22 Burst results for "Tillich"

"tillich" Discussed on Untangle

Untangle

01:55 min | 10 months ago

"tillich" Discussed on Untangle

"Instead, it's about thinking from a deeper, more grounded place in the human self, from that hard place where we are connected with others, and our thinking can become more of a service to the common good. So yes, it became clear to me that I needed to take a downward journey. There was a great theologian named Paul tillich, who years ago, defined God as the ground of being. And for a lot of people, that's been a helpful non denominational understanding of what that big word God might mean the ground of being of all being, animal being plant being human being, et cetera and so all of that began to really work on me and I started taking that downward journey away from my ego and I think I didn't mention ego earlier away from my ego away from the wrong kind of intellect, et cetera, et cetera toward more grounded forms of all of that and including working on getting rid of this sense that I'm somehow special and should be exempt from the normal processes of life from the suffering that we were talking about here, Patricia. That was an illusion cultivated at altitude for me because I had been flying above the crowd above the action. So all of that helped a lot and then I came eventually to my own image for what this journey had been like. Once I broke through to the other side, I started an imaging my depression in this goes directly to your question about befriending how can depression be a befriending force I started imaging my journey as if I had been walking down a sidewalk and from a block or two away I heard this voice calling my

Paul tillich Patricia depression
"tillich" Discussed on Lex Fridman Podcast

Lex Fridman Podcast

05:16 min | 11 months ago

"tillich" Discussed on Lex Fridman Podcast

"Now only the crude is fundamentalism would say, well, that's a universe accurate description of God. It's an image that's catching something of God's manner of being. Then what does it mean to believe in God? So there's a word, and we have to limit ourselves to human interpretable words today. There's a word called faith. What is faith mean? So we can't really directly know God. You kind of sneak up to the idea of God with metaphors. Better he sneaks up on us. Because I like the language of grace. God's action comes first. So if I stay perfectly within the realm of I'm seeking, with my kind of eagle eyes and my inquiring mind, I'm not going to find God that way. I might find a path that opens up, but I would say finally God finds me and I think then the language of faith begins to make more sense. I'm with Paul tillich though, the Protestant theologian. So the most misunderstood word in the religious vocabularies faith. Because he said the way we take it usually is something sub rational. You know, I have a proof of this. I really know this and I only kind of believe that. That's just a personal opinion or impression. But that's to identify faith with the kind of infra rational. And that's not it. I don't want something in for a rational. I don't want superstition or childish credulity. So authentic faith is the darkness beyond reason. And on the far side of reason, it's super irrational, not infra rational.

Paul tillich
"tillich" Discussed on Spark My Muse

Spark My Muse

04:05 min | 1 year ago

"tillich" Discussed on Spark My Muse

"One <Speech_Female> lives from the future <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> to the past. <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> And this without rhythm <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> or any kind of meaningful <Silence> <Advertisement> organization. <Silence> <Advertisement> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> The world <Silence> of anxiety <Speech_Female> is a <Speech_Female> world in which the <Speech_Female> categories <Speech_Female> the structures of <Speech_Female> reality have <Speech_Female> lost their validity. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Everybody <Speech_Female> would be dizzy. If <Speech_Female> causality suddenly <Silence> ceased to be valid <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> <Speech_Female> in existential <Speech_Female> art as i <Speech_Female> like to call it <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> causality has <Speech_Female> lost its validity. <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> Modern art <Speech_Female> has been attacked <Speech_Female> as a forerunner <Speech_Female> of totalitarian <Speech_Female> <Silence> systems. <Speech_Female> The answer <Speech_Female> that all totalitarian <Speech_Female> systems <Speech_Female> have started their <Speech_Female> careers by attacking <Speech_Female> modern art <Speech_Female> is insufficient <Speech_Female> for one could say <Speech_Female> that the <Speech_Female> totalitarian systems <Speech_Female> fought modern <Speech_Female> art just because <Speech_Female> they tried to <Speech_Female> resist the meaninglessness <Speech_Female> expressed <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> in it. <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> The real answer <Silence> lies deeper. <Speech_Female> Modern art <Speech_Female> is not propaganda <Speech_Female> but revelation. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> It shows that <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> the reality <SpeakerChange> of our <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> existence is <Speech_Female> as <Silence> <Advertisement> it <SpeakerChange> is <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> it <Speech_Female> does not cover up the reality <Silence> in in which we're <Speech_Female> living the <Speech_Female> question <SpeakerChange> therefore <Silence> is this <Speech_Female> is the <Speech_Female> revelation <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> of a situation <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> propaganda <Silence> <Advertisement> foreign. <Speech_Female> If this <Speech_Female> were the case all <Speech_Female> our would have to <Speech_Female> become dishonest. <Speech_Female> Beautification <Silence> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> the art <Speech_Female> propagated by <Speech_Female> both totalitarianism <Speech_Female> and <Speech_Female> democratic conformism <Silence> <Speech_Female> is <Speech_Female> dishonest <Silence> beautification. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> It is <Speech_Female> an idealized <Speech_Female> naturalism <Speech_Female> which is preferred <Speech_Female> because it removes <Speech_Female> every danger <Speech_Female> of art. Becoming <Speech_Female> critical <Speech_Female> and revolutionary. <Silence> <Speech_Female> The creators <Speech_Female> of modern art <Speech_Female> have been able to <Speech_Female> see the meaninglessness <Speech_Female> of <Silence> our existence. <Speech_Female> They participated <Speech_Female> <Silence> in its despair <Speech_Female> at <Speech_Female> the same time. They have <Speech_Female> had the courage <Speech_Female> to face it <Speech_Female> and to express <Speech_Female> it in <Speech_Female> their pictures <Silence> and sculptures. <Speech_Female> They had <Speech_Female> the courage to be <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> as themselves. <Silence> <Advertisement> <Music> <Advertisement> <Music> <Advertisement> <Music> <Advertisement> <Music> <Advertisement> <Silence> <Advertisement> <Silence> <Advertisement> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> <Silence> That's a fascinating essay. <Speech_Female> He <Speech_Female> speaks of <Speech_Female> artisan writers <Speech_Female> of art <Speech_Female> and literature as <Speech_Female> people <Speech_Female> expressing the truth <Speech_Female> of the meaninglessness <Speech_Female> they see <Speech_Female> and the structural <SpeakerChange> breakdowns. <Silence> That they see <Speech_Female> truth <Silence> tellers. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> And <Speech_Female> those who are trying <Speech_Female> to imitate <Speech_Female> what they feel is real <Speech_Female> as participating <Speech_Female> in dishonest <Speech_Female> beautification. <Speech_Female> That's probably <Speech_Female> the opposite of what <Speech_Female> some people might think. <Speech_Female> Normally <Speech_Female> but the existentialist <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> wants to deal <Speech_Female> with the entire <Speech_Female> spectrum <Speech_Female> of human emotions. <Speech_Female> Not just <Speech_Female> the good feelings <Speech_Female> but the feelings <Speech_Female> that we all <Speech_Female> have especially <Speech_Female> as things break <Speech_Female> down and <Speech_Female> disperse <Speech_Female> especially <SpeakerChange> as <Silence> <Advertisement> we encounter suffering. <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Female> <Speech_Female> You may need to <Speech_Female> listen to that again <Speech_Female> to really absorb <Speech_Female> the power of all <Speech_Female> those words <Speech_Female> and his train of <Speech_Female> thought. <Speech_Female> I definitely recommend <Speech_Female> till the courage <Speech_Female> to be. <Speech_Female> Even though it <Speech_Female> is almost seventy <Speech_Female> years old. <Speech_Female> He is a man of <Speech_Female> his time speaking to <Speech_Female> his time <Speech_Female> but his wisdom <Speech_Female> carries great <Speech_Female> meaning <Speech_Female> and help for us today. <Speech_Female> I hope <Speech_Female> you enjoyed this <Speech_Female> and pass it along <Speech_Female> to anybody. You think <Speech_Female> is a person <Speech_Female> who appreciates <Speech_Female> this kind of <Speech_Female> in depth look at <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> culture and <Silence> <Advertisement> the human condition. <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> <Speech_Female> If you would <Speech_Female> like to support me. I <Speech_Female> would deeply <Speech_Female> appreciate it. <Speech_Female> You can go to patriotic <Speech_Female> dot com <Speech_Female> slash spark <Speech_Female> my muse. <Speech_Female> Any contributions <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> from a dollar on <Speech_Female> up unlock <Speech_Female> a lot of posts <Speech_Female> that are companions <Speech_Female> to these episodes <Speech_Female> as well <Speech_Female> as plenty of other materials. <Speech_Female> And <Speech_Female> i know you will enjoy <Speech_Female> it. <Speech_Female> They blessing <Speech_Female> and peace <Speech_Female> and reality <Speech_Female> be yours. <SpeakerChange> <Music>

