have looked very different had the Greeks lost at Marathon. Gaugamela: In 331 B.C.E., Alexander the Great crushed a vastly superior Persian force in a classic hammer-and-anvil battle, in which his cavalry (the hammer) outflanked the enemy to drive it onto the spear-wielding phalanx (the anvil). When the dust had settled, King Darius III was in flight, and Achaemenid Persia, which had dominated Asia for three centuries, was at an end. Masada: The Romans showed their mastery of the difficult art of siege warfare by breaching the virtually impregnable Jewish fortress of Masada, which fell on April 16, A.D. 73. The defenders took their own lives rather than surrender, ending the last chapter of the Jewish Revolt against Rome. Famous Generals You also follow celebrated confrontations between commanders of ancient times, including Hannibal versus Scipio, the 3rd-century B.C.E. equivalent of Lee versus Grant during the American Civil War, or Rommel versus Montgomery during World War II. At the head of a Carthaginian army, Hannibal nearly broke the back of Roman power in Italy, inflicting the worst Roman defeat ever at the horrendous Battle of Cannae in 218 B.C.E. But he met his match in P. Cornelius Scipio, who lured him to Africa for a killing blow at the Battle of Zama. Scipio was known ever afterward as Scipio "Africanus." Other generals you study include Alexander the Great: Arguably the greatest general ever, Alexander was heir to the tactical innovations of his father, Philip II of Macedon, who, in turn, had learned new battle techniques from Epaminondas of Thebes. Alexander's stunning victories are marked by his maximally efficient use of military tools. Julius Caesar: A brilliant tactician and master chronicler of his own exploits, Caesar won battles against barbarian armies and Roman rivals alike. He was preparing to conquer the Parthian Empire when he was struck down in the Roman Forum on the Ides of March in 44 B.C.E. Xenophon: Elected general after the massacre of his commanding officers, this soldier of fortune led a beleaguered army of 10,000 Greek mercenaries on a daring retreat from deep within Persian territory. What You Will Learn This course focuses on warfare in the ancient Mediterranean world, encompassing the region from Mesopotamia to Western Europe, including Egypt and North Africa. The first eight lectures chart the development of warfare from prehistoric times to the glory days of the great states of the ancient Near East and Egypt. After examining theories about how to define war, you survey different models for the origins of warfare in the Upper Paleolithic (c. 37,000-12,000 years ago) and Neolithic (c. 10,000-5,000 years ago), testing them against the archaeological evidence, which provides our only clues to organized violence among prehistoric peoples. Then you move into the historical era, starting with the first battles for which we have written accounts. These took place between the city-states of early Sumer (c. 3000-2350 B.C.E.), when armies of infantry that used rudimentary chariots clashed over honor, irrigation rights, and boundaries. Next you travel to Egypt and survey the changing nature of warfare in the Old to New Kingdoms (c. 2700-1070 B.C.E.), including the first fully recorded battle in history: the Battle of Megiddo between Pharaoh Thutmose III and a coalition of Syrian lords, fought outside the walls of a town in Palestine. You examine the fearsome Assyrian war machine as it developed c. 900-612 B.C.E., and the sophisticated army that allowed the Assyrians to forge the largest empire yet seen in the region. You also address disputed matters of the Trojan War and Homeric warfare. In the next eight lectures you cover warfare among the Greeks and their distinctive form of combat using hoplites, a type of armored infantry that fought in close formation called the phalanx. You study the Persian invasions of Greece (490-479 B.C.E.), examining the battles of Marathon, Thermopylae, Salamis, and Plataea that decided this titanic clash. The disastrous Athenian expedition against Sicily (415-413 B.C.E.) during the Peloponnesian War is next, followed by the military revolution in the 4th century B.C.E., which saw the creation of a new and formidable fighting unit spearheaded by the cavalry and a reformed phalanx. This integrated and flexible army reached its pinnacle of efficiency under Alexander the Great, and you survey the battles at the Granicus River, Issus, and Gaugamela that made Alexander king of Persia. In the third part of the course you study the legions of Rome, which evolved brutally effective tactics that gave them dominion over the entire Mediterranean basin. It is unclear how Roman legionary armies actually fought, and you explore various theories before following the legions into combat in their colossal struggles with Hannibal in the Second Punic War (218-202 B.C.E.). Then you compare the Roman legion and Macedonian phalanx-the two most efficient killing machines of the day-in duels fought in Italy in the 3rd century B.C.E. and in the Balkans and Asia Minor in the 2nd century. Next you consider Roman skill in siege warfare as exemplified by Julius Caesar's siege of Alesia (52 B.C.E.) and the siege of Masada in Judea in A.D. 72-73. The final two battles covered are Roman defeats and introduce the German tribal warrior. These are the battles of the Teutoburg Forest in A.D. 9, considered one of the most important battles in European history, and Adrianople in A.D. 378, which heralded the decline of Roman imperial power. In the final lecture, Professor Fagan considers the recent proposal by scholar Victor Davis Hanson that there is a distinctively "Western way of war" traceable from the Greeks to the modern age. This intriguing view represents hoplite warfare as a unique development of Greek conditions that casts its shadow down to the present. Despite the theory's attractive simplicity, it has problems that Dr. Fagan details in a fascinating glimpse of scholarly debate in action. Clash of Theories The battles you study were fought so long ago, and accounts of them are so incomplete, that what happened involves considerable controversy. Professor Fagan presents contending theories and often his own hypotheses about how events unfolded during these bloody encounters. For example The standard view of battle mechanics adopted by opposing armies of Greek hoplites is that they advanced shoulder-to-shoulder in close-ordered formation and crashed into each other head-on. Then they sought, quite literally, to shove their opponents off the field, all the while stabbing with their spears. The minority view is that hoplite battle was more open, with hoplites standing up to six feet apart and fighting individually rather than as a mass. Dr. Fagan demonstrates how this minority view "is a lot more plausible and is supported by the ancient evidence better than the strange business of ritualized shoving." Similarly, it is far from clear how Roman legionaries fought their battles. The prin[beeep]l ancient source, the historian Livy, is so confused on the point that it is obvious he never witnessed a legion in action. After considering various schools of thought, Professor Fagan draws on clues from different battle narratives to conclude that flexibility lay at the heart of the Roman system, so that no one "battle deployment" fit all. On the issue of whether the Greek hoplites at Marathon charged the Persians across the one-mile gap separating the armies, as described by the ancient historian Herodotus, Professor Fagan notes that experiments carried out at The Pennsylvania State University with physical education majors suggest that Herodotus was wrong. Wearing weighted jackets and carrying mock nine-pound shields, only one of the Penn State athletes could run the mile-long course, and he was utterly exhausted-certainly not in a position to fight 24,000 Persians! War's Grim Reality Dr. Fagan ends by reminding us of the grim reality of war: Throughout history many millions have died on battlefields. "We owe it to them," he concludes, "and to the thousands who continue to perish in our planet's wars, to understand as fully as possible what it was that killed them. If this course has advanced its audience's comprehension of war even a little, then it has amply fulfilled its purpose." Homepage https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/great-battles-of-the-ancient-world Screenshot Rapidgator https://rg.to/file/076a514ce35d1355d093ca983d249607/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part08.rar.html https://rg.to/file/196d138f459e1394cfb85b3d3553e6bd/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part11.rar.html https://rg.to/file/25f4070bd6641773c696c17b7ef2c130/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part10.rar.html https://rg.to/file/4672466a1ee1c0efdbbae4d151a65cc6/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part05.rar.html https://rg.to/file/4a6878c9491e64defd76608ca6162ace/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part06.rar.html https://rg.to/file/53aec6272a6a280df5af2343dc7e0c50/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part07.rar.html https://rg.to/file/670ff198ba7b23f949c82734b2df5b6a/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part09.rar.html https://rg.to/file/6a9a4e789a35da96a288c8175fe230a3/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part02.rar.html https://rg.to/file/869bd4377a093b3f83a3ce781c15359d/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part01.rar.html https://rg.to/file/d6cc195ed9f97985f1406aebede09853/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part04.rar.html https://rg.to/file/ef99525a60abfde62d533c431af26675/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part03.rar.