2021/06/17

Sandor Katz - Wikipedia

Sandor Katz - Wikipedia

Sandor Katz

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
Sandor Ellix Katz
A color image of Sandor Katz, a man in a loosely worn purple plaid shirt and cargo pants with grey hair and two shade of grey mutton chop sideburns and mustache. He is standing at a table in which he is making sauerkraut. He has one hand in the bowl and is making a circular gesture with the other.
Sandor Katz doing a fermentation workshop at the Monticello Heritage Harvest Festival, 12 September 2015
BornMay 20, 1962 (age 59)
Known forFood writer focusing on DIY fermentation
Notable work
Wild Fermentation (2003)
The Art of Fermentation (2012)

Sandor Ellix Katz (born May 20, 1962) is an American food writer and DIY food activist.

Work[edit source]

A self-described "fermentation fetishist", Katz has taught hundreds of food workshops around the United States, and his book Wild Fermentation (2003) has been called a classic,[1] "the bible for people embarking on DIY projects like sourdough or sauerkraut",[2] and "especially notorious for getting people excited about fermenting food".[3] He was named one of Chow magazine's top "provocateurs, trendsetters, and rabble-rousers" in 2009.[4]

Personal life[edit source]

Born to a Jewish family with origins in Belarus, Katz grew up in New York City on the Upper West Side.[5] He is openly gay,[6] an AIDS survivor,[7] and began his fermentation experimentation while living in a rural, off-the-grid Radical Faerie community in Tennessee.[2][8]

Popular culture[edit source]

Katz was the subject of the 2009 punk rock song "Human(e) Meat (The Flensing of Sandor Katz)", a satirical vegan response to Katz's 2006 chapter on "Vegetarian Ethics and Humane Meat" in The Revolution Will Not Be Microwaved.

Bibliography[edit source]

References[edit source]

  1. ^ "An interview with underground foodie hero Sandor Katz"Grist Magazine. 17 May 2007. Retrieved 30 July 2009.
  2. Jump up to:a b "On the Hunt for Wild Yeast: Chatting with home fermentation expert Sandor Ellix Katz"CHOW Magazine. 18 March 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  3. ^ "The Revolution Will Not Be Microwaved: An Interview with Sandor Ellix Katz"Healing the Earth radio. 15 August 2007. Retrieved 30 July 2009.
  4. ^ Lessley Anderson (2 November 2009), The CHOW 13: Sandor Katz, p. 10
  5. ^ "Pickling Pioneer Preaches Gospel of Fermentation"The Scroll. 19 September 2014. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  6. ^ Sandor Katz (2006), The Revolution Will Not Be Microwaved, Chelsea Green Publishing, p. 95ISBN 1-933392-11-8
  7. ^ Katz, Sandor. "Who Is Sandorkraut?".
  8. ^ Winborn, George (30 May 2008), "Fermentation Fervor" (PDF)Just Out, p. 43[permanent dead link]

External links[edit source]

2021/06/16

Klein, This Changes Everything (book) - Wikipedia

Spirit Bodymind Gender Ecology Peace Scapbook: Klein, This Changes Everything (book) - Wikipedia

Klein, This Changes Everything (book) - Wikipedia

This Changes Everything (book) - Wikipedia

Amazon.com: Origin Story: A Big History of Everything (Audible Audio Edition): David Christian, Jamie Jackson, Recorded Books: Books

Amazon.com: Origin Story: A Big History of Everything (Audible Audio Edition): David Christian, Jamie Jackson, Recorded Books: Books

Origin Story: A Big History of Everything 
Audible Logo Audible Audiobook – Unabridged
David Christian (Author), Jamie Jackson (Narrator), Recorded Books (Publisher)
4.4 out of 5 stars    692 ratings


A captivating history of the universe - from before the dawn of time through the far reaches of the distant future. 

Most historians study the smallest slivers of time, emphasizing specific dates, individuals, and documents. But what would it look like to study the whole of history, from the big bang through the present day - and even into the remote future? How would looking at the full span of time change the way we perceive the universe, the earth, and our very existence? 

These were the questions David Christian set out to answer when he created the field of "Big History", the most exciting new approach to understanding where we have been, where we are, and where we are going. In Origin Story, Christian takes readers on a wild ride through the entire 13.8 billion years we've come to know as "history". 

By focusing on defining events (thresholds), major trends, and profound questions about our origins, Christian exposes the hidden threads that tie everything together - from the creation of the planet to the advent of agriculture, nuclear war, and beyond. With stunning insights into the origin of the universe, the beginning of life, the emergence of humans, and what the future might bring, Origin Story boldly reframes our place in the cosmos.
----
Switch between reading the Kindle book & listening to the Audible narration with Whispersync for Voice.
Get the Audible audiobook for the reduced price of AUD11.01 after you buy the Kindle book.
Kindle from AUD 18.83
Audible Logo Audiobook
AUD 0.00
with membership trial
Listening Length 12 hours and 23 minutes
Author David Christian
Narrator Jamie Jackson
Whispersync for Voice Ready
Audible.com Release Date May 22, 2018
Customer reviews
4.4 out of 5 stars
----------------
Top reviews from the United States
Matt Mansfield
5.0 out of 5 stars The Evolution of Our Collective Learning
Reviewed in the United States on June 26, 2018
-
If you enjoy traditional history in terms of investigation, analysis, and debate about specific events and people, you will likely not be satisfied by David Christian’s 2018 work, “Origin Story: A Big History of Everything”.

As the author, a historian with extensive teaching credentials at Macquarie University in Sydney, University of Vermont, San Diego State University, to name some, has pointed out: “… in a globally connected world, there are so many local origin stories competing for people’s trust and attention that they get in one another’s way.”

