A presentation from the #BLA15 Conference about introducting annual action plans and meetings at an academic library.
The library uses these reports to focus activity for the upcoming year, and build a stronger partnership between the library and each academic department. It's something both parties have found beneficial.
What is the most popular activity in the UK? The answer may surprise you. Ned Potter
A comparison between how often we visit the cinema, the church, A&E - and one other cultural institution which we visit several times more than we visit the theatre and football matches combined...
This presentation has been made public domain - please feel free to use it however you'd like, including remixing or repurposing it without the need for attribution.
A series of 10 small tips for anyone leading a session of instruction.
Divided into Session Structure, Tablet as Teaching Assistant, Hand-Outs and Materials, there's a mix of things to make your life easier as the teacher or trainer, and your delegate's lives easier.
Associated blog post explaining each one in more detail at bit.ly/10TinyTips.
What is UX and how can it help your organisation?Ned Potter
An overview of User Experience techniques. No longer just web usability testing, there's a new much more human movement in UX. This presentation outlines the key components, with examples: ethnography, and human-centred design.
UX at York: starting small and scaling up (#nclxux)Ned Potter
A timeline of our ethnography and design work at the University of York, encompassing four UX (User Experience) Projects. Includes the changes we've made to services and space as a result of the fieldwork we've undertaken, and our strategy for dissemination.
Just a Room Full of Stuff? Why Libraries are Great / Katie BirkwoodKatie Birkwood
A brief introduction to what it is that makes libraries so important.
Talk given at Ignite London 4, 8 Feb 2011, with a bit of extra text added to help it make sense.
http://ignitelondon.net/home
A presentation from the #BLA15 Conference about introducting annual action plans and meetings at an academic library.
The library uses these reports to focus activity for the upcoming year, and build a stronger partnership between the library and each academic department. It's something both parties have found beneficial.
What is the most popular activity in the UK? The answer may surprise you. Ned Potter
A comparison between how often we visit the cinema, the church, A&E - and one other cultural institution which we visit several times more than we visit the theatre and football matches combined...
This presentation has been made public domain - please feel free to use it however you'd like, including remixing or repurposing it without the need for attribution.
A series of 10 small tips for anyone leading a session of instruction.
Divided into Session Structure, Tablet as Teaching Assistant, Hand-Outs and Materials, there's a mix of things to make your life easier as the teacher or trainer, and your delegate's lives easier.
Associated blog post explaining each one in more detail at bit.ly/10TinyTips.
What is UX and how can it help your organisation?Ned Potter
An overview of User Experience techniques. No longer just web usability testing, there's a new much more human movement in UX. This presentation outlines the key components, with examples: ethnography, and human-centred design.
UX at York: starting small and scaling up (#nclxux)Ned Potter
A timeline of our ethnography and design work at the University of York, encompassing four UX (User Experience) Projects. Includes the changes we've made to services and space as a result of the fieldwork we've undertaken, and our strategy for dissemination.
Just a Room Full of Stuff? Why Libraries are Great / Katie BirkwoodKatie Birkwood
A brief introduction to what it is that makes libraries so important.
Talk given at Ignite London 4, 8 Feb 2011, with a bit of extra text added to help it make sense.
http://ignitelondon.net/home
Lecture 17 of the 1st NS-CUK Winter School on Ethics of AI and Robots (AI Ethics 2022)
Lecturer: Dr. Eun-Soon You
Date: Jan 26th, 2023
Topic: Services based on AI and robots and their problems
Syllabus: https://nslab-cuk.github.io/2022/12/06/WS/
Lecture 17 of the 1st NS-CUK Winter School on Ethics of AI and Robots (AI Ethics 2022)
Lecturer: Dr. Eun-Soon You
Date: Jan 26th, 2023
Topic: Services based on AI and robots and their problems
Syllabus: https://nslab-cuk.github.io/2022/12/06/WS/
5. • 본 자료는 BBC의 Ethic Guide, Animal
rights을 참조하여 작성되었습니다.
6. 동물에 대한 보편적 인식
• 동물에게는 생각(thought)이나 이성이 없다
• 동물에게는 의식(consciousness)이 존재하지 않는
다
• 동물에게는 영혼(spirit)이 없다
• 동물은 인간과 같은 윤리적 행동과 판단(moral
activities)을 할 수 없다.
• 동물은 사람을 위해서 존재한다.
7. 철학자들의 인식
• 성 토마스 아퀴나스 (St Thomas Aquinas)
는 동물들은 본능에 따라 움직이지만 사람
은 합리적 이성을 가지고 있다고 가르침.
• 프랑스의 철학자 데카르트 (Rene Descarte
s )는 동물은 생태적 기능을 하는 로봇 그
이상이 될 수 없다고 가르침.
9. 데카르트의 주장
데카르트의 주장을 따르면 동물은 사고(thought)가 없기
때문에 감정(feeling)이 없고 아픔과 고통을 느낄 수 없으
며 결론적으로 영혼(spirit)이 존재하지 않는 다른 존재라
고 주장함, 이로 인해 인간은 동물을 이용하는데 대한 어
떠한 죄책감도 느낄 필요가 없다고 가르침.
10. 많은 사람들 뿐만 아니라 철학자
및 기독교 성자들 까지 동물은 완
전히 인간과 다른 존재로 인식
20. KOKO
• 패터슨 박사(Dr. Penny Patterson)는 고릴라와 최초로
대화에 성공한 연구자로, 고릴라 KOKO에게 미국 수화
(American Sign Language: ASL)를 가르친 결과 코코
(KOKO)는 1000개의 단어를 배우고 사용했으며 심지어
새로운 표현을 창조하기 까지 했다고 보고했습니다.