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/AqsWEVvSMt/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part09.rar.html https://fikper.com/CidkBmB61a/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part05.rar.html https://fikper.com/GQjrknZwC4/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part03.rar.html https://fikper.com/HtHsKQ9i4Q/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part06.rar.html https://fikper.com/QKwsUDQCnH/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part01.rar.html https://fikper.com/Y0SM03jNDP/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part02.rar.html https://fikper.com/emgkF8RdNX/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part08.rar.html https://fikper.com/qq7HyDmwWn/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part04.rar.html https://fikper.com/qre0FuMIvg/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part10.rar.html https://fikper.com/vP21aB01Xh/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part07.rar.html https://fikper.com/wd5XiaAtFq/kuxuu.TTC..Great.Battles.of.the.Ancient.World.part11.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
Free Download TTC - Geometry An Interactive Journey to Mastery Last updated 10/2024 MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 36 Lessons ( 18h 18m ) | Size: 15.3 GB Inscribed over the entrance of Plato's Academy were the words, "Let no one ignorant of geometry enter my doors." To ancient scholars, geometry was the gateway to gaining a profound knowledge of the world.$1#$ Today, geometry's core skills of logic and reasoning are essential to success in school, work, and many other aspects of life. Like other math fields, geometry teaches us how to think. It leads students to uncover new truths based on already established ideas and facts. It requires us to test and examine the conclusions of others. It teaches us to lay out our thinking clearly, describing each step so that others can follow along and verify our results. This systematic way of thinking is essential in many fields. Drawing conclusions from experimental data is the basis of scientific discovery. Our justice system depends on compelling evidence to render a verdict in a court of law. And we use logical reasoning in everyday conversations to win friends over to our point of view. In fact, the great Greek scholar Euclid demonstrated just how much you can do with logic. He worked out that basically all of geometry stands on just 10 core principles. You can build the rest using straightforward, logical reasoning. In short, geometry is among the great intellectual feats of humankind. However, geometry goes far beyond being just an intellectual exercise. Its real-world applications extend to navigation, architecture, engineering, physics, technology, and even art. Botanists use the geometry of triangles to estimate the heights of trees. Astronomers use an understanding of ellipses to describe the orbits of planets. Quantum physicists use the mathematics of rotation to explain aspects of subatomic physics. Architects use principles of symmetry to develop aesthetically pleasing buildings. Engineers use the properties of parabolas to design headlights and satellite dishes. With its powerful blend of intellectual accomplishment and practical application, it's no wonder that most schools consider geometry a core subject. Yet as award-winning Professor James Tanton of The Mathematical Association of America shows in Geometry: An Interactive Journey to Mastery, geometry can be an exciting adventure at any age. Those who will benefit from his 36 clear and accessible lectures include high school students currently enrolled in a geometry class; their parents, who seek an outstanding private tutor for their students; home-schooled students and others wishing to study high school geometry on their own; collegestudents who are struggling with math requirements and who need to strengthen their grasp of this fundamental subject; and anyone curious about the intellectual challenge of logic and reasoning that underlies mathematics, the sciences, and our technological world. Professor Tanton's excellent teaching style makes the course ideal for those students who have ever believed they're "not good at math" or have had challenges understanding geometry in the past. A Different Way to Learn Geometry Even students who have done well in other math courses such as algebra can sometimes find geometry a challenge. More so than algebra and other equation-based math, geometry places particularly strong focus on making logical inferences from facts and building a story of reasoning. Plus, geometry involves a more visual approach-working with shapes and patterns from the real world. Many geometry courses begin by teaching the results of geometric thinking-by listing a set of beginning rules first. But how can one build the foundations of a house without first having a sense of what the house should be? Professor Tanton encourages students to start by playing with ideas of the mind (and acts of the hand!) to develop a feel for geometric rules and a context for those rules. In Geometry: An Interactive Journey to Mastery, Professor Tanton guides students as they build an understanding of geometry from the ground up. With this approach, the instruction focuses on the intellectual play of the subject and its beauty as much as its utility and function. Students begin with elementary building blocks like points, lines, and angles and observe how those basic units interact. From a clear understanding of the fundamental principles, students use logical reasoning to expand their understanding of geometry. Like building a house brick by brick, each new discovery stands upon the others-without any sudden or confusing jumps. In the first part of the course, students develop an intuitive context for thinking about terms like point, line, angle, plane, and flat; grasp how to create logical proofs; and uncover the three deep and fundamental assumptions of geometry-the Pythagorean theorem, the parallelism postulate, and the similarity principles. In the second part, students study common geometric shapes and their properties (such as triangles, polygons, and circles); explore the intersection of geometry and algebra; examine the basics of trigonometry; and learn how to calculate areas. Once students understand the core principles, they are set loose to play in the third part of the course. Students ponder a range of fascinating and sometimes counterintuitive applications for geometry. They combine two seemingly disparate fields: geometry and probability; dive into the wild world of fractals; investigate conics and their many practical applications; use complex numbers to solve tricky geometry problems; and contemplate spherical and even "taxi-cab" geometry. Delightful Real-World Examples A beauty of geometry is its wide variety of fascinating and unexpected applications. Some of the examples students explore in this course include these Width of a river: You're on a walk and come across a river. Can you estimate how wide it is? See how you can-with no more than a bit of geometry and a baseball cap. Geometry and nature: From the orbits of planets to the shape of your small intestine, geometric shapes appear in some surprising places throughout nature. See how geometry helps us better understand the marvels and mysteries of the world around us. Modern cell phones: Swiping the screen on a cell phone seems to be an ordinary activity. But did you know your phone is actually relying on some clever geometry? Find out exactly what your phone is doing and the mathematics behind it. Works of art: When people think of applications for mathematics, they often mention the fields of science or engineering. But geometry also has its place in the visual arts. See how great artists like M.C. Escher used geometric shapes and principles to create masterpieces. A game of pool: If you're playing pool and want to play a trick shot against the side edge, how do you need to hit the ball? See how you can determine this and more using the reflection principle. A Teacher of Teachers Professor Tanton is committed to sharing the delight and beauty of geometry and works with teachers across North America