This short document promotes creating presentations using Haiku Deck, a tool for making slideshows. It encourages the reader to get started making their own Haiku Deck presentation and sharing it on SlideShare. In just one sentence, it pitches the idea of using Haiku Deck to easily create engaging slideshows.
1212南華大學成年禮演講—Situate Ourself in the WorldYu-cheng Liu
This document discusses the importance of liberal arts education and being an enlightened and audacious person through critical thinking. It encourages reading, writing, conversing with those who can help you improve, and taking action through civil engagement and community-based learning. This allows people to situate themselves in the world. Brief mentions are made of TED conferences in various cities that discuss having goals and seeing yourself when you see the world. The document also provides information about forming a TED club and schedule.
The document discusses issues around global food loss and waste. Some key points:
- 1.3 billion tonnes of food is lost or wasted annually, amounting to 1/3 of all food produced for human consumption.
- Food loss and waste amounts to squandering of resources like water, land, energy, labor and capital. It also produces greenhouse gas emissions contributing to climate change.
- Solutions and strategies focus on improving efficiency and sustainability across food supply chains from production to consumption. Reducing food loss and waste can provide economic and environmental benefits.
1. The document discusses thinking big and how thinking big and small thoughts can influence each other.
2. It notes that when people think big, it is contagious, but small thinking from others can also be virulent if one is not careful.
3. The key is to direct one's own struggle inward against small thoughts and surround oneself with other big thinkers.
This short document promotes creating presentations using Haiku Deck, a tool for making slideshows. It encourages the reader to get started making their own Haiku Deck presentation and sharing it on SlideShare. In just one sentence, it pitches the idea of using Haiku Deck to easily create engaging slideshows.
1212南華大學成年禮演講—Situate Ourself in the WorldYu-cheng Liu
This document discusses the importance of liberal arts education and being an enlightened and audacious person through critical thinking. It encourages reading, writing, conversing with those who can help you improve, and taking action through civil engagement and community-based learning. This allows people to situate themselves in the world. Brief mentions are made of TED conferences in various cities that discuss having goals and seeing yourself when you see the world. The document also provides information about forming a TED club and schedule.
The document discusses issues around global food loss and waste. Some key points:
- 1.3 billion tonnes of food is lost or wasted annually, amounting to 1/3 of all food produced for human consumption.
- Food loss and waste amounts to squandering of resources like water, land, energy, labor and capital. It also produces greenhouse gas emissions contributing to climate change.
- Solutions and strategies focus on improving efficiency and sustainability across food supply chains from production to consumption. Reducing food loss and waste can provide economic and environmental benefits.
1. The document discusses thinking big and how thinking big and small thoughts can influence each other.
2. It notes that when people think big, it is contagious, but small thinking from others can also be virulent if one is not careful.
3. The key is to direct one's own struggle inward against small thoughts and surround oneself with other big thinkers.
This document discusses how technologies can lead people away from who they want to be by capitalizing on inherent tendencies. It examines the symbiotic relationship between humans and technology, and how our perception of the world and meaning is filtered through instruments. Several scholars are referenced who discuss topics like privacy in a technological context, contextual integrity, and how privacy is an ongoing social accomplishment achieved through struggle rather than a fixed state. The conclusion reiterates that technologies are integral to how we recognize ourselves.