This is the impetus for Christian to write a “big history” from a much broader perspective of human experience and coincidently to co-found with Bill Gates of Microsoft origin, the Big History Project, a free online syllabus about this topic.

The premise of “Origin Story” is there is a relentless struggle between basic components of the universe: evolution of more complex structures and entropy, the general tendency of matter and energy to return to a simple, disorderly state. And humans are part of this process.

Presumably our capacity for collective learning with an evolved emphasis on precise copying and communication is a unique trait distinct from other living forms. Consequently, we are more self-aware and able to accept responsibility for our impact on the biosphere, for however long we will experience big life.

The author defines the rise of complexity in terms of ”thresholds”, or events when the flow of recorded or theorized experience gained complexity: birth of the universe; first stars glow; new elements created; our sun and solar systems form; earliest life on earth; earliest form of human species; end of last ice age and earliest signs of farming; fossil fuels revolution. The last and future threshold touches on the sustainability of a world order.

An imaginative twist to putting these thresholds and timeline in perspective is dividing the estimated number of years by 1 billion: the “big bang” was 13 years, 8 months ago, while the asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs 24 days ago, the Roman and Han empires 1 minute ago and the fossil-fuel revolution 6 seconds ago.

The book is divided into four sections: Cosmos; Biosphere; Us; The Future. The writing is conversational and comfortable to follow while providing a level of detail and terminology without overwhelming technicality.

Christian carefully reminds that several chance occurrences, besides the much-discussed “Goldilocks zone”, created opportunities for life, as we know it, to evolve. Geo-thermal core, plate tectonics, critical balancing between carbon, oxygen and other elements, the evolution of DNA beyond RNA, the role of prokaryotes – all are presented in fascinating detail.

One area the book might have explored more was the evolution of the pre-frontal lobe or cortex in the human brain. This is a more recent development and seems to be a major, if not decisive, distinction between humans and other species and a likely basis for self-awareness and consciousness.

As a complementary material for the first two sections, you might want to check out online NOVA’s “Australia’s the First 4 Billion Years’” four-part series that helps visualize some of Christian’s observations.

For the third section covering the rise and impact of complex human interactions beyond farming and hunting, the author references Samuel Noah Kramer’s 1963 work, “The Sumerians” (if it helps, here's the link to my Amazon review of Kramer’s work:
 https://www.amazon.com/review/R37UB92YMPN1U3/ref=cm_cr_othr_d_rdp_perm?ie=UTF8).

In the same section he makes several important references to Thomas Picketty’s 2014 seminal work, “Capitalism in the Twenty-First Century”, to underscore the human and social impact of the rapid industrial development (again, if it helps, here's the link to my Amazon review of Piketty’s work:
 https://www.amazon.com/review/R3QGVI29BM4HI/ref=cm_cr_othr_d_rdp_perm?ie=UTF8 ) .

The last section about the future seems more focused as a response to today’s political and social events while leaving aside some of the potentially more impactful long-range human developments: artificial intelligence, mixed reality and quantum computing.

All told, “Origin Story” offers a refreshing way to see our human experience. It may also make you wonder whether, one way or another, as TS Eliot wrote in his 1925 poem, “The Hollow Men”, it will all come to end “not with a bang but a whimper.”
Read less
Customer image
76 people found this helpful
----
Jack Hicks
5.0 out of 5 stars For those who seek wisdom and perspective
Reviewed in the United States on August 1, 2018
Verified Purchase
“Origin Story, A Big History of Everything”, by David Christian, 2018 By any measure the last 75 years, in my lifetime, have seen the largest explosion of knowledge in Human history. For millennia humans have sought the wisdom of the gods; How the universe and humans came to be. I feel very fortunate to have witnessed this epochal achievement. Working as an engineer at the Cape I witnessed the first Pioneer spacecrafts and Apollo moon missions blast off. I sort of realized at the time that we were entering a new age of exploration and technological innovation, but I could have never imagined the discoveries yet to come; Billions of Galaxies discovered by the Hubble Space telescope, Black holes, Gravity waves, Robot vehicles roving on Mars, super computers in phones or the unlocking of the genetic blueprint of life. Almost every field from Astrophysics Physics, Quantum mechanics, Biology, Neurobiology, Genetics, Geology to Paleontology and Paleoanthropology has seen groundbreaking discoveries that have changed our understanding of the universe and our place in it.
Now comes an amazing new book that weaves this knowledge into a surprisingly readable 300-page narrative story of the universe for the last 13 billion years. Up till now to attain this updated knowledge you would have to read separate books or take separate courses in each of the above specialties. Christian takes us on an epochal journey from the first milliseconds of the big bang, the formation of atoms and elements to the structural formation of the universe. From there we are taken to the formation of chemical elements to the formation of the earth and the beginning of life in the form of single celled prokaryotes 3 billion years ago. Photosynthesis, Cyanobacteria, plate tectonics all play a role in making our planet unique in our solar system as the only place hospitable for life. Then evolve the Eukaryotes through a combining of more primitive cells to form a new type of oxygen breathing cell, which make all multicellular animals and us possible. With the evolution of large bodied animals comes the evolution of large brains and consciousness. With the appearance of humans comes sharing and generational transmission of information and technologies. This ability proves crucial to the development of globe changing events such as agriculture and the scientific revolution. Along the way to us there were all sorts of blind alleys, near miss encounters and apocalyptic disaster scenarios that didn’t completely play out just by good luck and serendipity. One such occurrence caused by volcanism, happened 70,000 years ago and brought the number of our species to just 10,000 individuals and almost to the brink of extinction. This makes our life and all life on earth as we see it now a miraculous and beautiful occurrence.
In a sense this book while conveying the history of the universe and human societies always emphasizes throughout the fact that energy flows, the laws of thermodynamics are the fundamental factors operating in the physical universe, biological systems and human civilizations. We learn “wealth never really consists of things; it consists of control over energy flows that make, move, mine and transform things”. Agrarian societies and empires could never bring wealth to a majority of the population because they could never produce enough surplus energy. They could only concentrate wealth in an elite ruling class of perhaps 10%-15% of the population. The discovery and exploitation of fossil fuels in the last 200 years, which are nothing more than reservoirs of ancient sunlight, has engendered a huge explosion in the energy, wealth available to human societies and made possible the almost sevenfold explosion of human population, middle classes and advanced western civilization. However, we learn here that the earth has undergone numerous mass extinctions caused by CO2 induced global warming, the last catastrophic one, over 50 million years ago called the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum that wiped out over 50% of all genera on earth. That event was caused by a huge explosion of volcanism emitted CO2. By burning fossil fuels and emitting huge quantities of CO2 in the same manner, are we at the beginning of just such an event? Christian emphasizes that we have reached a critical point in the evolution of life on earth where one species, us, now control the fate of our entire ecosystem. We can put into play our knowledge of how the universe works that we have assiduously garnered over the last several hundred years or we can ignore what we know, instead let greed and tribalism reign and plunge our planet into an unknown future of chaos and destruction where our very survival will be at risk. This must be one of the great turning points in history like the invention of agriculture or the discovery of fossil fuels where mankind has no choice but to utilize his innovative abilities and technologies to harness the sun’s energies directly. I don’t think I have ever encountered a book with more knowledge condensed into one place in such a readable form. You want wisdom and perspective? Read this! JACK
Read less
39 people found this helpful
Helpful
Report abuse
Gary
5.0 out of 5 stars Thorough science
Reviewed in the United States on June 28, 2018
Verified Purchase
This is a great read! You certainly won’t get through it in one sitting, but it is worth the time. I love reading science books, so this was an easy, entertaining book from that perspective.