"tillich" Discussed on Spark My Muse

Spark My Muse

04:06 min | 1 year ago

"tillich" Discussed on Spark My Muse

"Completely conditioned whether he works or loves or kills her eats or sleeps he is an object among objects without meaning for himself and therefore unable to find meaning in his world. He represents that destiny of absolute objectification against which all existentialist fight. He represents it in the most radical way without reconciliation. The courage to create this figure equals the courage with which kafka has created the figure of mr k. A glimpse at the theater confirms this picture. The theater especially in the united states is full of images of meaninglessness and despair in some place. Nothing else is shown. As in arthur miller's death of a salesman in others the negativity is less unconditional as in tennessee william's. A streetcar named desire but it seldom becomes positively. Even comparatively positive solutions are undermined by doubt and by awareness of the ambiguity of all solutions. It is astonishing that these plays are attended by large crowds in a country whose prevailing courage is the courage to be as a part in a system of democratic conformity. What does this mean. For the situation of america and with it of humankind as a whole one can easily play down the importance of this phenomenon. One can point to the unquestionable fact that even the largest crowds of theatergoers aren't infinitely small percentage of the american population. One can dismiss the significance of the attraction. The existentialist theatre has for many by calling it an imported fashion doomed to disappear very soon. This is possibly but not necessarily so it may be that the comparatively few few even if one adds them to all the cynics and despairing ones in our institutions of higher learning or a van guard which precedes a great change in the spiritual and social psychological situation. It may be that the limits of the courage to be as a part have become visible to more people than the increasing conformity shows if this is the meaning of the appeal that existentialism has on stage. One should observe it carefully and prevent it from becoming the forerunner of collectivist forms of the courage to be as a part a threat which history has abundantly proved to exist. the combination of the experience of meaninglessness and of the courage to be as oneself is the key to the development of visual arts since the turn of the century in expressionism and surrealism. The surface structures of reality are disrupted the categories which constitute ordinary experience have lost their power. The category of substance is lost. Solid objects are twisted like ropes. The casual interdependence of things is disregarded things appear in a complete contingency temporal sequences are without significance. It does not matter whether an event has happened before or after another event. The spatial dimensions are reduced or dissolved into a horrifying infinity. Organic structures of life are cut into pieces. Which are arbitrarily. From the biological not the artistic point of view re composed limbs are dispersed. Colors are separated from their natural carriers. The psychological process this refers to literature more than art is reversed..

mr k arthur miller kafka america tennessee william
"tillich" Discussed on Spark My Muse

Spark My Muse

04:15 min | 1 year ago

"tillich" Discussed on Spark My Muse

"The feelings of meaninglessness become despairing and self destructive on this basis existentialism that is the great art literature and philosophy of the twentieth century. Reveal the courage to face things as they are and to express the anxiety of meaninglessness. It is creative courage which appears in the creative expressions of despair. Sartre calls one of his. Most powerful plays no exit a classical formula for the situation of despair but he himself has an exit he can say no exit thus taking the situation of meaninglessness upon himself t. s. eliot called his first grade poem quote though wasteland unquote he described the decomposition of civilization the lack of conviction and direction the poverty and hysteria of the modern consciousness as one of his critics has analyzed it but it is the beautifully cultivated garden of the great poem which describes the meaninglessness of the wasteland and expresses the courage of despair. In kafka's novels the castle and the trial the unapproachable remoteness of the source of meaning and the obscurity of the source of justice and mercy are expressed in language which is pure and classical the courage to take upon oneself the loneliness of such creativity and the horror of such visions is an outstanding expression of the courage to be as oneself humans are separated from the sources of courage but not completely they are still able to face and accept their own separation in audience the age of anxiety the courage to take upon oneself the anxiety in a world which has lost the meaning is obvious as the profound experience of this loss the two polls which are united in the phrase courage of despair receive equal emphasis inserts the age of reason the hero faces a situation in which his passionate desire to be himself drives him to be the rejection of every human commitment he refuses to accept anything which could limit his freedom nothing has ultimate meaning for him neither love nor friendships nor politics the only immovable point is the unlimited freedom to change to preserve freedom without content he represents one of the most extreme forms of the courage to be as oneself the courage to be a self which is free from any bond and which pays the price of complete emptiness in the invention of such a figure sort proves his courage of despair from the opposite side the same problem is faced in the novel the stranger by camus who stands on the boundary line of existentialism but who sees the problem of meaninglessness as sharply as the existentialist. His hero is a man without subjectivity. He is not extraordinary in any respect he acts as an ordinary official in a small position would act. He is a stranger because he nowhere achieves an existential relation to himself or his world. Whatever happens to him has no reality and meaning to him. A love which is not a real love a trial which is not a real trial and execution which has no justification reality. There is neither guilt nor forgiveness neither despair nor courage in him he is described not as a person but as a psychological process.

