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Obesity Epidemic

Therapeutic Fasting

 Jason Fung [ 27 JUL 2019 | Obesity Epidemic | 1:11:27 ] is a nephrologist and expert in the use of intermittent fasting and low-carbohydrate diets for the treatment of Type 2 diabetes. In this presentation, delivered on Aug.

Editor 2019-07-272021-04-24 600 - Technology ENGAGE

Are Microbes Making Us Fat?

 Alanna Collen [ 13 NOV 2018 | Obesity Epidemic | 12:51 ] We all know why people get fat, don’t we? It’s because they eat too much and they move too little. It’s because they eat the wrong foods.

Editor 2018-11-132021-04-24 600 - Technology ENGAGE

Follow Your Gut

Rob Knight [ 6 MAR 2017 | Obesity Epidemic | 56:09 ] explores the unseen microbial world that exists literally right under our noses — and everywhere else on (and in) our bodies. He discusses the important influence the microbiome

Editor 2017-03-062021-04-11 600 - Technology ENGAGE

Knight’s TED

Rob Knight [ 23 FEB 2015 | Obesity Epidemic | 17:28 ] We humans have always been very concerned about the health of our bodies, but we haven’t always been that good at figuring out what’s important. Take the ancient

Editor 2015-02-232021-01-29 600 - Technology No Comments ENGAGE

Why We Get Fat

 Gary Taubes [ 29 JUN 2012 | Obesity Epidemic | 1:10:40 ] Let me just give you a little bit of background before I start and why a journalist is here talking about weight — and why a journalist

Editor 2012-06-292021-01-27 600 - Technology No Comments ENGAGE

Bitter Sweets

 Robert Lustig [ 30 JUL 2009 | Obesity Epidemic | 1:29:36 ] I’m going to tell you, tonight, a story. And this story dates back about 30 years. This story has a little bit of something for everybody. It

Editor 2009-07-302021-01-27 600 - Technology No Comments ENGAGE

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VISIBILITY @ 10KFT

The classification codes at the Visible are based on Melvil Dewey’s Decimal Classification Codes (DCC).

Originally published in 1876, the same year Alexander Graham Bell applied for a patent for their telephone, Dewey’s Codes were originally designed to organize the library collections at Amherst College in Western Massachusetts.

At the time there were relatively few books in anyone’s collection anywhere, and the convention was to just put them on the shelf anywhere there was room, as they trickled in.

Dewey’s classic system, sporadically and often shyly evolved, is currently in use in an estimated 200,000 libraries across 135 countries worldwide. More than half of these, admittedly, are located in the United States (116,867) – but that means almost half of them are located elsewhere (42%).

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