But this is a history book as well. A big-history book. It kept my attention for the majority of the time and I learned a lot, but I confess to skimming through a bit of the pre-farming history. I may revisit that later.

The last part of the book discusses possible human species futures - the good and bad anthropocene. Two promising documents are referenced - one from the United Nations. The other being the Paris Agreement. Of course, every reputable scientist today recognizes the tragedies of Trump. That’s my obvious comment as this author rightfully keeps his political and religious views out of the book.

I highly recommend this book to those who appreciate the scale of the cosmos and our very small part in its grand scheme.
23 people found this helpful
----
tkeithlu
3.0 out of 5 stars A bit too simple, a bit too slick.
Reviewed in the United States on August 5, 2018
Verified Purchase
Mr. Christian tries to present a smooth history and rationale for human beings as we are today. It's a monumental task attempted by few others. He has rather to pick and choose among competing theories for any number of topics to make it all work, and unfortunately presents those theories as fact, without concern for the uncertainties. It's an engaging read, and would be fun to assign to an anthropology class just to see what arguments ensued.
19 people found this helpful
----
Top reviews from other countries
Gazza
4.0 out of 5 stars Origin Story: A Big History of Everything
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 17, 2019
Verified Purchase
I bought Origin Story on the basis that it would be an updated version of Hendrik van Loon’s classic history: The Story of Mankind. Personally, I think it doesn’t live up to that volume. For one, it doesn’t have the same wit and humour in the writing as Loon. Nor does it have the childish sketching that accompanies Loon’s work that I have grown so used to, which is something that makes his work so endearing.

Nonetheless, David Christian’s work is bang up to date with current science and knowledge and (like Loon’s ‘Story’) it reads particularly well.

I hope you find my review helpful.
8 people found this helpful
-----
J. Drew
5.0 out of 5 stars How we came to here,a fascinating tale of big history
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 24, 2020
Verified Purchase
Most history books focus on recent events, military campaigns, kings and queens or political events. They also tend to focus only on events in the last 10,000 years or so. And most focus on events much more recently than that. What I loved about this book is that it starts with the moment the whole universe could be contained in a size less than the dot that finishes this sentence that began with all the light to the energy we needed to form a universe. The moment we now call the Big Bang occurred over 13 billion years ago. It uses this moment as the first threshold to explain the history of the origin of earth and moves through nine more thresholds to tell the story of how we got to here, right now. From this moment, it explains 4 forces including gravity, electromagnetic energy, and quantum mechanics that explain how everything comes together through simple laws of nature. But then explains how atoms work which then come together to form planets. And then 4 1/2 billion years ago, in a swirling dust cloud that formed our sun, shortly after all the planets of our solar system were born and we had the planet Earth. Then from planets and rocks, it then moves through life and mass extinctions (we’ve had at least 5 we know of - the last being the one to wipe out most of the dinosaurs [we still have some relatives of dinosaurs such as birds and chickens]). When it gets to Homo sapiens there is an Interesting moment when the human population was down to just a few ten thousand humans (enough to fill a moderate sized sports stadium) about 70,000 years ago. Our species came close to extinction, possible due to catastrophe that may have been triggered by a massive volcanic eruption on Mount Toba in Indonesia that pumped clouds of soot into the atmosphere, blocking photosynthesis for months or years and endangering many species. We survived and we now have 7.7billion people on the planet. However, all other species of upright ape have also become extinct. The threshold including timelines from billions of years and transformed into a 13 year time frame line to help us get an idea of the deep time is as follows (I always love using my arm to explain to people how much I would need to delete to wipe out the entire existence of humans who ever existed on this planet – it’s literally one swipe at a nail file across the nail of a finger of an outstretched arm or the removal of one layer of paint off the top of the Eiffel Tower):

