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Words by the Water Literature Festival at The Theatre by the Lake, Keswick, Cumbria 5th. 14th. March 2010.
Diarmaid MacCulloch is Professor of the History of the Church, in the Theology Faculty at St Cross College, Oxford. He is a Fellow of the British Academy, and co-edits the Journal of Ecclesiastical History. He has written extensively on Tudor England; his biography Thomas Cranmer: a Life (Yale UP, 1996) won the Whitbread Biography, Duff Cooper and James Tait Black Prizes. Previous publications have included "Reformation: Europe's House Divided 1490-1700", with Penguin/Allen Lane (appearing in the USA as The Reformation: a History).
Professor MacCulloch can currently be seen presenting "A History of Christianity - the first 3,000 years" on BBC4 (the series will be repeated on BBC2 in the new year); the accompanying book is now available.
For more on Diarmaid MacCulloch see:- www.stx.ox.ac.uk/general/fellows/macculloch_diarmaid
Note: two spelling mistakes in the author's name signing "MacCulloch" oh dear me..
A treasure trove of beautifully crafted furniture, fashion, art and design, alongside a wonderful all-day café-brasserie... plus tasty delights from one of the world's greatest cheese shops and fantastic specialist wine merchant.
© 2016 Tony Worrall
This project is part of JKU LIT @ Ars Electronica. The installation “AI Truth Machine” deals with the chances and challenges of finding truth through a machine. In a fictitious courtroom, the aim is to determine who is better suited to distinguish the truth from a lie in a court case: An artificial intelligence or a judge? Before being questioned by the “AI Truth Machine”, a visitor is asked to lie about a given topic. In contrast to a judge, the machine provided by Converus® determines the truth in a completely different way. The AI-supported truth-finding process differs from the judicial interrogation methodology in the extremely precise analysis of eye movements and pupil dilation during an interrogation. After completion of the questioning, the result is presented and the question is to be clarified whether an AI can actually replace a judge.
For further information please visit:
ars.electronica.art/keplersgardens/en/ki-wahrheitsmaschine/
Credit: vog.photo
Skechers D'Lites, Sz 9.5, bought by my 16 year old daughter, and now taking up closet space. she wants to get rid of them. She wore them only a few times, but they have a brown spot on one shoe toungue.
A portrait series with Pauline in cooperation with Damjan Savic.
Check my Instagram!
Damjan Savic on Instagram.
Model's Instagram.
Viet Thanh Nguyen, winner of the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, speaks to a packed house in the Clemson University Alumni Center during Clemson’s 10th annual Literary Festival, March 30, 2017. Nguyen won the puliter for his novel The Sympathizer. His other honors include the Dayton Literary Peace Prize and the Andrew Carnagie Medal for Excellence in Fiction. (Photo by Ken Scar)