Sartre eliot kafka camus
"tillich" Discussed on Spark My Muse

Spark My Muse

05:39 min | 1 year ago

"tillich" Discussed on Spark My Muse

"My muse and i'm your host lisa delay today a soul school. Listen to oh. Seven tillich on art and literature. I'm returning to paul tillich. And his book the courage to be. Because i find him incredibly insightful in this book that seems practically prophetic britain. Almost seventy years ago. As a mid twentieth century philosopher an existentialist theologian paul tillich comes to us with really keen insights on meaninglessness and chaos and anxiety that we experience us humans but also during the collapse of institutions and systems which normally provides structure to us and in these times of kovic pandemic and many systems that we have taken for granted or are familiar with his words are educational and in a way comforting to us. A lot of people are unfamiliar with paul tillich. And that's why i enjoy bringing his wisdom back around today. i'm going to read from page. One forty two and this section is called the courage of despair in contemporary art and literature. And remember that he wrote this in nineteen fifty two. This is really at the peak of the modern arts period. World war two has ended in recent memory for these people and modern art comes out as this chaotic response to traditional art realism and art coming from communist countries and too many people the signals a terrible downfall of society and civilization. What know now is the. Us government was funding art programs. That were specializing in modern art. As a kind of propaganda against the propaganda of the art that was coming out from communist countries it was a kind of open rebellion against it but often conservative people in the united states. Reviled it and sense that it was a harbinger of horrible things to come. Tillich speaks to this movement in art and literature as a way of expressing. Anxiety as a way of positivity expressing our fears of death and despair. I find the section incredibly insightful and. I hope that you can take it in. Maybe listen to this episode again if you need to. He writes in quite a heady educated way. He's also referring to pulsar te the atheist existentialist and his play no exit. Some of these things. You can look up. I will be linking to them in the show notes so you can get a feel for the context in which he was writing. He mentioned other philosophers too but by understanding this time of experiencing meaningless and despair. I think it helps us in our time. This is the ethos or the pathos of what we are experiencing now..

paul tillich tillich lisa britain Us government Tillich united states
"tillich" Discussed on Spark My Muse

Spark My Muse

02:19 min | 1 year ago

"tillich" Discussed on Spark My Muse

"That's all most of us can do. And that is exactly what the welcoming prayer helps us do. It helps us to get our perspectives in so that we don't just concentrate on only the pain and only are hopeless or helpless situation. We lay aside the things. We can't control in order that we can be freed of them in a certain way. This is a really difficult topic. And i cover some difficult topics in my book. The wildland within. I'm really glad to felix for reaching out to me. And if you have any questions about anything my book anything hard or anything challenging that you would like to know a little bit more. I'm so grateful to explain it on this medium of audio podcast if you'd like to do the book with others or have some companionship. As you read through the book. I'll be looking for a way to set up a book club. That is virtual where we can go through the book slowly together. So if you haven't found a partner trusted friend to go through the book together stay tuned at spark my muse dot com for announcements on how we will work through the book together. Perhaps you can find someone within that group in a more intimate way about some of the specifics of the book and in your life. Thank you felix for presenting this question. That i could encounter more thoroughly. Thank you for your work. And witness. Next week go will return to a reading from tillich on existentialism art and literature the covers modern art and the seeming meaninglessness. That is represented there as fascinating. He has a way of really distilling insights that most people haven't and i'm really excited to share that with you..

felix tillich
"tillich" Discussed on Spark My Muse

Spark My Muse

02:19 min | 1 year ago

"tillich" Discussed on Spark My Muse

"It isn't really an embrace of it as it is an acknowledgement of it. And i think that is really the role of artists and people who are sensitive to reality that those of who can sense reality as it is make it more visible to others who can't see it yet. Make the unseen seen to others who might not see it yet. There is things to despair of and there is meaninglessness two aspects of life for which we cannot overcome our lives. Come to the grave. There are things that seem hopeless. There is a prussian in the world and righteous people suffer when the wicked and suffer and this is the reality of life. And i think we should do all we can to stand against it to fight against it but at the same time realized that we're pushing a boulder up hill and there are other people on the other side pushing the boulder down against us when we acknowledged this in truthful ways we can express this sometimes in ways that people assume mean we are despairing or we are morbid but someone needs to express the ineffable the unexpectable the things that we turn away from. Someone needs to say. This doesn't make sense unless acknowledge it. Someone needs to point out when things are cruel and say this is evil we cannot stand for evil tillich tells us that the church should decide for truth against safety even if the safety is consecrated and supported by the churches because the truth sets us free dishonesty and cover up stone set us free and freedom in a very ultimate way not freedom in a short term way the freedom to see clearly freedom to be liberated on all levels. This is the kind of portion of a book that gets me thinking so many thoughts and writing down so many notes and sometimes even some poetry about it because it incites so much from deep places within me. Perhaps it does for you if you'd like to share your reflections or thoughts. I'm really happy to hear them. You can go to.

boulder tillich
"tillich" Discussed on Spark My Muse

Spark My Muse

02:53 min | 1 year ago

"tillich" Discussed on Spark My Muse

"Hello this is sparked by muse. I'm your host lisa delay and today i'm going to bring you saw school two. Oh five the courage to despair. That sounds like a really unusual title and it certainly is. I made a promise that i would be reading from. Tillich the courage to be. I'm revisiting that today. This little portion in the book comes from one thirty nine existentialism today in the courage of despair. And i just wanted to recall to your mind that this was actually written in nineteen fifty to the middle of the last century. And so take that into consideration as you hear these words. He is writing from proximity seventy years ago. A lot was different than it was the height of the cold war with communism with russia. But what he reflects on in many ways as extremely timeless and i think is pertinent to our times in terms of understanding ourselves better as humans in the section following. This is possibly an even more interesting section. And it's called the courage of despair in contemporary art and literature and what he's speaking to. As modern art mid twentieth century modern art even more fascinating to understand his writings in light of what we know. Now that the cia and the united states government funded many modern art programs and backed them as a way of resisting communism and what was reviled as nonsense and messy news and chaos in modern art was actually a kind of funded propaganda against the art coming out of russia and communism stay tuned for that one in a future soul school episode. Let's read what telecast say about existentialism and he is speaking as a man to his time existentialism as it appeared in the twentieth century represents the most vivid and threatening meaning of existential in it the whole development comes to a point beyond which cannot go it has become a reality in all the countries of the western world it is expressed in all the realms of humans spiritual creativity it penetrates all educated classes. It is not the invention of a bohemian philosopher or of a neurotic novelist. It is not a exaggeration made for the sake of profit and fame. It is not a morbid play with negativities elements of all these have entered it but it itself is something else it is the expression of the anxiety of meaninglessness and of the attempt to take this anxiety into the courage to be as once-off recent existentialism must be considered from these.