to develop more effective teaching methods for geometry and other math courses. He is not only a teacher of math, but a teacher of the best ways to teach math. His experience has taught him where students most frequently flounder, which has given him the skills to explain mathematical concepts in a way that removes mental roadblocks to success. Making each example come to life, Geometry: An Interactive Journey to Mastery engages students in a visual adventure. Professor Tanton uses bright and colorful slides, easy-to-understand whiteboard drawings, and interactive demonstrations to make his explanations crystal clear. And to help students better understand geometric principles, a workbook complete with sample problems and solutions accompanies the course. Equipped with a firm understanding of geometry, students walk away from the course with the tools and knowledge to continue on to greater challenges in mathematics, school, and life. Your journey into this world of joy and wonder has only begun. Homepage https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/geometry-an-interactive-journey-to-mastery Rapidgator https://rg.to/file/2d2bbfb015f37c74e99549f1be36c236/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part08.rar.html https://rg.to/file/2d9f866d1431fd6d153a5e80b0455d91/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part02.rar.html https://rg.to/file/38fc62d54d3b2054231d51558c5304ef/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part01.rar.html https://rg.to/file/52099bf31e368ad505fbd7e3459fcfea/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part12.rar.html https://rg.to/file/6ab280baff880ff561c93dad9dedfe54/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part09.rar.html https://rg.to/file/70f474cd1bc8846089fceae9eaa496f1/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part16.rar.html https://rg.to/file/72aab35aa5780031be08cb268ad57a42/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part06.rar.html https://rg.to/file/77a60a48f853a1544354cb69eb0e01bc/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part15.rar.html https://rg.to/file/82374b6d608784e0193290a71676d547/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part13.rar.html https://rg.to/file/9a9b69fd58a4e8f2c82e4bb4af14edb0/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part04.rar.html https://rg.to/file/a39269eaecdd4900a59cf346eb565008/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part14.rar.html https://rg.to/file/b4209a9f9cc88b68c036532578e7bf8a/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part10.rar.html https://rg.to/file/bacc872738d36fa646dafc9a9a060731/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part11.rar.html https://rg.to/file/c7b276805d16b13374e8366f59bafaaf/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part07.rar.html https://rg.to/file/d6e06ef997cb04e8eb0b036fb943c58c/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part03.rar.html https://rg.to/file/f9892397719893183a04685154ad1951/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part05.rar.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/1B7mk7ciQC/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part12.rar.html https://fikper.com/CQDi2VddfS/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part08.rar.html https://fikper.com/CkwC0WTuYy/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part16.rar.html https://fikper.com/F2p4ub4oR5/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part10.rar.html https://fikper.com/LmwSgpQBs3/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part05.rar.html https://fikper.com/Vq8U5PkZz0/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part02.rar.html https://fikper.com/WnLanODvJC/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part03.rar.html https://fikper.com/a0QlDmTSq8/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part13.rar.html https://fikper.com/cw0aghuRzC/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part09.rar.html https://fikper.com/d6eeoay6EI/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part11.rar.html https://fikper.com/eV9y4zXZJ1/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part01.rar.html https://fikper.com/ezTPXyHlCH/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part06.rar.html https://fikper.com/k140H4tZfO/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part15.rar.html https://fikper.com/o7Y8br0fmJ/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part04.rar.html https://fikper.com/rL4h4d5zgl/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part07.rar.html https://fikper.com/uwNLGzfv9H/lqpkn.TTC..Geometry.An.Interactive.Journey.to.Mastery.part14.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
Free Download TTC - Communism in Decline From Sputnik to Gorbachev Released 9/2024 MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 12 Lessons ( 6h 42m ) | Size: 5.61 GB Communism was more than a new philosophy to Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels when they wrote the Communist Manifesto in 1848. They saw it as a brand-new way of life, a new civilization for the modern man and woman. The communist way of life was to represent a total liberation from all of history, which they saw as nothing more than struggle, exploitation, and suffering. Instead of building upon the past, they proposed that communism would focus only on the future, promising total social equality for all and sharing in a new stage of human societal evolution. When measured against other social theories throughout world history, communism is more than just another a philosophical thought experiment. The beliefs and practices of communism were institutionalized in Lenin's Bolshevik state, as experienced within the experimental and unprecedented development of the Soviet Union. For 74 years, the experiment held together. Communist regimes, at their peak, ruled more than one-third of the world's population. What happened? What really caused this giant experiment to decline and fall apart? In Communism in Decline: From Sputnik to Gorbachev, Professor Vejas Gabriel Liulevicius reveals the internal and external forces that ripped apart the grand communist experiment. What were the mistakes made by the Soviet leaders who believed too deeply in their own propaganda? And why were they not able to see the many ironies in their own poor decisions? In 12 fascinating lectures, you will learn how the Soviet Union went from winning the space race against the United States in 1957 to Gorbachev's resignation and the dissolution of the great experiment in 1991. The Men at the Top Eight men led the Soviet Union from its founding in 1922 to its collapse in 1991. Each of them believed that communism was the only way forward to achieve a bright and successful future for modern society. Theoretically, at least, they believed that political power should belong to the workers and peasants; but if that was the ideal aspiration, no one came close to achieving it. As the leader of the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution, Vladimir Lenin became the guiding personality of the Soviet Union after founding the Russian Communist Party, then signing treaties with nearby countries and regions. After serving only two years as the head of the Soviet Russian government before his death in 1924, he was succeeded by Josef Stalin. In power from 1924 until his death in 1953, Stalin's murderous dictatorship caused the death of millions in the Soviet Union. Stalin is also known for becoming an ally of the United States in the effort to defeat Germany during World War II. In the years after Stalin's death, there were several notable Soviet leaders who followed Stalin. What did these men bring to their leadership roles and how did their decisions shape the Soviet Union and the world? In this course, you will learn about Nikita Khrushchev. Khrushchev ruled the Soviet Union during the complex times of the Bay of Pigs invasion and the Cuban Missile Crisis and when his country was arguably at its zenith-when Sputnik won the space race for the Soviet Union in 1957. Leonid Brezhnev. Brezhnev saw himself as the leader of the worldwide fight against capitalism. That mission resulted in the USSR coming to the aid of any socialist or communist government that seemed to be on the verge of failing. This "Brezhnev Doctrine" led him to the 1968 invasion of Czechoslovakia's Prague Spring and the invasion of Afghanistan in 1979. Mikhail Gorbachev. Explore the "Gorbachev Phenomenon" and "Gorbymania." Although not so popular at home, this Soviet leader was beloved internationally. He knew the Soviet Union needed to move forward economically, and he "thawed" the Cold War as one way to achieve that goal. In 1991, Gorbachev oversaw the dissolution of the Soviet Union. Promises vs. Reality The communist doctrine promised a great deal that its leaders never delivered. No one knows what would have happened if the Soviet Union had followed Lenin's doctrine, and if the longest-serving Soviet leader had