Theoretical computer scientists
Juris Hartmanis (July 5, 1928 – July 29, 2022) was a Latvian-born American computer scientist and computational theorist who, with Richard E. Stearns, received the 1993 ACM Turing Award "in recognition of their seminal paper which established the foundations for the field of computational complexity theory". (Wikipedia).
From playlist Thank You Professor Lewin
In response to Professor Lewin's Video for me
From playlist Thank You Professor Lewin
Isaac Newton - English Physicist & Formulated the Laws of Gravity |Mini Bio | BIO
Watch a short biography of Isaac Newton, a key figure in the scientific revolution who is most famous for formulating laws of gravity. #Biography Subscribe for more Biography: http://aetv.us/2AsWMPH Delve deeper into Biography on our site: http://www.biography.com Follow Biography for mo
From playlist Genius & Innovation | A+E Networks
Trip Through Center of The Hague, Holland
The Hague, The Netherlands
From playlist Walter Lewin is Alive and Well!
Albert Einstein, Holograms and Quantum Gravity
In the latest campaign to reconcile Einstein’s theory of gravity with quantum mechanics, many physicists are studying how a higher dimensional space that includes gravity arises like a hologram from a lower dimensional particle theory. Read about the second episode of the new season here:
From playlist In Theory
Everything You Need to Know About Bitcoin in 2021 | Andreas Antonopoulos
Andreas Antonopoulos is a best-selling author, speaker, educator, and highly sought after expert in Bitcoin and open blockchain technologies. He is known for making complex subjects easy to understand and highlighting both the positive and negative impacts these technologies can have on ou
From playlist Interviews and Shows
The Jury This class examines the role of the jury in capital sentencing, the selection of juries through the questioning of prospective jurors with the exclusion of those who cannot be fair and impartial, the use of peremptory strikes by the parties, the instructions to the jury and its de
From playlist Capital Punishment: Race, Poverty, & Disadvantage with Stephen Bright
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From playlist Law Review News!
The Seventh Amendment | US government and civics | Khan Academy
Keep going! Check out the next lesson and practice what you’re learning: https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/us-government-and-civics/us-gov-the-national-constitution-center/us-gov-the-bill-of-rights-ncc/v/the-eighth-amendment The Seventh Amendment protects jury trials in civil cases.
From playlist The Constitution, Bill of Rights, and Landmark Supreme Court Cases
Aggravating Factors (s3c) The death penalty may be imposed only if a jury finds an “aggravating factor,” and, once one is found, aggravating factors are considered in deciding whether to impose the death penalty or life imprisonment. The purpose of aggravating factors is to narrow the cri
From playlist Capital Punishment: Race, Poverty, & Disadvantage with Stephen Bright
“Beyond a Reasonable Doubt”: How Juries Get It Wrong | Richard Dawkins | Big Think
“Beyond a Reasonable Doubt”: How Juries Get It Wrong New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink Join Big Think Edge for exclusive video lessons from top thinkers and doers: https://bigth.ink/Edge ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Evolutionary bio
From playlist Richard Dawkins | Big Think
Peremptory Strikes (s9b) “Peremptory strikes” allow both prosecutors and defense counsel to freely strike a certain number of jurors. Historically, peremptory strikes have been used to exclude racial minorities from jury service. This segment addresses that history and analyzes whether t
From playlist Capital Punishment: Race, Poverty, & Disadvantage with Stephen Bright
Interview: Sia Sanneh (s9c) Sia Sanneh of the Equal Justice Initiative of Alabama discusses findings by the Initiative of discrimination in the use of peremptory strikes in Alabama.
From playlist Capital Punishment: Race, Poverty, & Disadvantage with Stephen Bright
What happened to trial by jury? - Suja A. Thomas
View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/what-happened-to-trial-by-jury-suja-a-thomas In the United States today, juries decide less than 4% of criminal cases and less than 1% of civil cases filed in court. At the same time, jury systems in other countries are growing. So what happened
From playlist New TED-Ed Originals
Making Sense of the Verdict (Depp v. Heard)
⭐️ Get my videos early & ad free (plus my exclusives!) only on Nebula. Save $10 per year! https://legaleagle.link/getnebula ⭐️ The verdict is in! ☕️ Sign up for Morning Brew now! https://legaleagle.link/morningbrew Welcome back to LegalEagle. The most avian legal analysis on the inter
From playlist Law Review News!
The Sixth Amendment | National Constitution Center | Khan Academy
Keep going! Check out the next lesson and practice what you’re learning: https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/us-government-and-civics/us-gov-civil-liberties-and-civil-rights/us-gov-due-process-and-the-rights-of-the-accused/v/miranda-v-arizona A deep dive into the Sixth Amendment, which
From playlist The Constitution, Bill of Rights, and Landmark Supreme Court Cases
Andreas Antonopoulos - Government not a threat to Bitcoin
I've always wondered how likely it is for bitcoin to be displaced by another cryptocurrency. Now I know! Get the most important book ever for free in every format including audiobook at: http://thefreedomline.com Audiobook on YT: http://youtu.be/OobMGexM6Ks Please support FREEDOM! by likin
From playlist Interviews and Shows