Tillich russia lisa united states government cia
"tillich" Discussed on The NBA Show

The NBA Show

07:34 min | 1 year ago

"tillich" Discussed on The NBA Show

"Quickly. In the words of anchorman i girl rosas was let go from the wolves yesterday at in the preceding twenty four hours. A lot of stuff came out about stated that front office. The vibes coming out of that front office may be some inter office. Consensual adult relationships. I've been. I've been discussed so really not a lot to get into. Just they're like sachin. Gupta is going to be taking over the office for a little while. The wolves had been rumored to be simmons destination. Although they had also been rumored to have been withholding most of their major assets. So i don't know if that changes the wolves calculus or the sixers calculus or anything but any any wolves thoughts. I think we can kind of dive deeper into franchises and crisis in the leader episode. Though yeah i'd say you know. Whoever i mean first of all i i i'm curious to see how much power such as given To actually make a big move like that if he isn't power to then you know. Nobody knows what's going to happen next. I have no idea what his appraisal of anthony edwards or daniel russell or anybody else on that team is and like those are those are obviously like the two major pieces so i guess we'll see what he thinks about them. But i mean to me just kinda swings back to the same issue of like why it is so hard to find a trade like anthony. Edwards is fantastic. He's not going to be championship piece right now. So you still need to find a third team and if it's daniel russell that you're getting for ben like he's still on that tier of guys that like they could probably probably rather have cj mccollum who i would assume is is is gettable at this point So i i don't know i don't know how much his actually really changed But if they do. I mean it could get really ugly if they decide to keep him around They can't find him quite yet. i think he's already. He's already received the installment of his salary that he's going to get up up until like i think like the year only as like a quarter left in it which is going to be way like i at that point i imagine he will no longer be a six or so if he really does decide to hold out then. I don't know like if they're willing to weather that early storm and wait to see lake. Is portland gonna fall apart or you know. I guess stuff has already gone down in minnesota. Or the wizards gonna fall. Apart is bill gonna become available irene. This i don't know i it. Just it's easy to say like okay. Just wait it out. But i mean training camp opens in a week. They're still we For for them to for them to trade him We'll see. I'm i'm a. I don't know i still feel like we're exactly where we were. Yes i agree with you. So let's talk about something that has changed the rules governing. Nba games now Basically this is not a secret. We've been talking about this or this has been out there in the ether that the nba's competition committee and that the referees were all the stakeholders and how the game is played. We're going to get together And today monty mccutchen. Like i mentioned who works in the league office and works with referees. Came out and gave a press conference a lot of video evidence to calls that he was going to the dan. Ba competition committee that the league office was going to be recommending that the referees change their sort of attitude about change their refereeing attitude sir. Why don't we talk a little bit about some of the things that are going to be different. En- games next season. Yes so basically like what we're going to see is just like a lot of what they are calling non basketball moves are going to be legislated out of the game like i think. We kind of intuitively know. We'll all of those are like it's unnatural moves. It's like you know jumping ahead to take john like what if you would take a jumper set going up and down Jumping ahead is not a natural movement. It's an attempt to get into your defender. What is considered Your defenders space. Right on. And i think that's really like what the what the crux of this is about. It's about also offensive players trying to get into spaces that are intended to beat. Tillich belong to the defender in order to put them in a position where they can easily draw foul or just like makes it impossible for for them to play defense So yeah to me. Just about space Like whether that's you know exaggerating pump fake like going going ahead on You know veering to the side when like you were clearly going straight just to get into like the area. The the the the defender was clearly running into So it's it's really just a lot of about How those things are going to be interpreted and you know just allowing defenders to defend The you know this. We had a a banner season for offense and This seems to be like the the natural. I guess unnatural. It is a rule that has been imposed on on the sport Response to that. Yeah so. I thought it was really interesting. I wouldn't necessarily recommend anybody. Go dig up. Mccutchen press conference but i. I think it's worth noting that one of the things that he says in his sort of preamble before he started taking questions basically he gave a statement took like one or two questions and then started getting into specific examples of the kinds of basketball or non basketball moves. Asserts that are not going to be allowed. This deceased now. He says they're not going to be allowed. Would he really means is. We're not going to call these as defensive fouls anymore at a certain point might actually be an offensive foul. But i think that there's going to be a lot of sort of open to interpretation for each referee as to whether or not you feel like that's a non call that's an offensive foul in some cases. That is still a defensive foul. I think that there will be probably all sorts of things going on but one thing that mccutcheon said that i wanted to kind of jump off of here because what. We're really trying to answer this week. On the answer is how will these rule changes affect a game but cutting pointed out that they basically like the point of nba basketball. The point of basketball is not to maximize offensive efficiency. It's to make it. Basically like the sports should be fair for both sides of the ball for basketball for offense and defense and that you know everybody loves seeing like the high-octane offenses. The scores scoring is inflated. Right now at maybe is good for the entertainment value of the game. But right now that. There's basically too many punitive action being taken against what is still traditional quote unquote good. Defending is that a pretty fair assessment. Of what what coaching said. Yeah i'd say so. And i think this is actually like one of the situations where It's rare that this happens like in the history of of rule changes in basketball. Like most of the changes have happened to you. Know encourage more offense Or you know. Like i mean i'll take us through like a kind of brief lake history of of rule changes in the game like basketball. I think as we said. I said this last podcast. We're talking about the hall of fame was invented so that you know players were were asked like any athlete. Any person would probably men back then. Though we would have a winter sport they could play that was not violent. And but it's still a contact sport so in any context for it like a lot lake. Soccer you have to then balance. Oh like you know. Ga- maintaining the games essence was like the natural aggression that happens with competitiveness And like that is essentially..

daniel russell cj mccollum basketball rosas monty mccutchen anthony edwards Ba competition committee nba sachin sixers Gupta simmons wolves Edwards wizards anthony Tillich ben portland minnesota
"tillich" Discussed on Accelerate!

Accelerate!

02:14 min | 1 year ago

"tillich" Discussed on Accelerate!

"Teaching people is perspective. And i was just searching for this quote here which is my favorite quotes from a job. Paul tillich she was american philosopher and theologian. And i saw this quote. Oh gosh decades early in my career and it just stuck with manic. Cut it out on my refrigerator again. For almost for decades and the quotas the awareness of the ambiguity of one's highest achievements as well as one's deepest failures is a definite symptom of maturity. And it's like that's it right. It just struck me like yeah. Yeah you got. Is you got lows highs. You think they are are as low as you think they are and keeping them. That perspective helps you move from one thing to that other spot on keeping that happy medium because i tell you this four letter word we call a life. It's a game when you when you think you're on top of the hill it knock you down and sometimes when you think you're down you're not really down you say well we can't get any worse. Ooh wait it can. How do you keep that happy medium then when things are going bad. Hey there's light at the end of the tunnel this is a chapter and it's there's a reason for this season i'm going through this and my question is what are you doing. Are you taking notes and learning. Are you learning from this time. That might be unsuccessful when you're having success are you still taking notes in learning and on the ball stain on your grind and not just like. Oh i'm good. Everything is awesome. Hey just around that corner. There's a challenge called coal. Are you ready. A lot of people got eighteen months ago. Nineteen months ago people got they got blindsided. I mean. I think that you're talking about the importance of the eight. Fs is yeah. That's what moves you forward. Right is when you say. Things are never as bad as they appear to be true to.