not strangled his country as a murderous dictator. By the time Gorbachev decided the Soviet Union could improve its standard of living by coexisting with capitalist countries and getting back to the best of Lenin's philosophies, it was too late. Too many systemic problems existed for Gorbachev to overcome, including Commodities Shortages. When people had to stand in line for hours to purchase the basic necessities for their families-if anything was on the shelves by the time they got to the front of the queue-it was clear their government was not providing for "each according to his needs" as Marx had proposed. What "They" Have. With the standard of living in the West being so much higher than that of the Soviet Union, it was difficult for citizens to believe that capitalism should be their mortal enemy. The National Problem. The Soviet Union attempted to blend people of numerous ethnicities into one state. Leadership promised that each ethnicity would share in the power while preserving their own cultural attributes. Instead, as economic shortages worsened, each group felt they were taken advantage of by the others. Dissent After the death of Stalin, the most violently repressive of all Soviet leaders, some voices of dissent could be heard arguing for freedom of speech and greater respect for human rights. Although Khrushchev initially allowed some dissent to distinguish his rule from Stalin's, he eventually cracked down on free speech, afraid it would undermine his power. In Communism in Decline: From Sputnik to Gorbachev, you will learn about the well-known major demonstrations such as Solidarity in the shipyards of Gdansk, Poland and demonstrations in Beijing's Tiananmen Square. Additionally, you will learn about more subtle forms of dissent, including Laughter. Repressed people fight back however they can, and in the Soviet Union telling jokes became a widespread form of dissent. In this course, you'll hear many of the political jokes that became a form of social protest-criticizing the system, its ideology, and the resulting daily indignities. Books. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn is one of the most well-known writers who used literature to reveal the truth about the Soviet prison camps and life in the country, in general. His most famous work, The Gulag Archipelago, was smuggled out to the West and published there in 1973. Samizdat. When an uncensored, non-Soviet-approved text could be found, people took it upon themselves to copy its pages one at a time, via typewriter or by hand, and then pass the pages around. Whoever received these samizdat ("self-published") products would have only one night to read them before passing them on to the next person. While communism failed in the Soviet Union in the long term, it had lasted for 74 years and remains the official ideological system today in China, North Korea, Laos, Vietnam, and Cuba. Only time will tell whether communism as practiced specifically in those countries will be able to overcome the problems that took down the Soviet Union. What Will You Learn? Meet the men who led the Soviet Union and consider their varied approaches to leadership Discover how citizens were able to voice dissent in a repressive regime Reveal the internal and external forces that tore apart the Soviet Union Homepage https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/communism-in-decline-from-sputnik-to-gorbachev TakeFile https://takefile.link/wguovwfeamd6/sahrv.TTC..Communism.in.Decline.From.Sputnik.to.Gorbachev.part1.rar.html https://takefile.link/lhoh3ktlhzcd/sahrv.TTC..Communism.in.Decline.From.Sputnik.to.Gorbachev.part2.rar.html https://takefile.link/jwypg8kptksu/sahrv.TTC..Communism.in.Decline.From.Sputnik.to.Gorbachev.part3.rar.html https://takefile.link/1v2nwpq94x1s/sahrv.TTC..Communism.in.Decline.From.Sputnik.to.Gorbachev.part4.rar.html https://takefile.link/ilm0kz9daisa/sahrv.TTC..Communism.in.Decline.From.Sputnik.to.Gorbachev.part5.rar.html https://takefile.link/wj4l40f1bo3l/sahrv.TTC..Communism.in.Decline.From.Sputnik.to.Gorbachev.part6.rar.html Rapidgator http://peeplink.in/73d96be844ee Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/wHNhN8KcLF/sahrv.TTC..Communism.in.Decline.From.Sputnik.to.Gorbachev.part1.rar.html https://fikper.com/IhUfDdM91V/sahrv.TTC..Communism.in.Decline.From.Sputnik.to.Gorbachev.part2.rar.html https://fikper.com/q5RchrArbP/sahrv.TTC..Communism.in.Decline.From.Sputnik.to.Gorbachev.part3.rar.html https://fikper.com/6PQHXN1rrb/sahrv.TTC..Communism.in.Decline.From.Sputnik.to.Gorbachev.part4.rar.html https://fikper.com/lYdchNbjsl/sahrv.TTC..Communism.in.Decline.From.Sputnik.to.Gorbachev.part5.rar.html https://fikper.com/6QEBVNxAHg/sahrv.TTC..Communism.in.Decline.From.Sputnik.to.Gorbachev.part6.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
Free Download TTC - Music Theory - The Foundation of Great Music Last updated 9/2024 MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 18 Lessons ( 7h 32m ) | Size: 6.23 GB Music has a phenomenal power to move, transport, and delight us. Across numerous styles and forms-from the iconic masterpieces of the classical tradition to genres such as jazz, rock, pop, and folk-great music expresses the inexpressible, speaks across time and cultures, and galvanizes audiences across the world. And the more we understand about music, the more we appreciate it, and a knowledge of music theory is the best place to start. Music may be the most abstract of the arts, as its sonic language is a spectrum of tones, but it has a highly organized structure, a structure that allows for both its form and its meaning. In fact, the great expressive capacity of music and its ability to captivate us and to deeply communicate is rooted in its organized structure and how that structure is used creatively by composers, as well as by performers. A clear knowledge of the theory of music-the "how" of music-offers you insight into How a musical narrative is created and how music communicates; How music uses time and moves through time; How the tension, release, and resolution of musical harmony play an essential role in the expressive power of music; The diversity of musical styles, and what makes musical styles and genres what they are, be it classical, jazz, bluegrass, or rock & roll; How rhythmic structure influences the effect the music has on us; How different expressive effects are created, both by composers and players; How music is conceived by those who write and play it; and more. In Music Theory: The Foundation of Great Music, you'll delve into the inner workings of Western tonal music through 18 enjoyable and revealing lessons taught by Professor Sean Atkinson of Texas Christian University. Professor Atkinson, an eminent music theorist and teacher, makes music theory refreshingly clear and accessible, demystifying the skill of reading music as well as the principles of musical analysis. Using a highly interactive approach, he orients the lessons to an understanding of how music creates its remarkable effects, both formally and expressively, and how this understanding benefits us as listeners and players. At the heart of these lessons lies the ability to read music as a tool for understanding what you hear and for deepening your enjoyment in listening, as well as for playing music. As you learn, step by step, to read and understand the written score, you'll see the structure of the music and how the music unfolds on the page. You'll also see how musical tones are written down in the form of notes, with each note having a rhythmic value, showing how long the note lasts in time. And you'll study how rhythm and meter work in music, how the key element of musical harmony functions, how a musical score is performed, and much more. With highly valuable insights for both listeners and instrumentalists, these 18 engaging lessons will teach you to become literate in the language of music. Discover the Inner Structure of Musical Expression As you develop your skills in reading and understanding the score, you'll explore the essential elements of musical form, structure, and composition, such as Tonality-Grasp how most Western music is based in tonality-the organization of musical tones into recognizable patterns; learn how musical scales, 7-note sequences, form the sonic grounding or tonality of works of music, how major and minor scales are often associated with different states of mind, and how musical scales are related to one another; Rhythm and Meter-Learn how rhythm forms a central structure or backbone for a piece of music, and build skill in reading and performing musical rhythms; also, study meter, the organization of musical pulses or beats within the music and on the page, and explore the systems of simple and compound meter; Counterpoint-One of the core features of Western classical music, uncover the parameters of counterpoint, the writing of two melodic lines which are played at the same time; see how the melodic lines move in very specific ways, forming