THRESHOLD 1: Big bang: origin of our universe
13.8 billion years ago - 13 years, 8 months ago
THRESHOLD 2: The first stars begin to glow
13.2 (?) billion years ago - 13 years, 2 months ago
THRESHOLD 3: New elements forged in dying large stars
Continuously from threshold 2 to the present day
THRESHOLD 4: Our sun and solar system form
4.5 billion years ago - 4 years, 6 months ago
THRESHOLD 5: Earliest life on Earth
3.8 billion years ago - 3 years, 9 months ago
The first large organisms on Earth
600 million years ago - 7 months ago
An asteroid wipes oiit the dinosaurs
65 million years ago - 24 days ago
The hominin lineage splits from the chimp lineage
7 million years ago - 2.5 days ago
Homo erectus
2 million years ago - 17 hours ago
THRESHOLD 6; First evidence of our species, Homo sapiens
200,000 years ago - 100 minutes ago
THRESHOLD 7: End of last ice age, beginning of Holoceine, earliest signs of farming
10,000 years ago - 5 minutes ago
First evidence of cities, states, agrarian civilizations
5,000 years ago - 2.5 minutes ago
Roman and Han Empires flourish
2,000 years ago - 1 minute ago
World zones begin to be linked together
500 years ago - 15 seconds ago
THRESHOLD 8: Fossilfuels revoliition begins
200 years ago - 6 seconds ago
The Great Acceleration; humans land on the moon
50 years ago - 1.5 seconds ago
THRESHOLD 9 (?): The Future
A sustainable world order?
100 years in the future? - 3 seconds to go
The sun dies
4.5 billion years in the future - 4 years, 6 months to go

When it moves to the future, understanding the laws of nature to say what will happen to our planet and sun are easy to foretell. The mystery however, regarding the future, is it in the complexity and mystery of the nature of man. That is a much more difficult future to foretell. This is a wonderful book, and I look forward to thinking about this book a lot.
Read less
One person found this helpful
-----
Paul K.
5.0 out of 5 stars If you want to know everything about how we got here, this is the book to start with.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 1, 2019
Verified Purchase
Origin Stories explains the Big Bang and keeps going. It’s the story of the ‘Goldilocks conditions’ needed to reach the 8 thresholds (Big Bang, stars, galaxies, molecules, life, humans, farming and the Anthropocene) that have defined our planet’s history. It makes me wonder at how we got here at all, whilst at the same time realising that ours is just one story within the unimaginable vastness of the universe. How many others might there be? In the introduction David says that as a child he could not make sense of things unless he could place them on some sort of map. This book is intended as the biggest map of them all, to provide a background timeline and context for everything that ever happened in our history. It’s big history. @bighistorypro @originstory #bighistory #booksthatfascinateme #booksiwantmykidstoread

---
C Bridges
5.0 out of 5 stars Wow!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 20, 2018
Verified Purchase
A fascinating story brilliantly told. Will need to read it again as there is so much to take in.
4 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Mr O L Rogers
5.0 out of 5 stars Very interesting
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 12, 2019
Verified Purchase
Really good overview from the bing bang to the present.
Report abuse



Amazon.com: Big History: The Big Bang, Life on Earth, and the Rise of Humanity (Audible Audio Edition): David Christian, David Christian, The Great Courses, The Great Courses: Books

Amazon.com: Big History: The Big Bang, Life on Earth, and the Rise of Humanity (Audible Audio Edition): David Christian, David Christian, The Great Courses, The Great Courses: Books

Big History: The Big Bang, Life on Earth, and the Rise of Humanity Audible Logo Audible Audiobook – Original recording
David Christian (Narrator, Author), The Great Courses (Author, Publisher)
4.2 out of 5 stars    11 ratings


How is it possible for the disciplines of cosmology, geology, anthropology, biology, and history to fit together? These 48 lectures answer that question by weaving a single story from accounts of the past developed by a variety of scholarly disciplines. The result is a story stretching from the origins of the universe to the present day and beyond, in which human history is seen as part of the history of our Earth and biosphere, and the Earth's history, in turn, is seen as part of the history of the universe.

Like traditional creation stories told by the world's great religions and mythologies, this lecture series provides a map of our place in space and time. But it does so using the insights and knowledge of modern science, as synthesized by a renowned historian. While you may have heard parts of this story before in courses on geology, history, anthropology, biology, cosmology, and other scholarly disciplines, Professor Christian provides more than just a recap of those disciplines. "Because of the scale on which we look at the past, you should not expect to find in it many of the familiar details, names, and personalities that you'll find in other types of historical teaching and writing," he explains. "For example, the French Revolution and the Renaissance will barely get a mention. They'll zoom past in a blur. You'll barely see them. Instead, what we're going to see are some less familiar aspects of the past. We'll be looking, above all, for the very large patterns, the shape of the past.