Paul tillich
"tillich" Discussed on Girls Gotta Eat

Girls Gotta Eat

05:38 min | 1 year ago

"tillich" Discussed on Girls Gotta Eat

"Success like women's tillich are men intimidated. That i'm successful. And i make a lot of money and it's how do you talk about that stuff and be conscious of that. You know telling somebody how much money you make. are you saying. I'm the most successful. Are you letting them figure that out on their own because all of this stuff is financed you know like you can talk about whatever you want just like how are you talking about it. Yeah there is a fine line of quote unquote advice on the way to be on a date. Because i don't want to tell people not to be themselves. It's not that you know what i mean. But i think if i was sure i could observe date sometimes. I would be like who this person on this day. Should taken it down a notch. You know what i mean like. Not they should have made themselves small. I'm talking about then guy or the girl or the girl. The girl whatever. It is whatever kind of relationship but like alcohol can be in the mix too and you can just people can get too chatty. They spill too much cry. You know like it isn't necessarily attractive. Show i know some people that are like i was just like sarcastic and funny. And it's like were you nagging. Yes means sarcasm. i've seen like sometimes you'll read your friends tax to other people and your friend reads it in their voice but you read it. And how a normal person's voice read it and you're like that was my friend like she was making this guy for the way spelled his name on a dating app who's name is jeff. But he's felt. Gao whatever like right out of the gate she was like. Or you're like those people who tells your name and a stupid way. And i was like i would never talk to you again. Be nagged yeah. Somebody said to me like the way that you spell rain is actually rei idiot. I'd be like okay fuck off. Yeah so like. Are you being funny and playful sarcastic nagging. Somebody and they don't like it like read the room. Because i mean there is always room for improvement. We're not perfect. I look back at like the way. I used to act on like a date for example or an job situation. You know ten years ago. It's mortifying you know what i mean like. I glad that i had bosses and you know guys. I dated like people to like. Tell me homecoming across. Put me in my place. They weren't saying like ashley. Make yourself small. Don't be successful. don't be loud. But they were kind of like. Here's how you come across them like noted you know what i mean like. I just wanna yeah. Advices advises helpful. You know what i mean. That's why i'm trying to tell this line and not be like go out there. Be whoever you want like. Everybody can be a little cooler right well. Okay my friend. I worked with her group on and she looks forwarded me these emails that i sent to like the ceo of the company and they were like very like he needs to apologize to me. I think i'm such a bad bitch. I think i'm so charge. It is so cringing. What i was saying to the person who is my boss and i like remember the conversation she would say to me and like now i feel like through his advice and through her making fun of me for these emails things like that like i can still put somebody in their place and i can still tell somebody that i i know better than them and i don't have to do it in a way like degrades somebody. It makes them feel stupid..

tillich Gao jeff ashley
"tillich" Discussed on The Bible Says What!?

The Bible Says What!?

03:46 min | 1 year ago

"tillich" Discussed on The Bible Says What!?

"So i mean. I had reached a point. You know at this point. In my life. When i when i hated myself and i you know. I don't wanna like shock any of the people. I'm sure that not you know not trying to trigger eating one or whatever but there was a point where i didn't i didn't want to live anymore right. The the pain the and the mental illness in the trauma. And all that had gotten to such a point that i just couldn't see a future for myself and i think one of the most beautiful descriptions of grace they've ever heard is from a felix in paul tillich. Who says that grace's being accepted accepting that you are accepted. And that's what i experienced now agree with you like and i'm ba. I've made peace with the fact that you know that there isn't a way to quote unquote. Empirically proves anything. And i'm at peace with the fact that maybe all of maybe that experience is just something that my psyche invented. And maybe when i die that's it and maybe that's maybe that's the end and i've made peace with that potentialities what i know though is that when i live from this place of profound acceptance self acceptance and therefore the acceptance of other people that i experienced at least as a gift from god from the divine from the universe. Whatever you wanna call it. That i'm kinder to people and that i can sit with people who are in pain and listen to them and let them know that the that the love that i felt for myself. They is also for them. That it's not just for me and it moves me to want to care for my neighbors and To want to welcome the stranger and to not get caught up as much not that i only always success with us but not get caught up as much in the anger and the hatred in the passions of our day in the polarization and all of that stuff so.

paul tillich grace
The Mind: A Factory of Fears

Spark My Muse

02:32 min | 1 year ago

The Mind: A Factory of Fears

"Today. I'm going to bring you something. From theologian and philosopher. Paul tillich he's considered usually an existential theologian from the mid twentieth century. And he has some fascinating and even prophetic things to say about our time. He wrote this book the courage to be in nineteen fifty two and even seventy years later. There are so many gems to be mined out of this book. I hoping to bring it to you in little bits here and there possibly over the next few weeks and months on page thirty six. There is a section called the interdependence of fear and anxiety. And i'm gonna read you pieces of this work anxiety and fear had the same ontological route but they are not the same in actuality. This is common knowledge but it has been emphasized and overemphasized to such a degree. That reaction against it may occur and wipe out not only the exaggerations but also the truth of the distinction fear as opposed to anxiety has a definite object as most authors agree which can be faced analyzed attacked endured one can act upon it and an acting upon it participate in it. Even if in the form of a struggle in this way one can take it into one's self affirmation. I'm gonna pause right here to say self. Affirmation is not any kind of positive thinking definition it is the acknowledgement that we as a human being are separated a separate sof or self determining agent in the world to understand that you are a self is self affirmation itself that tillich courage can meet every object of fear because it is an object which makes participation possible courage can take the fear produced by definite object into itself because this object however frightful it may be houses side with which it participates in us and we in it one could say that as long as there is an object of fear love in the sense of participation can conquer

Paul Tillich Tillich
"tillich" Discussed on DUH:A Bangladeshi Podcast

DUH:A Bangladeshi Podcast

05:32 min | 1 year ago

"tillich" Discussed on DUH:A Bangladeshi Podcast

"You each me eastman data whole issue. Quit attack guna traditional tillich. I'd don't come about panicles louison and i'm emotionally by into baugh or purpose moment to me and i say this oil quotable quickly. We'll list i mean Even i mean. I'm out of the home family. Skilled tell me every lewke illegality out of bordeaux alimony lime code see for a for profit. I'm the my martyrdom my mutual. You didn't wouldn't who ratio from focus. Taste that like him. Was that like the borderline.