a coherent sequence that makes melodic and harmonic sense, and creating the basis for musical narrative; Harmony-Study the laws of harmony, the foundation of tonal music, where two or more notes are played together; learn how chords, groups of three or more notes that sound at the same time, form sequences or progressions, creating tonal tension or instability that leads finally to resolution or stability-an integral element of the expressive power of music; Musical Narrative: Phrase Structure-Witness how a piece of music unfolds by means of musical units called phrases, which have a beginning and an end; then see how phrases are encompassed within larger units called periods and sentences, allowing the music to create a sense of a narrative or "story" in sound; and Playing the Score: Elements of Expression-Explore the markings within a score that indicate how the music should be performed; take account of dynamics, the volume or loudness of a given sequence, articulation, the way an individual note should be performed, and tempo, the speed of the music, and how these indications are realized by performers. Enjoy Literacy in the Language of Music Throughout the course, Professor Atkinson's spirited and approachable teaching style makes for a thoroughly compelling and fun excursion into music theory and its applications. He illustrates the elements of musical form and structure with recorded examples from great works by Bach, Mozart, Haydn, and Robert and Clara Schumann, as well as excerpts from jazz, rock, and other musical genres, showing how the principles of tonal music apply within different musical forms. Extensive onscreen graphics clearly illustrate the musical elements under discussion, making the material easy to follow and directly graspable. A special course workbook provides many additional resources for study and practice. A particularly special feature of this course is a live session with a working jazz pianist, who plays several jazz classics, interpreting the songs using only chords and a melody line. Here you witness musical improvisation in action, and its relevance to understanding musical form and expression. Music Theory: The Foundation of Great Music offers you an adventure in listening, a richly insightful inquiry that will deepen your appreciation and enjoyment of one of our world's most sublime art forms. What Will You Learn? Delve into the fascinating inner structure of music in this dynamic, hands-on course on music theory Discover how music is structured and put together, and the inner principles of musical expression Learn to read music and gain rich insight into how musical expression functions Homepage https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/music-theory-the-foundation-of-great-music TakeFile https://takefile.link/86fcemd2lbny/xbefp.TTC..Music.Theory.The.Foundation.of.Great.Music.part5.rar.html https://takefile.link/9fkd81igntgz/xbefp.TTC..Music.Theory.The.Foundation.of.Great.Music.part2.rar.html https://takefile.link/b89d7n6yaw9j/xbefp.TTC..Music.Theory.The.Foundation.of.Great.Music.part1.rar.html https://takefile.link/kt5xu7l6957u/xbefp.TTC..Music.Theory.The.Foundation.of.Great.Music.part6.rar.html https://takefile.link/lcmik6ygphii/xbefp.TTC..Music.Theory.The.Foundation.of.Great.Music.part3.rar.html https://takefile.link/qfufer73t6ts/xbefp.TTC..Music.Theory.The.Foundation.of.Great.Music.part7.rar.html https://takefile.link/wrdumzy313f3/xbefp.TTC..Music.Theory.The.Foundation.of.Great.Music.part4.rar.html Rapidgator http://peeplink.in/0f0db0227cd9 Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/93piVdh2o4/xbefp.TTC..Music.Theory.The.Foundation.of.Great.Music.part2.rar.html https://fikper.com/SnH66IvUMu/xbefp.TTC..Music.Theory.The.Foundation.of.Great.Music.part3.rar.html https://fikper.com/nG64siO0oW/xbefp.TTC..Music.Theory.The.Foundation.of.Great.Music.part6.rar.html https://fikper.com/pmK44P5AYq/xbefp.TTC..Music.Theory.The.Foundation.of.Great.Music.part5.rar.html https://fikper.com/s5bkisXSgK/xbefp.TTC..Music.Theory.The.Foundation.of.Great.Music.part1.rar.html https://fikper.com/vONBz6uCf6/xbefp.TTC..Music.Theory.The.Foundation.of.Great.Music.part7.rar.html https://fikper.com/vPuiv43IkL/xbefp.TTC..Music.Theory.The.Foundation.of.Great.Music.part4.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
Free Download TTC - Writing Great Fiction Storytelling Tips and Techniques Last updated 9/2024 MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 24 Lessons ( 12h 18m ) | Size: 10.3 GB Whether you're huddled around the campfire, composing an email to a friend, or sitting down to write a novel, storytelling is fundamental to human nature. But as any writer can tell you, the blank page can be daunting. It's tough to know where to get started, what details to include in each scene, and how to move from the kernel of an idea to a completed manuscript. Writing great fiction isn't a gift reserved for the talented few. There is a craft to storytelling that can be learned, and studying the fiction writer's techniques can be incredibly rewarding-both personally and professionally. Even if you don't have ambitions of penning the next Moby-Dick, you'll find value in exploring all the elements of great fiction. From evoking a scene to charting a plot to selecting a point of view, Writing Great Fiction: Storytelling Tips and Techniques offers a master class in storytelling. Taught by acclaimed novelist James Hynes, a former visiting professor at the famed Iowa Writers' Workshop and the University of Michigan, these 24 insightful lectures show you the ins and outs of the fiction writer's craft. More than just delivering lectures, Professor Hynes offers the first steps of an apprenticeship, showing you not only how fiction works but also how to read like a writer. Here you'll find explications of novels and stories across the ages Rediscover classics such as Jane Eyre, Bleak House, Middlemarch, Mrs. Dalloway, and others. Gain new insights into bestsellers such as the Harry Potter and Game of Thrones series. Explore the world of literary fiction, from Chekhov's "The Kiss" to Marilynne Robinson's Housekeeping. Reflect on what makes characters such as Anna Karenina and Sherlock Holmes so memorable. Find out how to create suspense like Dashiell Hammett, George Pelecanos, and John le Carré. In addition to showing you how the elements of fiction work, this course is an interactive toolkit. Professor Hynes closes each lecture with an exercise to get your creative juices flowing. Only you know what story you want to tell, but the many examples and writing prompts in these lectures will get you from thinking about writing to the act of writing-often the toughest part of any project. Begin with the Basics William Faulkner once said that writing a novel is like a one-armed man trying to hammer together a chicken coop in a hurricane. That may be an exaggeration, but finding your way into a story can take an equal amount of creative experimentation. In the opening lectures of this course, you will learn how to Evoke a Scene: There is a fine art to selecting just the right imagery to bring a scene to life. Whether you're heeding the old advice to "show, don't tell," or you're seeking to create what novelist John Gardner called a "vivid and continuous dream," scenic detail is the life-blood of good fiction. Professor Hynes shows you how to choose rich details while keeping your narrative uncluttered. Develop a Character: When you create a fictional character, you're creating the illusion of reality-suggesting a real person rather than replicating one. Four lectures on character development teach you how to build characters who think and act in plausible ways. See how novelists such as Joseph Conrad, Virginia Woolf, George R.R. Martin, and many others develop their believable and memorable characters. Craft Great Dialogue: Just as characters are illusions that suggest real people, so too does dialogue suggest authentic speech. Good dialogue serves at least one of a few key functions in a narrative, such as evoking character, advancing the plot, or providing necessary exposition. A two-lecture unit sheds light on balancing dialogue with narration, with examples from the work of Charles Dickens, Alice Munro, and Toni Morrison, as well as the professor's own fiction. Build the Story's Structure Literature creates order out of chaos. To do so, you need to provide structure to your story, which can be one of the most challenging aspects of writing fiction. Among the topics you'll study are Story versus Plot: Whether it's a novel, a short story, or a blog post, one of a story's primary functions is to keep the reader reading. One way to achieve this is by creating a compelling plot. After exploring the difference between "story" and "plot"-as defined by E.M. Forster-Professor Hynes unpacks the many techniques of storytelling, and he concludes this six-lecture unit with some thoughts about keeping momentum in relatively "plotless" fiction such as James Joyce's "The