"Prepare yourself for a journey through time and across space, from the first moments of existence to the distant reaches of the far future."
Read less
©2008 The Teaching Company, LLC (P)2008 The Great Courses
Audible Logo Audiobook
AUD 0.00
with membership trial
Paperback
AUD 13.66
Audio CD
AUD 36.70
Other sellers & formats
Audible Logo
Special invitation from Audible!
Free with Audible TrialAUD 0.00
Continue for FREE
Monthly payment after 30 days:
$14.95(AUD 19.98 as of today) 
One credit a month to pick any title from our entire premium selection to keep (you’ll use your first credit now).
Unlimited listening on select audiobooks, Audible Originals, and podcasts.
You will get an email reminder before your trial ends.
AUD 19.98 a month after 30 days. Cancel online anytime.
Learn more about Membership
Buy with 1-ClickAUD 67.60
Sold and delivered by Audible, an Amazon company
Add to List
Share    
Amazon book clubs early access
Add to book club
Not in a club? Learn more
People who viewed this also viewedPage 1 of 9Page 1 of 9
Previous page
The Origin and Evolution of Earth: From the Big Bang to the Future of Human Existence
The Origin and Evolution of Earth: From the Big Bang to the Future of Human ExistenceThe Origin and Evolution of Earth: From the Big Bang to the Future of…
Robert M. Hazen
5
Audible Audiobook
AUD 0.00 Free with Audible trial
The Joy of Science
The Joy of ScienceThe Joy of Science
Robert M. Hazen
6
Audible Audiobook
AUD 0.00 Free with Audible trial
Mysteries of Modern Physics: Time
Mysteries of Modern Physics: TimeMysteries of Modern Physics: Time
Sean Carroll
2
Audible Audiobook
AUD 0.00 Free with Audible trial
Particle Physics for Non-Physicists: A Tour of the Microcosmos
Particle Physics for Non-Physicists: A Tour of the MicrocosmosParticle Physics for Non-Physicists: A Tour of the Microcosmos
Steven Pollock
1
Audible Audiobook
AUD 0.00 Free with Audible trial
Chemistry and Our Universe: How It All Works
Chemistry and Our Universe: How It All WorksChemistry and Our Universe: How It All Works
Ron B. Davis
6
Audible Audiobook
AUD 0.00 Free with Audible trial
Biology: The Science of Life
Biology: The Science of Life
Stephen Nowicki
 13
Audible Audiobook
AUD 0.00 Free with Audible trial
Next page
People who bought this also boughtPage 1 of 6Page 1 of 6
Previous page
Major Transitions in Evolution
Major Transitions in EvolutionMajor Transitions in Evolution
Anthony Martin
1
Audible Audiobook
AUD 0.00 Free with Audible trial
How the Earth Works
How the Earth WorksHow the Earth Works
Michael E. Wysession
7
Audible Audiobook
AUD 0.00 Free with Audible trial
What Darwin Didn’t Know: The Modern Science of Evolution
What Darwin Didn’t Know: The Modern Science of EvolutionWhat Darwin Didn’t Know: The Modern Science of Evolution
Scott Solomon
1
Audible Audiobook
AUD 0.00 Free with Audible trial
Life in Our Universe
Life in Our UniverseLife in Our Universe
Laird Close
0
Audible Audiobook
AUD 0.00 Free with Audible trial
The History of the United States, 2nd Edition
The History of the United States, 2nd EditionThe History of the United States, 2nd Edition
The Great Courses
36
Audible Audiobook
AUD 0.00 Free with Audible trial
The Remarkable Science of Ancient Astronomy
The Remarkable Science of Ancient Astronomy
Bradley E. Schaefer
 0
Audible Audiobook
AUD 0.00 Free with Audible trial
Next page
Get more included with membership:
1 credit a month

The Plus Catalog

Podcasts

Product details
Listening Length 24 hours and 26 minutes
Author David Christian, The Great Courses
Narrator David Christian
Audible.com Release Date July 08, 2013
Publisher The Great Courses
Program Type Audiobook
Version Original recording
Language English
ASIN B00DTNW86O
Best Sellers Rank #11,788 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals)
#136 in Biological Sciences (Audible Books & Originals)
#828 in Biological Sciences (Books)
Customer reviews
4.2 out of 5 stars
4.2 out of 5
11 global ratings
5 star
 59%
4 star
 28%
3 star 0% (0%)
 0%
2 star 0% (0%)
 0%
1 star
 13%
How are ratings calculated?
Review this product
Share your thoughts with other customers
Write a customer review

Sponsored 

Top reviews
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
rikitikitavi
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Seller who gives a Complete and Accurate description of what he sells. I like that:)
Reviewed in the United States on February 17, 2021
Verified Purchase
I Love my “Big History: The Big Bang, Life on Earth”
the Complete Great Learning Compact Disc Set. Neatly packed and Quickly shipped. I’m a very Happy customer who’s always willing to spend a bit more for a complete and accurate description of the product sold:) Again, very Happy with my buy!
Helpful
Report abuse
S. Aldrich
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating and profound.
Reviewed in the United States on October 2, 2016
Verified Purchase
Wonderful lectures.
Helpful
Report abuse
Becky
4.0 out of 5 stars Big History - Properly named Perfect for retirement folks to enjoy.
Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2014
Verified Purchase
Plan on listening to it throughout the winter months. We're looking forward to it. The set was in perfect condition. .
Helpful
Report abuse
Kristi R.
5.0 out of 5 stars "To understand ourselves," says Professor Christian, "we need to know the very large story, the largest story of all."
Reviewed in the United States on February 1, 2017
Big History: The Big Bang, Life on Earth and the Rise of Humanity
By Professor David Christian

"To understand ourselves," says Professor Christian, "we need to know the very large story, the largest story of all."