louison tillich eastman bordeaux
"tillich" Discussed on Problematic Premium Feed

Problematic Premium Feed

03:15 min | 1 year ago

"tillich" Discussed on Problematic Premium Feed

"Gonna say that Because europeans have killed their connection tillich spirituality. And i feel like a lot of other cultures would and these drugs for for that purpose because the european mindset is so isolated alienated from even having that kind of experience have closed off themselves that kind of experience like the need for drugs and to intoxicate themselves like even higher for people. That are acculturated into that. is really high. Because you've lost the ability to kind of tap into what our mind and bodies can do when we have a more holistic or spiritual relationship with the world. Maybe there's something to that. I'm.

tillich
"tillich" Discussed on Diet Starts Tomorrow

Diet Starts Tomorrow

04:00 min | 2 years ago

"tillich" Discussed on Diet Starts Tomorrow

"Honestly i would just ask him and be honest with him just like honestly like i'm really struggling with my schedule especially compared to yours so when you talk about like what you're doing during the day and it's video games and you're talking about how great was the workout you out in. Just ask him to like. Please not tell you those things because it bothers you and like it's not like he needs to like like it's not necessarily for him to give those details about when he worked out and how great his video game score was or whatever is like like he just doesn't need to talk about that like there's so many things you can talk about that are not like literally a play by play of what he did. Today is the like. It's unless like unless you ask unless you ask or like if he's saying like something happened that's worth reporting during my workout. Like he's like i would just ask him to save like it really bothers you right now and until like just for now like you just aren't doing well with those conversations and please don't bring them up you can yeah. I think that that's that's good advice but again like when you communicate that don't cause he could take it defensively like he could be letting all talking about my day. You could just be like is nothing to do with you. I'm so proud of you and yeah you're getting your workout in like i if anything. I wish i could do that. But because i can't it's really like just starting to fester Maybe like say would it be. Would it be cool. If like one day week like you saved yours could do together after i got back from work like maybe asking something like that because that would make me feel so good and something like add to that or maybe we can like plant an activity to do together like either cooking or something that maybe then we'll take away from that feeling of he has this life and i have this life and it's so different And if say long term your business does not change their thing and his dozen either and you see that may be working from home is what you prefer. There's lots of companies that offer that permanently Not saying you should do that. I'm just saying that's an option. Like sometimes it feels like we're stuck in where we are and we can't change our circumstances but in the short term i would work on like how can i communicate with my husband. Tillich mitigate the feelings that are coming like coming out of you and also try to be very delicate then can get very defense how you communicate it so that you can say like. I'm so proud. Doing amazing sweetie yes. He does alot up about this. Have you like a soft conversation about it. Yeah and maybe don't do it. That's maybe don't do it in reaction to him bring something up bring it up. We don't we don't on a weekend on. Yeah yes when you're out of the house when you're out of the house when your house is the best time to bring up small and just be like you know what i've been really feeling lately. I'm starting to feel resentful of my job. Because i don't. I can't like work out like the the way that you like so so proud of the way that you do that. I just wish. I could do that to like start there and see how i don't like say like when he talks about his work house don't be like can you. Not talk about your workouts. Like randomly bringing up randomly. Like it's been on your mind plan. Yeah this is how i feel but good luck. Work working in jealous batch. We're here for you. we're here for you. We here for you and we wish you so much luck an everybody. If you have a non skill went to share if you have a deer d. t to ask us email us sea batches dot com. You can.

Tillich
"tillich" Discussed on Conversations

Conversations

04:40 min | 2 years ago

"tillich" Discussed on Conversations

"And the different clans and this exchange of wealth more coming from the man side lists coming from the women's side but this tillich in exchange is binding that relationship which then had to support the couple. And that you're and did debris family sends in these these money where they did. I mean it was had basically money but they gathered together what they could they who gathered and put together. I think it was about seven hundred pounds which was a lot of money in those days. Sydney a lot for them together. Are they send it to australia. But my parents get it. We explain to them my explained to them but we used it for like wedding rings in a suit for breach getting way too the flowers for your wedding day. Come from another friend properly guinean student. They're still alive. I actually lived in parliamentary them. Moi a he went around pinch from for the front yards of around oaken flour and put the thought we needed to have some flowers. So we've entered pitched these flowers on the front yard houses in oak unfair and took them to the little chapel at chroma college breast man. How will you and berry given a child before you married Giving out children and is very common traditionally and it still happens. It's a custody adoption. it's called a and When one of his mother's because you have many mothers in many fathers when a breeze mothers was pregnant with her seventh child. I think it was. They contacted the child is born. We will name the child other carol berry and i'm very said to me you know that's they are giving the child to us and i said okay. Yeah we were twenty two. What the time. colorado. I wasn't even married i was twenty. How did you about acquiring a child of course with migration and things child couldn't come to australia and so it was given by his biological mother to his mother but fed by the biological mother but Mother looked up to him until we came back and by then he was about eighteen months of age. The poor fellow he used to be told cinema with your mother's coming. She's coming later and then strange white men didn't speak the language turns up. I mean it turned out a nice fellow. Considering you you'd also given birth yourself to a baby girl in brisbane before you removed p and j. Yes what was your arrival like in this new home for you with your new husband and a baby and meeting a new baby for you there as well what. What was the arrival like made a couple of visits to propagate by then during christmas periods when berry was completing his law degree. I had a little bit of a concept of you know how women are expected to do things. I knew that i was the one that was going to have to adjust. I knew that i couldn't change a culture. I couldn't change the way of life. So i had to learn how i could adjust to be part of that way of life and it was. I think i'd be very privileged to be honest Lived sometimes a tough life but a very privileged to able to experience two cultures and have a wonderful husband. You know the tensions and the joys of of of that. What was his home. Village like when you arrived Houses built along. Walkways out over the water and i will build out of odds and ends from the war during the war. The the village which had been made traditional materials was taken apart. Knock down by the army..

chroma college tillich carol berry australia Moi berry Sydney colorado brisbane army
Abby Wambach on What It Means to Find Your True Self

On Being with Krista Tippett

02:19 min | 2 years ago

Abby Wambach on What It Means to Find Your True Self

"The book you wrote you. The chapters are all ways. People had seen you write and categories. You'd but sometimes walked into willingly and and sometimes is that had been an armor right so it was everything from you or how you seen yourself. We fraud tomboy rebel teammate. Lesbian manic depressive captain leader romantic hero addict failure and then the last chapter is human somewhere. You said i had created yourself. All these categories that were both generated from you generated externally helped create you but shut you off from becoming human fully. Human glennon has said this a lot. you know. We're all kinda like russian nesting dolls and as we get older. We kinda keep putting on all of these costumes. And that's what i thought for me growing up. That's what i thought. I had to do to mature to age to get. Wisdom is to put on all these different costumes and see which one fit. And i think that now having gone through a lot of my life granted i'm still fairly young thirty eight but i realized that the more you can actually take those costumes off and get down to that little small immobile russian nesting doll. That is like who you are your true self that is like the humanity of all of us and we all are in there. I visited very random. But i just wanna share it. Because it was reading thinking he ended with human which seems like the simplest most elemental thing of all but is really the work of a lifetime. Right i was thinking about this you. When i studied theology paul tillich wrote the courage to be and he's called an existentialist feel ogen. I read it when i was older. Because i was emphasized when i thought that to be that being but the current the book is actually about how the courage it takes right. The courage is the work.