Dead." Point of View: As you'll see in this three-lecture unit, much of a story hinges on the perspective from which it's told. From the omniscience of Middlemarch to the free indirect discourse of Light in August, and from the double consciousness of Huck Finn to the unreliable narrator of The Aspern Papers, Professor Hynes surveys the range of narrative possibilities. Time, Place, and Pace: A story's setting is a powerful way to create mood. Think of London in Bleak House, or Middle Earth in the Lord of the Rings trilogy. Time plays an equally important role in fiction-the era of a story's setting, the sequence of events that occur, and the timing with which information is revealed to the reader are all pivotal elements. You'll learn how to syncopate action and exposition, scene and summary, short scenes and long scenes, present-time narrative versus flashbacks, and more. Drafts and Revisions: All stories must come to an end. In this course's final unit, you'll step back from the specific elements of scenic composition and consider the story as a whole. How do you build a complete draft? What are some strategies for revision? And what do you do when you've finished? A Practical Toolkit to Get You Writing As a working novelist, Professor Hynes is able to imbue his teaching of the elements of fiction with the wisdom of personal experience. He uses vivid examples from the history of literature as well as lessons and anecdotes from his own time in the novel-writing trenches. He shares his personal processes and techniques, and even examines specific examples where he struggled as a writer, revealing how he overcame those difficulties. But this course is meant to be a toolkit, not an instruction manual. The beauty of fiction writing is that it's a creative field. There are no right answers, no single way to tell a story. A wealth of exercises will get you writing so that you can practice the many techniques you learn. Along the way, Professor Hynes is an able guide, showing you what has worked for him and other novelists, and pointing out pitfalls to avoid. Writing Great Fiction: Storytelling Tips and Techniques is truly an exceptional course for anyone interested in storytelling. What Will You Learn? Learn how to create and develop meaningful fictional characters - both major and minor. Explore the dynamics of good dialogue, and learn how to integrate it into a narrative. Distinguish between points of view to determine which one will work best for your story. Investigate the pros and cons of writing drafts - and the importance of revisions. Get a realistic, business-oriented view of how to make a living as a fiction writer. Homepage https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/writing-great-fiction-storytelling-tips-and-techniques TakeFile https://takefile.link/4bj6qqlub1ak/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part01.rar.html https://takefile.link/4e2runx9uvcz/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part05.rar.html https://takefile.link/7waojvtjx9aa/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part02.rar.html https://takefile.link/8ar67yzmws5r/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part03.rar.html https://takefile.link/bnlajurwqx73/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part06.rar.html https://takefile.link/brvoj2regvxc/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part11.rar.html https://takefile.link/kjbxzme06vp9/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part10.rar.html https://takefile.link/m0lfpnuo03in/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part04.rar.html https://takefile.link/tmolg35b2ff2/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part08.rar.html https://takefile.link/tziobofav1pf/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part09.rar.html https://takefile.link/wfwzsugoquby/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part07.rar.html Rapidgator https://rg.to/file/3bf80b3178d671a3b1248cbdf2039e98/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part04.rar.html https://rg.to/file/4fd994d3165fbbff3490e9ffd9e11cd3/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part02.rar.html https://rg.to/file/5fa9fec79434642c60330537d3ebfe85/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part11.rar.html https://rg.to/file/613c8f9dd8a35cdedc82803ccf0f2ad6/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part07.rar.html https://rg.to/file/6b0cf6fa379bd1f5930ebf16dd50a2ec/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part05.rar.html https://rg.to/file/8e9b5a006c62d76960c537673f65e9a1/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part10.rar.html https://rg.to/file/a4a93f6f9268e09b60e25b1eebaac984/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part09.rar.html https://rg.to/file/b1e6d653bb5759d30690ce1a4bdca846/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part01.rar.html https://rg.to/file/bc5a0fb66ccd13ab417d0ed407ccc677/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part03.rar.html https://rg.to/file/c5ec1e2d31da18e2e4982c315da65670/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part06.rar.html https://rg.to/file/ff7dda979a1cf2cd2fcbfaecc7c66cea/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part08.rar.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/1IQziXqHwX/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part07.rar.html https://fikper.com/4u2e3ZIoBf/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part05.rar.html https://fikper.com/98K5aURAw4/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part02.rar.html https://fikper.com/IJWDCWRO8E/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part08.rar.html https://fikper.com/IRN0h9k0jy/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part04.rar.html https://fikper.com/N1uVY614zl/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part03.rar.html https://fikper.com/TxEAjeAdG0/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part09.rar.html https://fikper.com/U2CtEEOeaz/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part06.rar.html https://fikper.com/UmgOZ63j5M/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part11.rar.html https://fikper.com/aWJjbGPJjI/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part10.rar.html https://fikper.com/boQmxX9X3O/blnvo.TGC..Writing.Great.Fiction.Storytelling.Tips.and.Techniques.part01.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
Free Download TTC - Mathematics Describing the Real World Precalculus and Trigonometry Last updated 9/2024 MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 36 Lessons ( 18h 42m ) | Size: 15.7 GB What's the sure road to success in calculus? The answer is simple: Precalculus. Traditionally studied after Algebra II, this mathematical field covers advanced algebra, trigonometry, exponents, logarithms, and much more What's the sure road to success in calculus? The answer is simple: Precalculus. Traditionally studied after Algebra II, this mathematical field covers advanced algebra, trigonometry, exponents, logarithms, and much more. These interrelated topics are essential for solving calculus problems, and by themselves are powerful methods for describing the real world, permeating all areas of science and every branch of mathematics. Little wonder, then, that precalculus is a core course in high schools throughout the country and an important review subject in college. Unfortunately, many students struggle in precalculus because they fail to see the links between different topics-between one approach to finding an answer and a startlingly different, often miraculously simpler, technique. As a result, they lose out on the enjoyment and fascination of mastering an amazingly useful tool box of problem-solving strategies. And even if you're not planning to take calculus, understanding the fundamentals of precalculus can give you a versatile set of skills that can be applied to a wide range of fields-from computer science and engineering to business and health care. Mathematics Describing the Real World: Precalculus and Trigonometry is your unrivaled introduction to this crucial subject, taught by award-winning Professor Bruce Edwards of the University of Florida. Professor Edwards is coauthor of one of the most widely used textbooks on precalculus and an expert in getting students over the trouble spots of this challenging phase of their mathematics education. "Calculus is difficult because of the precalculus skills needed for success," Professor Edwards points out, adding, "In my many years of teaching, I have found that success in calculus is assured if students have a strong background in precalculus." A Math Milestone Made Clear In 36 intensively illustrated half-hour lectures, supplemented by a workbook with additional explanations and problems, Mathematics Describing the Real World takes you through all the major topics of a typical precalculus course taught in high school or college. Those who will especially benefit from Professor Edwards's