48 lectures | 30 minutes each
1 What Is Big History?
2 Moving across Multiple Scales
3 Simplicity and Complexity
4 Evidence and the Nature of Science
5 Threshold 1—Origins of Big Bang Cosmology
6 How Did Everything Begin?
7 Threshold 2—The First Stars and Galaxies
8 Threshold 3—Making Chemical Elements
9 Threshold 4—The Earth and the Solar System
10 The Early Earth—A Short History
11 Plate Tectonics and the Earth's Geography
12 Threshold 5—Life
13 Darwin and Natural Selection
14 The Evidence for Natural Selection
15 The Origins of Life
16 Life on Earth—Single-celled Organisms
17 Life on Earth—Multi-celled Organisms
18 Hominines
19 Evidence on Hominine Evolution
20 Threshold 6—What Makes Humans Different?
21 Homo sapiens—The First Humans
22 Paleolithic Lifeways
23 Change in the Paleolithic Era
24 Threshold 7—Agriculture
25 The Origins of Agriculture
26 The First Agrarian Societies
27 Power and Its Origins
28 Early Power Structures
29 From Villages to Cities
30 Sumer—The First Agrarian Civilization
31 Agrarian Civilizations in Other Regions
32 The World That Agrarian Civilizations Made
33 Long Trends—Expansion and State Power
34 Long Trends—Rates of Innovation
35 Long Trends—Disease and Malthusian Cycles
36 Comparing the World Zones
37 The Americas in the Later Agrarian Era
38 Threshold 8—The Modern Revolution
39 The Medieval Malthusian Cycle, 500–1350
40 The Early Modern Cycle, 1350–1700
41 Breakthrough—The Industrial Revolution
42 Spread of the Industrial Revolution to 1900
43 The 20th Century
44 The World That the Modern Revolution Made
45 Human History and the Biosphere
46 The Next 100 Years
47 The Next Millennium and the Remote Future
48 Big History—Humans in the Cosmos

This was such an all compassing history of the world combining history, science, physics, biology and statistics into a huge epic of how we got to where we are now and where are we going from here.

Professor Christian taught at San Diego State University and now in Sydney, Australia. He is clear and concise on his explanations and there is so much to cover in this course that I know I will have to listen to it repeatedly.

I thoroughly enjoyed the big picture of the science of the creation of the universe and the beginnings of man in such a short time. There were many questions that were answered and many questions that we need to study more. We have so much more to learn about where we came from and where we are going.

I highly recommend this lecture series, I certainly learned from it.
Read less
4 people found this helpful
Helpful
Report abuse
Chris
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent
Reviewed in the United States on February 14, 2015
This is the History of Everything from the beginning of the universe to the present day, organized around 8 threshold events-starting with the beginning of the universe, moving through the formation of the stars and galaxies, the formation of chemical elements, planets and solar systems (with special emphasis on our solar system and Earth), the beginning of life, the appearance of Homo sapiens, the development of agriculture (symbiosis between man and domesticates on a massive scale) and ending with The Modern Revolution. Each threshold event involves its own particular discipline from Cosmology, to Geology, Biology and Anthropology. Professor Christian provides background information from each discipline which he gathered from years coordinating Big History courses where lecturers from each of the disciplines taught segments of the class. The result is a cohesive narrative and foundation for understanding the past 13.6 billion years. I feel as if four years of inchoate 1980's undergrad education has been sorted and ordered in a few weeks.
5 people found this helpful
Helpful
Report abuse
Camber
5.0 out of 5 stars This Course is Mandatory for All Adults
Reviewed in the United States on December 4, 2013
Christian was a pioneer of big history, and is still a leader in the field, if not THE leader. TTC and its customers are therefore incredibly fortunate to have gotten Christian to develop this course.

The scope of the course is very sweeping and comprehensive. Christian literally presents a history of the universe, both natural and human, from the big bang right up to present, and even ends with potential scenarios for the future. In the process, the student is exposed not only to history on the grandest possible scale (which is the scale at which everyone should first be exposed to history), but he also imparts basic knowledge in areas such as cosmology, physics, chemistry, biology, human evolution and anthropology, technology, etc.

As a lecturer, suffice it say that Christian is superb, and 48 lectures is perhaps a perfect length for this material - long enough to synthesize a vast amount of material, without tiring the student too much by the end of the course.

It would be a gross understatement to say that I highly recommend this course. Rather, this course is absolutely mandatory for anyone who aspires to consider themself an educated adult in the world today. The framework this course provides is essential for the putting the modern world in perspective and making wise decisions for the future.
Read less
9 people found this helpful
Helpful
Report abuse
See all reviews

A scientist explores the mysteries of the gut-brain connection |

A scientist explores the mysteries of the gut-brain connection |



A scientist explores the mysteries of the gut-brain connectionDec 6, 2017 / Karen Frances Eng


Sacha Vega/iStock
The brain in your head and the one in your gut are always exchanging info. But how do they do it? Neuroscientist Diego Bohórquez is trying to find out the answers.

If you were asked where the human body’s nervous system is located, you’d probably answer “the brain” or “the spinal cord.” But besides the central nervous system, which consists of those two organs, our bodies also contain the enteric nervous system, a two-layer lining with more than 100 million nerve cells that spans our guts from the esophagus to the rectum. The enteric nervous system has been called “the second brain,” and it’s in constant contact with the one in our skull. That’s why just thinking about food can lead your stomach to start secreting enzymes, or why giving a speech can lead to your feeling queasy.

Until recently, scientists thought the two systems communicated solely via hormones produced by enteroendocrine cells scattered throughout the gut’s lining. After sensing food or bacteria, the cells release molecular messengers that prompt the nervous system to modulate behavior. But it turns out the process may be much more direct. Intriguingly, Duke University gut-brain neuroscientist Diego Bohórquez, a TED Fellow, has found that some enteroendocrine cells also make physical contact with the enteric nervous system, forming synapses with nerves. This revelation opens the door to rethinking how we might affect these signals — and might someday change how we treat conditions as varied as obesity, anorexia, irritable bowel syndrome, autism and PTSD.