Human Glennon Manic Depressive Paul Tillich
Go Networking with Sneha Inguva

Software Engineering Daily

09:41 min | 3 years ago

Go Networking with Sneha Inguva

"Guba. Welcome to software engineering daily. Thank you thank you for having me here have been a huge fan for a while so. I'm super excited and humbled to be on the show right. Well happy to have you on you work at Digital Ocean which is a cloud provider. Give me a few examples of engineering problems that you've worked on so digital ocean. We are cloud hosting provider. We have a variety of products in different areas for example with storage with networking as well as compute. Which is probably. I guess what most people are familiar with who used digital ocean we have droplets serve virtual machines that they can use but the interesting thing as cloud hosting providers that it's a little different from other companies in which in that we have both physical hardware issues we also have software issues and then we also have a web application so we've had interesting problems kind of all over the place when I joined the company. I wasn't actually network engineer. I was working on. One of the internal delivery. Teens is what we call the and on that team the biggest problem we were addressing was the difficulty in deploying and updating applications so namely working with Kubrick so that was definitely an interesting problem because I think we addressed. Both you know the challenge in building an abstraction layer on top of Kuban as that increased the just ease of deploying because before that people use chef chef was a little complicated in general and then on top of that also getting buy in from different teams to kind of use this new internal tool that we had so that would. That's kind of one of the problems we've had that we've addressed as you've mentioned digital ocean is built around these abstractions called droplets. Can you say much about what droplet is? Is it a VM? Is it a container? What am I actually interfacing with? When I spin up a digital ocean instance of course so it is a virtual machine. I think droplet just our marketing speak for everything oceanic themed in our company but it is essentially a virtual machine that is I guess. Technically Co located on servers with other virtual machines and you can spin up really in any location around the world. I think we have about thirteen data centers. So that super fine I I also heard you mentioned container so right now. We don't have containers as a service but we have coober. Netties is a service so technically speaking you could manage your containers as well although droplet itself is just a ritual machine. Got It now when you join a company. It's always tricky to find the bounds of what you should learn. And what you should know. R- it's hard to know just how deep to go and I know that when one of these virtual machines spun up. There's a ton of stuff that is going on under the hood. What was your process for figuring out what to learn the the life cycle of a user spinning up a VM. That's a really good point. In fact I think I think we still do this. When someone we have a for networking at least we have a really good on boarding process. Or when I joined the company not a networking we also had still had a pretty good on boarding process but it was more generic and there is in fact I guess. An on boarding session called how. The cloud works where an engineer who's been at the company for a while actually goes through the entire process and kind of goes through all the micro services that I guess receive a request and send a response. You know down to the schedulers that actually are scheduling the droplet placement on a particular hyper visor. Down to everything. So the thing is I think most people probably have a general idea of the different services that are being touched but then when it comes down to the nitty gritty of how exactly he's Networking Setup Hauser. Sdn configured all of that. I don't think unless you're on that specific team. You are aware so. It's it's kind of a t shaped process in a way so you have a general like breath of knowledge of how I guess the cloud works quote unquote but when it comes to the nitty gritty details. You probably have a very good idea of just your specific area. And I think it's impossible to have a very deep knowledge of absolutely every single service when you're at a company this large with this many micro services and with this many domains of expertise totally now. The reason I want to have you on the show is because I saw some talks. The you gave one specific talk about networking and the term networking can mean a lot of different things. But I know that now working at a cloud provider and you being a systems engineer working at a cloud provider. You probably have some insights on the engineering that goes into the actual nitty gritty of something spending up within digital ocean. What does networking mean at a cloud provider? What does that term networking so networking at a cloud provider? I think has two layers. There's of course the physical infrastructure that is set up so of course I think every cloud provider has physical switches physical address physical gateway so that is definitely one layer but then another thing that you have to consider especially at a cloud provider where you are dynamically. Creating and deleting virtual machines is that you are constantly adding different paths for networking packets traverse and removing them as well. So that's where software defined networking comes in and that's a completely different layer that you have to consider especially at a cloud provider and in fact at digital ocean. We actually have a team that deals with a lot of the physical details when it comes to physical switches in our data centers but we also have a SDN team which has a lot of sub teams that deal with a lot of the micro services that are interfacing and communicating with obvious open switch which is our virtual switch of choice that are actually making a lot of our networking products. Possible such as you know such as VP see or firewalls or even DHCP. A lot of these different things about some of the lower level networking concepts that you needed to know to build some of the projects that you've built within digital ocean. Of course so I'll just take you through. I guess when I first joined the networking team we were coming out with a product called. Bring Your own image so previously when people typically spin up a virtual machine or droplet they can select predefined image whether it's a boon to or I don't think we have Microsoft but a different version of a boon to or one of many different options however with Byu Hawaii we started giving them the option of bringing their own image. So the only issue with that is when we control the image ourselves. We can kind of control the cloud configuration meaning allocating IP addresses and setting up a lot of configuration. But when they're bringing their own image we need a way to dynamically allocate Ip addresses for those droplets using that image and that's where the DHCP protocol came in. And that was something that I had heard of. But I wasn't super familiar with but in general I guess whenever you're building a new networking product. That's using a new protocol my first step typically is to read the RMC so I pulled up the DHCP are of C and then the DHCP C. Which is a little different and started to learn about the protocol and I guess most people at home are probably familiar with it when they log into their computer and they fire up the Internet their ISP Rod are actually allocates Ip address for their home computer and so that's essentially using the DHCP protocol so we were implementing our own. I guess a hyper visor level demon to do that for different droplets in our data center and so that was something that I started to learn about. And then the other thing. When you're a cloud hosting provider is you start to learn about perhaps the ways in which you might have abusive actors and kind of look into security and so that was very interesting and then you you start to do a lot of load testing and try to figure out how to mitigate any possible issues so that was also something else. I started to look into when it came to the server that phrase you mentioned. Rfc reading the RFC. I've read some core answers and wikipedia recommendations about you WANNA learn networking concepts you should read the RFC which chance for the request for comments. Why is that the best path to learning about networking protocols? I mean that is fundamentally where the networking protocols were designed and some of these protocols redesigned like decades ago so I think that of course you could read wikipedia articles encyclopedia articles youtube videos. All of those are helpful. But I think that going to kind of the original source of where this communication protocol was defined. And of course to be honest the first time you read through any networking RFC. It won't one hundred percent make sense so obviously going through it marking up everything you don't understand which then and then of course every RC is somehow linked Tillich twenty other RC's so then go jumping to another RFC to kind of understand. Maybe another protocol that is used within a particular protocol kind of helps you build sorta like in a mental map or like a mental knowledge tree of what that protocol actually does what it

