Showing posts with label MIT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MIT. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

It just gets better

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

You are reading from the book Today's Gift

You will jump to it someday. Then you'll fly. You'll really fly. After that you'll quite simply, quite calmly make your own stones, your own floor plan, your own sound.
—Anne Sexton

A young man sat beside a whispering creek all day for years, never moving. The townsfolk who watched him wondered whether he heard the gurgling creek sounds, or felt the sting of insects, or saw the raccoons when they came at night to sip from the cool, dark waters.

One day the young man rose and dashed up the hill above the creek. There, using all the healing strength of the stream, which he had quietly absorbed over the years, he gathered stones. He arranged them layer-by-layer to fit the plan he had thought out by the creek, and feverishly he built his home. When done, he let out a brassy, booming holler of joy. Imagine the townsfolk's surprise when they turned their eyes to that lonely spot by the creek and saw a huge castle of stone above the place where the young man once rested.

What plans can I make during my idle hours today?

From Today's Gift: Daily Meditations for Families ©1985, 1991 by Hazelden Foundation. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. No portion of this publication may be reproduced in any manner without the written permission of the publisher.


DO



OR



&

Introduction/Overview of Brain Disorders

Dr. Susan Hockfield
Mriganka Sur
May 4, 2009

Running Time: 0:25:38



“At MIT we love bold experiments, the kind that change the rules, and we have an impressive record of making bets that win. That fearless experimental spirit coupled with intense collaboration among investigators, with the support of philanthropic friends, is exactly what will drive us to next level in brain research.”
Susan Hockfield





This Mornings' reflections

Enjoy,


Peter Lott Heppner

P.S. We all need to breathe





P.S. 2 We All need to Know our Surroundings



Tuesday, May 5, 2009

agua, water H2O HOH Wasser mizu shuǐ Eau Ha'


Planet Water: Complexity and Organization in Earth Systems
Rafael Bras '72, MS '74, ScD '75
March 30, 2009
Running Time: 1:05:18

From MIT World

"Rafael Bras, a professor of civil and environmental engineering who pioneered the field of hydrologic science, is MIT's James R. Killian Jr. Faculty Achievement Award winner for 2008-2009."






“It covers 70% or so (of the planet), but even more, water in the hydrology cycle sets the environment, makes life on Earth feasible, and whether we like it or not, we depend completely on it. It is the circulatory system of Earth, it is the lymphatic fuel of Earth.”

Rafael Bras


Along with air

Another thing we all share,

Have a word for

 a need for

And belongs to all Life

No One owns the right to it

Yet all are responsible

to hold those accountable for damaging it

Those are We




Alley Patron



Thursday, April 16, 2009

4 decades



Observations on the Science of Finance in the Practice of Finance
Robert C. Merton Ph.D. '70
March 5, 2009




codebase="http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=9,0,0,0" width="481" height="271" id="Main" align="middle">


If, 4 + a = 5
then a=1

If the Dow closes down 777
 and later 411
then,
 because
 is integrated into
 Economics,
Engineering
 and
 Software
 Could underlying securities be just another integer?
Capitalized by Theoretical Values?
Can Cyber Constructs Supercede Gold Standard, Petrol dollar, Fractional Reserve based economies, thereby shifting a Nations Wealth Deftly into (a) private account(s)?


Peter Lott Heppner


P.S. That's a lot of zero's somewhere.


Monday, March 2, 2009

Metastasis by Richard Hynes

From MIT World


“Screens are revealing a lot of different mechanisms by which metastatic cells learn new tricks, and suborn the mechanism of the host to get them where they’re going. The appealing thing is, these alterations offer opportunities for therapies: you can interfere with circuits between cells, restore growth suppression, interfere with blood vessel formation.” Richard Hynes








"About the Speaker

RICHARD O. HYNES PHD '71
Daniel K. Ludwig Professor for Cancer Research, Department of Biology Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Richard Hynes received his B.A. in biochemistry from the University of Cambridge, U.K., and his Ph.D. in biology from MIT. After postdoctoral work at the Imperial Cancer Research Fund in London, where he initiated his work on cell adhesion, he returned to MIT as a faculty member.

Hynes is a fellow of the Royal Society of London, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the Institute of Medicine. He has received the Gairdner Foundation International Award for achievement in medical science and recently served as president of the American Society for Cell Biology."