What fueled Bohórquez’s interest in the gut-brain connection? Chickens. After he moved to the US from Ecuador, his first position was as a visiting research scholar at North Carolina State University, where he worked in a nutrition laboratory that focused on chickens. “In poultry production, the biggest challenge is to feed the hatchling chicks as soon as possible so the bird can achieve its maximum growth potential,” Bohórquez says. “My PhD advisor came up with the idea to feed the chicks in the egg before they hatch. This in-ovo feeding consisted of delivering enzymes into the amniotic fluid of the embryo right before it hatched.” Bohórquez was surprised at how this practice changed what the chicks did after they hatched. “The unfed chickens came out of the egg and slept for five or six hours. But the ones fed in ovo went straight to eat,” he says. “They were also more alert, spent time looking around, and pecked each other. I became intrigued about how ingested nutrients alter behavior.”

A friend’s gastric bypass surgery also fueled his curiosity. “A friend was struggling with obesity and, as a last resort, decided to have gastric bypass surgery. It worked. She lost a lot of weight, and it resolved her diabetes,” he recalls. “But most strikingly, her perception of taste changed. She used to be repulsed by the sight of runny egg yolks, but after the surgery, she craved them.” Such a change in taste has been well documented in some patients who’ve undergone bariatric surgery, but scientists aren’t sure how or why it happens, says Bohórquez. “It’s a new subject, but rewiring the gut appears to physically change how we perceive the taste of food in the brain.”

While scientists have known that nutrients are sensed in the gut by enteroendocrine cells, the exact way this happens was murky. They understood that when stimulated, enteroendocrine cells release hormones that either enter the bloodstream or activate nearby nerves to affect how we eat. “My focus has been to figure out how a sensory signal from a nutrient is transformed into an electrical signal that alters behavior,” Bohórquez says. He and his colleagues began taking a close look at enteroendocrine cells, using 3D electron microscopy. Imaging them in this way revealed a whole new structure that hadn’t been seen before. “It turns out enteroendocrine cells not only have microvilli, or tiny protrusions, exposed to the gut, but they also have a foot-like extension, which we called the neuropod,” says Bohórquez. “It became evident that enteroendocrine cells have similar physical attributes to neurons, so we wondered whether they might be wired to neurons, too.”

The secret to tracking synaptic connections: a special kind of rabies. The key to illuminating the process was inserting a tiny amount of modified fluorescent rabies virus into the colon of a mouse. “Rabies is a virus that infects neurons and spreads through synaptic connections, so when used in a modified form that only allows it to jump one neuron at a time, it’s useful for tracking neural circuits,” Bohórquez explains. Seven days after undergoing this procedure, the enteroendocrine cells of the mouse colon glowed green, offering evidence that the sensor cells were indeed behaving as neurons. Bohórquez then bred a mouse that would allow the tracking rabies to make a second jump. When he delivered the tracking rabies into the colon of this new mouse, the enteroendocrine cells and the nerves that they connected to lit up, demonstrating the existence of a physical synapse between the sensor cells and its nervous system — and a physical connection that hadn’t been seen before.

Charting the communication pathway between the gut and brain could someday lead us to new treatments for disorders and conditions. A number of diseases — autism, obesity, anorexia, irritable bowel syndrome, inflammatory bowel disease, PTSD and chronic stress — share a symptom known as altered visceral sensing, or a hyper- or hyposensitivity to gut stimuli. “For instance, clinical observations have suggested that some children with anorexia may be hyper-aware of the food they ingest from an early age,” says Bohórquez. “Under normal circumstances, this process happens without detailed spatial and temporal awareness, but those children can feel what’s going on in there, which triggers anxious feelings.” With this knowledge, scientists may better understand other disorders that have been thought to be solely psychological.

Can our enteroendocrine cells smell, taste and touch? They possess the same molecular receptors that enable mechanical, chemical and thermal sensing in your nose and mouth, says Bohórquez. “These mechanisms are just beginning to be studied, and it’s where research is headed.” And beyond the gut, he points out, the lining of our body’s organs — including our lungs, prostate and vagina — all possess sensor cells similar to enteroendocrine cells. “Future exploration will continue to uncover how the brain perceives signals from these organs and how they affect how we feel,” he says.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Karen Frances Eng is a contributing writer to TED.com, dedicated to covering the feats of the wondrous TED Fellows. Her launchpad is located in Cambridge, UK.
brain
brains
Diego Bohórquez
gut
nervous system

유상용 [마을에서 공부하기 ㅡ 진동 마을인문학]

Facebook: 유상용 tcS4p5onmsorsegde 

유상용
tcS4p5onmsorsegde  · 
[마을에서 공부하기 ㅡ 진동 마을인문학]
6월14일(월)부터 10월까지 매주 열릴 예정인 진동의 마을인문학 강좌는
‘진리를 찾아 먼 길 떠나지 않아도’ 

동네에서 함께 읽고, 묻고, 탐구하는 가운데
보통의 동네에서 보통의 우리들로서, 
삶과 행복의 길을 찾아가는 여정이다. 강사도 동네사람, 서로 배우고 서로 가르치며 성장하는 마을의 공부방이다.
-----------------------------------------------
1 노자 도덕경 – 안성균 (양도지구살림 대표) 
6/14, 6/21, 6/28 7/5
전세계에서 성경 다음으로 많이 번역된 지혜의 보고,
덜 소유해도 만족하며 행복을 찾아가는 법, 남과 비교하지 않고 경쟁을 넘어 자기다움을 사랑하는 법을 전하는 <노자>와 욕심을 내려놓고 최선을 다하며 결과를 받아들이는 자연스러운 삶을 위한 안내서 <노자 도덕경>을 만납니다. 