lucid and engaging approach include high school and college students currently enrolled in precalculus who feel overwhelmed and want coaching from an inspiring teacher who knows where students stumble; parents of students, who may feel out of their depth with the advanced concepts taught in precalculus; those who have finished Algebra II and are eager to get a head start on the next milestone on the road to calculus; beginning calculus students who want to review and hone their skills in crucial precalculus topics; anyone motivated to learn precalculus on his or her own, whether as a home-schooled pupil or as an adult preparing for a new career. The Powerful Tools of Precalculus With precalculus, you start to see all of mathematics as a unified whole-as a group of often radically different techniques for representing data, analyzing problems, and finding solutions. And you discover that these techniques are ultimately connected in a beautiful way. Perceiving these connections helps you choose the best tool for a given problem Algebraic functions: Including polynomial functions and rational functions, these equations relate the input value of a variable to a single output value, corresponding to countless everyday situations in which one event depends on another. Trigonometry: Originally dealing with the measurement of triangles, this subject has been vastly enriched by the concept of the trigonometric function, which models many types of cyclical processes, such as waves, orbits, and vibrations. Exponential and logarithmic functions: Often involving the natural base, e, these functions are built on terms with exponents and their inverse, logarithms, and describe phenomena such as population growth and the magnitude of an earthquake on the Richter scale. Complex numbers: Seemingly logic-defying, complex numbers are based on the square root of -1, designated by the symbol i. They are essential for solving many technical problems and are the basis for the beautiful patterns in fractal geometry. Vectors: Quantities like velocity have both magnitude and direction. Vectors allow the direction component to be specified in a form that allows addition, multiplication, and other operations that are crucial in fields such as physics. Matrices: A matrix is a rectangular array of numbers with special rules that permit two matrices to be added or multiplied. Practically any situation where data are collected in columns and rows can be treated mathematically as a matrix. In addition, Professor Edwards devotes two lectures to conic sections, slicing a cone mathematically into circles, parabolas, ellipses, and hyperbolas. You also learn when it's useful to switch from Cartesian to polar coordinates; how infinite sequences and series lead to the concept of the limit in calculus; and two approaches to counting questions: permutations and combinations. You close with an introduction to probability and a final lecture that features an actual calculus problem, which your experience in precalculus makes ... elementary! Real-World Mathematics Believing that students learn mathematics most effectively when they see it in the context of the world around them, Professor Edwards uses scores of interesting problems that are fun, engaging, and often relevant to real life. Among the many applications of precalculus that you'll encounter are these Public health: A student with a new strain of flu arrives at college. How long before every susceptible person is infected? An exponential function called the logistic growth model shows how quickly an epidemic spreads. Surveying: Suppose you have to measure the diagonal width of a marsh without getting wet. It's a simple matter of walking two sides of a triangle on dry land and then using trigonometry to determine the length of the third side that spans the marsh. Astronomy: One of the most famous cases involving the sine and cosine functions that model periodic phenomena occurred in 1967, when astronomer Jocelyn Bell detected a radio signal from space at 1.3373-second intervals. It proved to be the first pulsar ever observed. Acoustics: The special properties of an ellipse explain why a person standing at a given spot in the U.S. Capitol's Statuary Hall can hear a whisper from someone standing 85 feet away. Computer graphics: How do you make an object appear to rotate on a computer screen? Matrix algebra allows you to move each pixel in an image by a specified angle by multiplying two matrices together. Probability: Have you ever forgotten your four-digit ATM PIN number? What is the probability that you can guess it? A simple calculation shows that you would have to punch numbers nonstop for many hours before being assured of success. An Adventure in Mathematical Learning A three-time Teacher of the Year in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the University of Florida, Professor Edwards has a time-tested approach to making difficult material accessible. In Mathematics Describing the Real World, he enlivens his lectures with study tips and a feature he calls "You Be the Teacher," in which he puts you in the professor's shoes by asking how you would design a particular test problem or answer one of the frequently asked questions he gets in the classroom. For example, are all exponential functions increasing? After you hear Professor Edwards's explanation, you'll know that when someone uses the term "exponentially," you should ask, "Do you mean exponential growth or decay?"-for it can go in either direction. He also gives valuable tips on using graphing calculators, pointing out their amazing capabilities-and pitfalls. What Will You Learn? Get introduced (or reintroduced) to inverse, rational, exponential, and polynomial functions. Delve into the laws of sine and cosine. Dig into the rudimentary world of probability to determine your odds at winning the lottery. Homepage https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/mathematics-describing-the-real-world-precalculus-and-trigonometry TakeFile https://takefile.link/29a2dc835840/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part12.rar.html https://takefile.link/2hveefsy1wfr/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part11.rar.html https://takefile.link/38h33hgi6gfn/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part05.rar.html https://takefile.link/3dypv324ek50/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part08.rar.html https://takefile.link/4pnaogbupzv3/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part09.rar.html https://takefile.link/4qlzonijj429/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part02.rar.html https://takefile.link/4wi6ybte06pn/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part07.rar.html https://takefile.link/ba3s3e821qc6/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part13.rar.html https://takefile.link/fimtt8tllzrt/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part10.rar.html https://takefile.link/g68ufxjzc4si/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part01.rar.html https://takefile.link/hy46m6maruox/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part06.rar.html https://takefile.link/i74pg71kzeja/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part15.rar.html https://takefile.link/nlofa7wlapcq/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part03.rar.html https://takefile.link/qc1j2og59w1q/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part14.rar.html https://takefile.link/w5mflhllmbp6/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part16.rar.html https://takefile.link/z384zra5cvdp/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part04.rar.html https://takefile.link/znslrw7uj1iz/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part17.rar.html Rapidgator https://rg.to/file/03175e32ba48727d0cfa39f9d7a7c7e9/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part01.rar.html https://rg.to/file/12b320e0843cae529aa05eff610fecd8/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part15.rar.html https://rg.to/file/134493794dc0598cde84ade1cfaf7108/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part17.rar.html https://rg.to/file/13e2be74bfc1286d0b14e6588d541b60/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part14.rar.html https://rg.to/file/202527d09a741f2c1e715f5c4f29c70b/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part06.rar.html https://rg.to/file/5db0ff3ff3d35e80fbda9f957909ea63/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part07.rar.html https://rg.to/file/5f0635df6f6323bce2378dc3abb9b257/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part16.rar.html https://rg.to/file/63dc759ced5efeb5b7b39efaffda50dc/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part04.rar.html https://rg.to/file/669708731373a8defd76a9734e18d9a5/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part02.rar.html https://rg.to/file/77e727795e3c0e1c235cf2ff121c1456/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part12.rar.html https://rg.to/file/ac91c35b291a51a1a5472548d1093c12/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part03.rar.html https://rg.to/file/af69478dd4d3899d5aa7902ce98a1050/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part10.rar.html https://rg.to/file/baadd545a2c74b2a51b58453131acbd8/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part11.rar.html https://rg.to/file/c53fcf76fa10dd4cc58e8d1c397a2787/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part05.rar.html https://rg.to/file/f2cee363d660ae12306d89ef236fcdad/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part08.rar.html https://rg.to/file/f76ff9ad9686c686aba4fa1ff7678c92/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part13.rar.html https://rg.to/file/fe5e4f037b1904cb7eab31e0aca6466a/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part09.rar.