Digital Ocean Engineer Kuban CO Kubrick Netties Systems Engineer Tillich VP Microsoft
Monterey Car Week 2019: Hi-Tech Meets High-End

WSJ Tech News Briefing

05:47 min | 4 years ago

Monterey Car Week 2019: Hi-Tech Meets High-End

"Better faster greener super micro resource-saving server and storage systems with intel zeon scalable processors reduce the cost and environmental impact of your enterprise infrastructure learn more at super micro dot com. This is tech news briefing. I'm i'm tanya bustos reporting from the newsroom in new york with a look at monterey car week to be rich and to drive cars. The esteemed auto gathering has just wrapped in california. What will the world's top manufacturers come up with next by way of fast electric supercars they are the most expensive cars on the planet high tech gets high-end after these type cabins. A group of states is preparing a joint antitrust investigation into who big tech state attorneys general is expected to formally launch the effort as soon as next week. It is likely to focus on whether a handful of dominant tech platforms used their marketplace powers to stifle competition google facebook amazon and apple are four companies likely to be a focus on the new investigation all declined to comment john. D mckinnon covers more at wsj.com. You can also listen to the what's news podcast for the very latest exacts from amazon alphabets alphabet google and facebook. Tell us officials that they face difficult and expensive challenges to comply with a retroactive french law that puts a tax on global the digital service providers the trump administration is investigating the french law under a trade provision that allows for tariffs to penalize illegal or unfair trade practices ask for where things stand monday executives told a panel at the u._s. trade representative's office that they don't currently have precise data to monitor french users of their websites and add services in order to calculate the tax tesla will not making electric cars again offering to rent solar panels to homeowners homeowner's rentals are available in six states arizona california connecticut massachusetts new jersey and new mexico tests customers can cancel these leases at any time. The smallest system can generate fifteen to nineteen kilowatt hours of power on average daily. If california is an indication tend to fourteen kilowatt hours have been bank banked in new jersey according to tesla solar panels can still be purchased from tesla in all fifty states last month. Tesla told analysts at an earnings call. It was optimistic for its future consoler saying it's quote energy products business will grow and quote coming up electric vehicles reigns supreme at monterey car week better faster greener super micro resource-saving server and storage systems with intel zeon scalable processors reduced the cost and environmental impact of your are enterprise infrastructure learn more at super micro dot com this year monterey car week proved electric electric vehicles rain as high end car fiends. Get eco-friendly wrapping up in california. We're left with but some of its greatest hits a stock cars. We saw rides is like the s._f. Ninety straubel in honor of ferrari racing's ninetieth birthday. It is the company's first plug in hybrid also graced with the first british electric supercar per car dubbed the most powerful series car ever made this means two thousand horsepower and a zero to sixty miles per hour acceleration of less than three seconds just two million dollars. I give you the lotus via c._e._o. Filipo ffom tells us more. Its all electric <hes>. It's a beautiful car. We have to say hi. It's <hes> it's actually carved by air. I'm sorry carved by air zone the way that the <hes> the flow see the car to create downforce into reduce due strike and obviously helps to give the performance. We've made a real design feature of it. So is a beautiful wasco drako motors unveiled its new electric g._t._e. One million dollars eight eight modern supercar at least according to shave sickened drako motors executive vice president for us is very important of a usable com. So what you see here is actually you know a grant coupet or a grand coupe bright that can seat four people and carry their luggage one of the key. Things of our electric car is usability. That's what we want to give you with all these autonomous happenings. Let's talk control the all electric e. x. P. one hundred g._t. Is self driving and it gives the driver for the choice to take control or stay luxurious. It is a concept car and bentley says they're aiming for a twenty thirty debut brett boy del bentley head of interior cheerier design has more we just didn't buy in the future of sustainable electric future vehicles needs to be cold or needs to be unemotional and so that's why observation is still based on our heritage and our dna of emotional beautiful journeys connected to first class travel mid range cars also get their due at the signature event the quail for example acura showed off its type s concept car its upcoming tillich sedan a four motor electric super sedan they will seat for and propel them to two hundred six miles per hour gordon mccall the quail co-founder explains. How old meets new at the car show. Virtually every major manufacturer represented here with primarily their concept cars. They're giving everyone a look into the future about what they're up to. There's a lot of media that comes along with that to kind of get a glimpse of what these companies are up to and it's a great balance. We get to look back and see what the companies created years and years ago. We get to take a peek at what they're <hes> what they're thinking about rain the us in the future that does it for this edition of tech news briefing reporting from the newsroom in new york. I'm tanya bustos. Thanks for listening.

California Tesla Monterey Tanya Bustos Intel New York Google Drako Motors Filipo Ffom D Mckinnon Facebook United States Wsj.Com Ferrari Racing Apple Arizona Executive Vice President
Venezuela's inflation could top 1 million percent

BBC World Service

02:04 min | 5 years ago

Venezuela's inflation could top 1 million percent

"The hour not just temperatures rising listen to Venezuela's inflation rate. Josh were thought is here for my business unit go on how. Big is it one million percents right that's a big go on how well. This, is a, prediction needs astral Monetary Fund they've been warning overnights that the Venezuelan government we need to keep printing money to cover what is a massive and growing budget hole and that could, lead to this kind of hyper inflation. Of a million percent now they've also want that the economy could shrink by eighteen percent this year Oil production in the country is. Significantly falling and there's also fear that this could have a spillover effects on, neighboring countries, and many, people are leaving Venezuela because of this because of the economic crisis. There and, fat, more than a million people have, left in the past. Year to may. Need to, neighboring Colombia I know what is a million percent. Inflation look like just looked up? Biggest inflation rate, ever? And the result that the computer gives me Donna how reliable is is Hungary which. Had a monthly inflation rate of forty one point nine percent in July nineteen Forty-six which meant the prices doubled every fifteen hours so, we're talking of something of that magnitude a million percent is it pretty much. And, it's leading to huge food and medicine shortages cuts Tillich trinity water supply He's not going to be helped even. Fantasy trae boy strike which is planned today by workers of the country's nationalized, 'electricity, company, corporate lackey A pool wages and this strike could go on indefinitely road. East regular power cuts in the country which. Lost several hours but this strike really could. See the country plunged, in darkness for much longer if the government. Doesn't meet the workers demands currently being paid around two dollars. A month that's another. Staggering. Figure, and they. Are asking for about thirty times, fifty times that's amounts for the government's only. Offering about twice that's that's quite dizzying amazing thanks thank you Joshua thought from the business unit Thank you very much for.

Venezuela Josh Venezuelan Government Astral Monetary Fund Hungary Colombia Joshua Tillich Million Percent Eighteen Percent Fifteen Hours Nine Percent Two Dollars