2 동경대전 – 황선진 (밝은마을 대표) 7/12, 7/19, 7/26, 8/2
코로나19, 기후위기 등 너머에서 이리로 오고 있는 세상. 그 새로운 세상을 이끌 철학은 무엇인가? 일찍이 160여 년 전, 새로운 문명을 예견했던 수운 최제우 선생. 수운선생의 육필 <동경대전>! 동경대전에 담긴 '나를 살리고 세상을 살리는' 지혜가 우리에게 손을 내민다.

3 ‘우리말과 삶을 가꾸는 글쓰기’ - 노광훈 (산마을고 교사) 8/16, 8/23
글쓰기는 자기를 찾고 자기 말을 찾고 자기 삶을 찾는 가장 좋은 공부다. 자기를 돌아보는 힘은 자기 삶을 정직하게 쓰는 글쓰기에서 나온다. 글은 왜 쓰고, 어떤 글을 어떻게 써야 하는지 알아보자. 자기 이야기를 자기 말로 쓴 글을 함께 나누면서 글을 보는 눈을 기르고, 글다듬기는 어떻게 하는지 공부해 보자.
1차시 : 글은 왜 쓰나? 무엇을 어떻게 쓰나? 어떤 글이 좋은 글인가? 글쓰기 다섯 단계. 
2차시 : 생활글(10줄 일기) 쓰고 글 합평하기. 글 다듬기.

4 빅히스토리 – 백영민목사 
9/6, 9/13(바뀔 수 있음)
화가 고갱이 타히티에서 그린 마지막 작품의 제목이 “우리는 어디에서 왔고, 무엇이며, 어디로 가는가?”입니다. 이는 ‘인간의 본질과 존재의 근거’에 대해서 묻는 질문이기도 합니다. 여러분은 이 물음에 어떠한 답을 가지고 있나요? 그 답은 여러 가지 일 수 있습니다. 그 중에 하나의 답을 ‘빅히스토리’로 떠나는 마을 인문학에서 함께 찾아보면 어떨까요?

5 내가 만난 세상의 공동체마을들 ㅡ  유상용 (진동 대표) 
10/4, 10/11(바뀔 수 있음)
1. 일본 야마기시공동체 / 미국 에미서리공동체 등 
2. 영국 브루더호프공동체 / 한국 성미산마을 등
: 공동체, 뭐 특별한 것 있을까? 좀 더 따뜻한 가족의 느낌으로 살아가는 것, 실수해도 서로 웃으며 보아주고 무슨 일이 있는지 하고 서로 관심 가는 것, 살면서 조금씩 더 안심하고 편안해지는 사람들 사이. 경제도 마음도 같이 해결해가자! 혼자서 외롭게 나두지 않는 그런 사이 사이 사이.
진동은 어떤 공동체로 되어가고 싶은 지 함께 생각해봅니다.


---
《우리 말과 삶을 가꾸는 글쓰기》

무너미 다녀와서 쓴 글  


지난 4월 17일 오랜만에 나들이를 했습니다. 이렇게 먼 길을 가보기는 8년 만에 처음입니다. 그것도 기차를 타고 가게 되어 혼자서 괜히 설레이는 마음도 들었습니다. 기차 타는 것도 18년 만입니다.
  처음에 무너미 글쓰기 모임에 노미화 선생이 전화로 꼭 와 달라고 했을 때만 해도 건성으로 "예, 예." 대답했지만 자신이 없었습니다. 그런데 상준이네 아부지가 이오덕 선생님 병세가 많이 나빠졌다는 말에 서울 김경희 선생님과 약속을 했습니다. 둘이서 억지로 끌고 가더라도 병원에 모셔 가자고 한 거지요.
  기차로 무극까지는 순조롭게 잘 갔습니다. 그런데 무극역에서 잘못되었습니다. 어쨌든 무너미까지 혼자서 간다는 욕심으로 택시를 탔는데 여태까지 잘 온 길을 망쳐 놓은 것입니다. 노광훈 선생이 마중 나온 것도 모르고 아까운 택시비만 마 천이나 냈으니까요. 안동에서 제천까지 4천 5백원, 제천서 무극까지 1천 5백원 합쳐서 6천원인데 택시비는 거의 갑절이 되었으니까요. 돈도 아까왔지만 노 선생한테 많이 미안했습니다.

  어쨌든 글쓰기 선생님들 만나 좋았습니다. 모두 어린아이들처럼 즐거워하고 있었습니다. 노광훈 선생은 머리를 깎아 흡사 영화 '유리'에 나오는 박신양이 같았고, 황금성 선생은 앞으로 외무부 장관이 됐으면 싶었고, 황시백 선생은 가장 노릇 잘 하는지 좀 의심스러웠고, 주중식 선생은 더 젊어진 것 같고, 이상석 선생은 언제나 착한 아저씨 같고, 원종찬, 김신철 선생 두 사람에겐 겨레아동문학선집을 받고 큰절이라도 하고 싶었습니다.
  돌아오는 길엔 주중식 각시가 운전하는 차를 여섯 사람이 타고 왔는데, 2시간 반이나 걸려도 아무도 방귀 한 번 뀌지 않아 차 안 공기가 깨끗했습니다. 집에 돌아와서 닷새 동안 끙끙 앓고 나서 오늘 겨우 이 글을 냈습니다. 조용명 선생 몸 조심했으면 좋겠습니다. 상준이네 어머니께서 힘이 많이 들었을 것입니다. (4월 24일 권정생) ▣ (한국글쓰기연구회,『우리 말과 삶을 가꾸는 글쓰기』, 제45호, 1999년. 5월)