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Saturday, April 28, 2007 | Science : Teaching Science | print version Print | Comments

Document Boxmind E-Lectures

by Guardian

UPDATE: I'm really sorry about posting this, it's from 2001! Boxmind isn't around anymore, and Matthew had sent me an email asking if I knew where to find these lectures. Perhaps someone can track them down for posting?

Thanks to Matthew Heaney for the link.

Reposted from:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,4146060,00.html

Brief free taste for public but internet expositions by top academics such as Richard Dawkins and Niall Ferguson will then be licensed

They are among the greatest thinkers of the day, driving forward an understanding in a range of disciplines from the origins of the cosmos to the nature of consciousness. But from today, 12 of the world's leading academics will be available to expound on their latest theories at the touch of a button.

Richard Dawkins, evolutionary biologist, Niall Ferguson, controversial history professor and the media's current academic favourite, and Sir Martin Rees, the astronomer royal, are three of the eminent dons who will deliver interactive, online lectures on a ground breaking internet site to be launched today.

In a development which may herald the web's coming of age as a powerful educational tool, the series of "e-lectures" will cover topics as diverse as the human genome project, Shakespeare's Othello and the relationship between power and money.

Alongside the eminent British contingent, will be three leading American academics, including Steven Pinker, the world-renowned professor of brain and cognitive sciences at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

His lecture, the Ingredients of Language, poses some fundamental questions. "How does language work?" he asks. "What is the trick behind our ability to share so many different kinds of ideas, merely by making noise as we exhale? ... the prediction that regular forms are generated by rule whenever memory fails helps to make sense of the many puzzles of language, such as how children learn their mother tongue, where language resides in the brain and why no one really seems to know the plural of Walkman."

Richard Halkett, who set up Boxmind - the company producing the e-lectures - with two fellow Oxford graduates three years ago, said: "Everybody has heard of Richard Dawkins, Niall Ferguson and the others. They might have heard them on the radio or seen them on television but very few will ever have had the chance to hear them deliver a lecture. Now they can log on and see them put forward their greatest theories."

Boxmind claims the site will blow apart traditional approaches to study. Because the lectures are not delivered by a live webcast but by a broadcast of filmed material, users can stop the action at any point and follow the extensive links on each page for in-depth background information on specific points. The lectures can also be rewound and examined line by line for weaknesses in the argument.

The technology used for the site - http://www.boxmind.com - is as inventive as the concept. Each lecture screen is split into four. In the top left, a talking head delivers the lecture, while synchronised slides run in the top right. In the bottom right there is a synchronised transcript of the entire lecture - complete with embedded footnotes - next to the relevant web links.

The 12 lectures will form the foundations of a growing archive. But there is one drawback: the resource is open to members of the public only until the end of the month. After that, the lectures will be licensed for use by individual universities, which will also be able to have their own academic staff delivering lectures in the same way.

"It is a pity that the public won't be able to access them," said Mr Halkett. "But the reality of internet businesses since the dot.com collapse is that we have to make real money."

The technology driving the site has potential far beyond academia. One option already under discussion is a deal with publishers for similar sites to tie in with new book releases, especially in the booming popular science market. That opens the possibility of readers being able to log on and have ready access to leading authors - Stephen Hawking, for example - to take them through their latest work.

The launch of the e-lectures is also likely to intensify demands for high quality online learning. So far the internet's potential as an educational resource has been limited by the sheer volume of information it carries.

In February last year, David Blunkett, the education secretary, announced plans for the world's first national e-university, offering a "British university education" worldwide.

But since then the grand plan has foundered, with many sceptics dubbing it an irrelevant white elephant on a par with the Millennium Dome. The government itself admits that the project is at least four years from fruition.

But Mr Halkett said the new e-lectures were proof that the internet could be made to deliver. "We started off building an online library but we quickly realised how scarce decent material is out there. We decided to produce our own and now we have a lecture series which offers dynamic, unrivalled access to the most persuasive thinkers of the day."

Heavy hitters in the groves of academe

The site's first 12 lecturers are:

Richard Dawkins
Fellow of New College, Oxford, and Charles Simonyi, professor of the public understanding of science. Lecture title: Survival of the Fittest - the Fittest What?

Niall Ferguson
Professor of political and financial history, at Oxford. Lecture title: The Cash Nexus - Money and Power in the Modern World.

Sir Martin Rees
Astronomer Royal and Royal Society professor at Kings College, Cambridge. Lecture title: Cosmic Evolution.

Daniel Dennett
Professor of philosophy, and director of the Center for Cognitive Studies at Tufts University, Massachusetts. Lecture title: Consciousness: More Like Fame Than Television.

Peter Atkins
SmithKline Beecham fellow and tutor in physical chemistry at Lincoln College, Oxford. Lecture title: The Second Law.

