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webcast.berkeley

The University of California-Berkeley has been streaming videos of their courses through their site webcast.berkeley since 2001. In 2006 they became the first university to podcast a significant number of their courses on audio, making lectures available as downloadable MP3s put up on RSS feeds that you can subscribe to.

Their podcasted courses cover science, psychology, engineering, and many other subjects. Podcasts of lectures are released throughout the semester and they also have an archive of all their previous courses which they've made available on podcast and streaming video.

As of March 15th, 2017 the webcast.berkeley courses were removed from iTunes U and YouTube.


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1 - 5 of 5 Titles
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1.
by John Searle
Available on:
Online Audio (Free)

The main purpose of this course is to answer the question, “How does language relate to the world?” In order to do this we will have to explore a lot of related questions...

2.
by Nathan F. Sayre
Available on:
Online Audio (Free)

The world is comprised of regions—this basic contention, as old as Western civilization, is at once commonsensical and problematic.

3.
by John Searle
Available on:
Online Audio (Free)

The course deals with the foundations of the social sciences and the differences between social science explanations and natural science explanations.

4.
by John Searle
Available on:
Online Video (Free)

How, if at all, can we reconcile a certain conception that we have of ourselves as conscious, free, rational, ethical, language using, social and political human beings in a world consisting entirely of mindless, meaningless physical particles?

5.
by Nathan F. Sayre
Available on:
Online Audio (Free)

Are there enough energy, water, mineral, and land resources for the world's population?

1 - 5 of 5 Titles
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