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/0P11jSifuc/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part03.rar.html https://fikper.com/ElZPu8CuwD/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part05.rar.html https://fikper.com/NlD1yBqV4W/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part12.rar.html https://fikper.com/UcZEROzQO8/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part10.rar.html https://fikper.com/bUgzUoitvx/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part01.rar.html https://fikper.com/ep5ZUGB1gr/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part07.rar.html https://fikper.com/ghmBJGTpwm/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part08.rar.html https://fikper.com/iKx5dMP3vA/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part02.rar.html https://fikper.com/ir4O5Gg6Ix/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part09.rar.html https://fikper.com/jxKAbRxxbL/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part14.rar.html https://fikper.com/kL96Jo8fDs/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part13.rar.html https://fikper.com/n0nkjUPB7A/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part17.rar.html https://fikper.com/nJu18XkKwj/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part15.rar.html https://fikper.com/pvLdvN5TZB/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part04.rar.html https://fikper.com/sTbw1oift8/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part11.rar.html https://fikper.com/tsMoVVnwFp/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part16.rar.html https://fikper.com/zDLs7zO2xV/aovzy.TTC..Mathematics.Describing.the.Real.World.Precalculus.and.Trigonometry.part06.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
-
- TTC
- Mathematics
-
(i 3 więcej)
Oznaczone tagami:
-
Free Download The Learning Brain [TTC Audio] English | May 25, 2018 | ASIN: B07CZ18VZZ | M4B@64 kbps | 12h 23m | 358 MB Lecturer: Thad A. Polk One of the most complicated and advanced computers on Earth can't be purchased in any store. This astonishing device, responsible for storing and retrieving vast quantities of information that can be accessed at a moment's notice, is the human brain. How does such a dynamic and powerful machine make memories, learn a language, and remember how to drive a car? What habits can we adopt in order to learn more effectively throughout our lives? And how do external factors like traumatic injuries and mood affect our gray matter? The answers to these questions are merely the tip of the iceberg in The Learning Brain. These 24 half-hour lectures offer in-depth and surprising lessons about how the brain learns and how we can optimize that learning. Begin your journey by focusing on which parts of the brain are responsible for different kinds of memory, from personal experiences and memorized facts to short-term memory, and how these systems work on a psychological and biological level. Then, discover how to better absorb and retain all kinds of memories in all stages of life. This course is chock-full of valuable information, whether you're learning a new language at 60 or discovering calculus at 16. If you need better study habits, struggle with learning a new skill, or just worry about memories fading with age, The Learning Brain will provide illuminating insights. Take this journey with Thad Polk, professor of psychology at the University of Michigan, whose well-organized curriculum and relaxed teaching style ease you into intricate aspects of learning science, including the underlying cognitive and neural mechanisms involved. Professor Polk's credentials in psychology and over 20 years' experience in education shine through every lecture of The Learning Brain as he firmly supports this rigorous exploration with scientific studies conducted over the last several decades of neuroscientific research. Rapidgator https://rg.to/file/f7403468c4f20e96e727b081af5487a9/2qsp9.The.Learning.Brain.TTC.Audio.Repost.rar.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/LvYrZmie2l/2qsp9.The.Learning.Brain.TTC.Audio.Repost.rar.html Links are Interchangeable - No Password - Single Extraction
-
Free Download The History of Ancient Rome [TTC Audio] English | July 08, 2013 | ASIN: B00DTO54Q4, B0015NBTEC | M4B@128 kbps | 24h 10m | 1.32 GB Lecturer: Garrett G. Fagan Even today, the influence of Ancient Rome is indelible, with Europe and the world owing this extraordinary empire a huge cultural debt in almost every important category of human endeavor, including art, architecture, engineering, language, literature, law, and religion. At the peak of its power, Rome's span was vast. In the regional, restless, and shifting history of continental Europe, the Roman Empire stands as a towering monument to scale and stability, unified in politics and law, stretching from the sands of Syria to the moors of Scotland. And it stood for almost 700 years. In this series of 48 spirited lectures, you'll see how a small village of shepherds and farmers rose to tower over the civilized world of its day and left a permanent mark on history. In telling Rome's riveting story, Professor Fagan draws on a wealth of primary and secondary sources, including recent historical and archaeological scholarship, to introduce the fascinating tale of Rome's rise and decline, including the famous events and personalities that have become so familiar: Horatius at the bridgeHannibal crossing the Alps during Rome's life-or-death war with CarthageCaesar being assassinated before a statue of his archrival PompeyThe doomed lovers Antony and CleopatraThe mad and venal emperors Nero and CaligulaThe conversion of Constantine. The course also addresses one of history's greatest questions: Why did the Roman Empire fall? And you'll learn why most modern scholars believe that the empire did not "fall" at all, but, rather, changed into something very different - the less urbanized, more rural, early medieval world. Rapidgator https://rg.to/file/7b47993ffe22cd6291b0c1c66aa27b1c/r10a1.rar.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/tgyOo74W9g/r10a1.rar.html Links are Interchangeable - No Password - Single Extraction
-
Free Download The Fall and Rise of China [TTC Audio] English | July 08, 2013 | ASIN: B00DTO4XNO | M4B@64 kbps | 24h 8m | 668 MB Lecturer: Richard Baum How can we account for China's momentous - and almost wholly unanti[beeep]ted - global rise? And what does it mean, for us in the West and for humanity's future? Speaking to these vital and fascinating questions, these 48 penetrating lectures by Professor Baum bring to vivid life the human struggles, the titanic political upheavals, and the spectacular speed of China's modern rebirth. Offering multilevel insight into one of the most astounding real-life dramas of modern history, the lectures weave together the richly diverse developments and sociopolitical currents that created the China you now read about in the headlines. You'll get a detailed understanding of all the core events in China's century of stunning change, including the collapse of the Qing dynasty, the Republican era and civil wars, the "Great Leap Forward", the Cultural Revolution, and the post-Mao economic "miracle". Throughout, Professor Baum reveals highly unusual details that enrich the cinematic sweep of the story. For example, you'll learn about the Christian warlord who baptized his troops with a fire hose, the strange kidnapping of Chiang K'ai-shek, and Professor Baum's own smuggling of top-secret documents out of Taiwan. A core strength of these lectures is that they make sense of the dramatic events of the story by getting deeply at what underlay them, culturally, socially, and historically - leaving you with a nuanced knowledge of the forces moving China's modern emergence. Bringing alive the passionate reinvention of China with deep discernment and humanity, they portray the confounding, majestic, heart-rending, and visionary story of a modern giant. Rapidgator https://rg.to/file/f0ec3eb6efb4c334be5cd962be4fa996/1t9zt.rar.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/e6E3bpLWb3/1t9zt.rar.html Links are Interchangeable - No Password - Single Extraction