John Kay
Fellow of St John's College, Oxford, and visiting professor of economics at the London School of Economics. Lecture title: The Foundations of Corporate Success.

David Womersley
Fellow and tutor in English literature and senior tutor of Jesus College, Oxford. Lecture title: Tragedy and Individuality in Othello.

John Searle
Mills professor of the philosophy of mind and language, University of California at Berkeley. Lecture title: Consciousness, Free Will and the Brain.

Sir David Weatherall
Regius professor of medicine at Oxford. Lecture title: The Human Genome Project and the Future of Medical Practice.

Ian Stewart
Professor of mathematics at Warwick University. Lecture title: Order and Chaos in Mathematics and Nature.

Nicola Lacey
Professor of criminal law at LSE. Lecture title: Criminal Law and Modern Society.

Steven Pinker
Peter de Florez professor in the department of brain and cognitive sciences at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Lecture title: The Ingredients of Language.

Comments 1 - 14 of 14 |

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1. Comment #35752 by boxmonkey on April 28, 2007 at 7:15 pm

boxmind.com is some kind of lame gateway page. And the domain is for sale, apparently. Anyone know the correct URL for this?

Other Comments by boxmonkey

2. Comment #35753 by maton100 on April 28, 2007 at 7:23 pm

 avatarThey need to include William Dembski in his white nightgown hosting webinars for the dinosaurs.

Other Comments by maton100

3. Comment #35754 by Series of Tubes on April 28, 2007 at 7:29 pm

Looks like Boxmind somehow lost control of their domain name. Maybe they forgot to renew it.

Other Comments by Series of Tubes

4. Comment #35755 by christianjb on April 28, 2007 at 7:31 pm

This is ancient news, 2-3 years old. The site has gone now.

Other Comments by christianjb

5. Comment #35756 by christianjb on April 28, 2007 at 7:32 pm

The date on the Guardian link is 2001. This was news 6 years ago!

Other Comments by christianjb

6. Comment #35769 by Axulus on April 28, 2007 at 8:02 pm

Drat!

Anyone know if these lectures are still available anywhere?

Other Comments by Axulus

7. Comment #35771 by Zaphod on April 28, 2007 at 8:06 pm

 avatarYea this is very old link. What happened to it?

Other Comments by Zaphod

8. Comment #35772 by Zaphod on April 28, 2007 at 8:07 pm

 avatareh www.boxmind.com brings up a list of gay porn sites :-S

Other Comments by Zaphod

9. Comment #35804 by Axulus on April 28, 2007 at 11:18 pm

The internet bubble must have killed it. They even received 8 million pounds in financing and still folded.

http://www.elearnity.com/A555F3/research/research.nsf/ByKey/DWIN556E6Y

Other Comments by Axulus

10. Comment #35846 by Ilovelucy on April 29, 2007 at 3:49 am

 avatarWell, that was one big intellectual cock tease of a bulletin. Anything else?

The God Delusion 2 follow this link!!!!

After following the link a page comes up saying the dog's eaten it...

Other Comments by Ilovelucy

11. Comment #35854 by Richard Dawkins on April 29, 2007 at 4:32 am

Alas poor Boxmind. I was on the Editorial Board, Horatio. A Board of infinite jest, of most excellent fancy.

I doubt if the lectures are available any more. I don't think they would be compatible with today's on-line video standards. Boxmind wrote and marketed its own software to play the lectures and to allow others to make their own lectures. The software didn't run on Macs, only on VCs.

R.I.P.

Richard

Other Comments by Richard Dawkins

12. Comment #35955 by Skeptyk on April 29, 2007 at 2:07 pm

I had high hopes for Boxmind, and found it just before it fell through a hole in the wwweb. I am sure the material is retrievable, but it would take more than a handful of folks doing the tech work of modifying it all; it would also mean updating and reconfirming all the permissions.

Maybe whoever is holding the Boxmind bytes can release some of your work, Richard, and others that fit with the RDF site. We would have to find elves to do the tech bits, and perhaps it will encourage a more broad retrieval of Boxmind materials.

Hungry minds have made skepticism and science just explode in the blog-o-pod-o-sphere, so there is an audience.

Other Comments by Skeptyk

13. Comment #36003 by matthewjheaney on April 29, 2007 at 8:45 pm

I seems like a waste for the boxmind lectures to remain quarantined somewhere. Solve the immediate problem, which is to get access to the original material, and then worry about conversion of the format...

Other Comments by matthewjheaney

14. Comment #36152 by HL on April 30, 2007 at 10:18 am

This is all I can find that's left.

http://web.archive.org/web/20010410195957/www.boxmind.com/lectures/

Too bad the lectures were not saved....

Other Comments by HL
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