Theorems

Disquotational principle

The disquotational principle is a philosophical principle which holds that a rational speaker will accept "p" if and only if he or she believes p. The quotes indicate that the statement p is being treated as a sentence, and not as a proposition. This principle is presupposed by claims that hold that substitution fails in certain intensional contexts. (Wikipedia).

Video thumbnail

Introduction to the Distributive Property

This video explains the distributive property and provides examples on how to use the distributive property. http://mathispower4u.yolasite.com/

From playlist The Distributive Property and Simplifying Algebraic Expressions

Video thumbnail

Why does the distributive property Where does it come from

👉 Learn how to multiply polynomials. To multiply polynomials, we use the distributive property. The distributive property is essential for multiplying polynomials. The distributive property is the use of each term of one of the polynomials to multiply all the terms of the other polynomial.

From playlist How to Multiply Polynomials

Video thumbnail

Jack Rakove: “Time for a Ticklish Experiment?”

In the final lecture for his course, "The Constitution: A Brief History," history professor Jack Rakove offers three specific ways in which the Constitution should be altered.

From playlist Stanford Historian Jack Rakove: "The Constitution: A Brief History"

Video thumbnail

How to Simplify an Expression Using Distributive Property - Math Tutorial

👉 Learn how to multiply polynomials. To multiply polynomials, we use the distributive property. The distributive property is essential for multiplying polynomials. The distributive property is the use of each term of one of the polynomials to multiply all the terms of the other polynomial.

From playlist How to Multiply Polynomials

Video thumbnail

Distributive Property

👉 Learn how to multiply polynomials. To multiply polynomials, we use the distributive property. The distributive property is essential for multiplying polynomials. The distributive property is the use of each term of one of the polynomials to multiply all the terms of the other polynomial.

From playlist How to Multiply Polynomials

Video thumbnail

How to Multiply Using the Distributive Property | Simplify by Multiplying

👉 Learn how to multiply polynomials. To multiply polynomials, we use the distributive property. The distributive property is essential for multiplying polynomials. The distributive property is the use of each term of one of the polynomials to multiply all the terms of the other polynomial.

From playlist How to Multiply Polynomials

Video thumbnail

The Distributive Property (L2.4)

This video defines the distributive property and provides several examples of how to multiply using the distributive property. Video content created Jenifer Bohart, William Meacham, Judy Sutor, and Donna Guhse from SCC (CC-BY 4.0)

From playlist The Distributive Property and Simplifying Algebraic Expressions

Video thumbnail

Multiply a Binomial by a Trinomial Using Distributive Property - Math Tutorial

👉 Learn how to multiply polynomials. To multiply polynomials, we use the distributive property. The distributive property is essential for multiplying polynomials. The distributive property is the use of each term of one of the polynomials to multiply all the terms of the other polynomial.

From playlist How to Multilply a Binomial by a Trinomial

Video thumbnail

How to Learn the Basics of The Distributive Property

👉 Learn how to multiply polynomials. To multiply polynomials, we use the distributive property. The distributive property is essential for multiplying polynomials. The distributive property is the use of each term of one of the polynomials to multiply all the terms of the other polynomial.

From playlist How to Multiply Polynomials

Video thumbnail

Using the Box Method to Multiply a Trinomial by a Trinomial - Math Tutorial

👉 Learn how to multiply polynomials. To multiply polynomials, we use the distributive property. The distributive property is essential for multiplying polynomials. The distributive property is the use of each term of one of the polynomials to multiply all the terms of the other polynomial.

From playlist How to Multiply a Trinomial by a Trinomial

Video thumbnail

Stanford Webinar - The Innovator’s Guide to Ethics, Tom Byers and Jack Fuchs

Learn more at https://online.stanford.edu In this webinar, Tom Byers and Jack Fuchs will give you guidance on how to brave ethical dilemmas in your life, career, and ventures. They’ll focus on the principles of personal development and empowerment to give you a solid foundation from whic

From playlist Leadership & Management

Video thumbnail

RedDotRuby 2014 - SOLID Design Principles in Ruby by Anil Wadghule

This talk covers following SOLID design principles in Ruby with live code examples. Single responsibility principle: an object should have only a single responsibility. Open/closed principle: an object should be open for extension, but closed for modification. Liskov substitution principl

From playlist RedDotRuby 2014

Video thumbnail

Incentives, Inequality, & Community P2 - G. A. Cohen (1991)

Gerald Cohen gives the second Tanner lecture on Incentives, Inequality, and Community. #Philosophy #PoliticalPhilosophy

From playlist Social & Political Philosophy

Video thumbnail

Is the Anthropic Principle Significant? | Episode 1904 | Closer To Truth

Is the Anthropic Principle significant? Here’s the claim: conditions of the universe relate to the presence of observers. Does the Anthropic Principle convey deep insights? Or thwart science? For sure, it’s often misunderstood and controversial. Featuring interviews with Bernard Carr, Pedr

From playlist Closer To Truth | Season 19

Video thumbnail

G. A. Cohen on Justice & Incentives (2001)

G. A. Cohen gives a talk called "Rescuing Justice from Constructivism: Justice & Incentives" in 2001. 00:00 Stand-Up Comedy 10:04 The Talk #Philosophy #PoliticalPhilosophy

From playlist Social & Political Philosophy

Video thumbnail

Do We Need Ethical Principles? Richard Rorty (1994)

Richard Rorty gives a talk on ethics and ethical principles at the Vancouver Institute in 1994. Note, the introduction to the speaker has been edited out and the audio has been slightly improved. More details will be added later. 00:00 Talk 50:59 Q&A #Philosophy #Rorty #Ethics

From playlist Social & Political Philosophy

Video thumbnail

Oxford 4b The Argument Concerning Induction

A course by Peter Millican from Oxford University. Course Description: Dr Peter Millican gives a series of lectures looking at Scottish 18th Century Philosopher David Hume and the first book of his Treatise of Human Nature. Taken from: https://podcasts.ox.ac.uk/series/introduction-david

From playlist Oxford: Introduction to David Hume's Treatise of Human Nature Book One | CosmoLearning Philosophy

Video thumbnail

Joscha Prochno: The large deviations approach to high-dimensional convex bodies II

Given any isotropic convex body in high dimension, it is known that its typical random projections will be approximately standard Gaussian. The universality in this central limit perspective restricts the information that can be retrieved from the lower-dimensional projections. In contrast

From playlist Workshop: High dimensional spatial random systems

Video thumbnail

A positive proportion of plane cubics fail the Hasse principle - Manjul Bhargava [2011]

Arithmetic Statistics April 11, 2011 - April 15, 2011 April 11, 2011 (02:10 PM PDT - 03:00 PM PDT) Speaker(s): Manjul Bhargava (Princeton University) Location: MSRI: Simons Auditorium http://www.msri.org/workshops/567/schedules/12761

From playlist Number Theory

Video thumbnail

Using the Box Method to Multiply a Binomial by a Trinomial - Math Tutorial

👉 Learn how to multiply polynomials. To multiply polynomials, we use the distributive property. The distributive property is essential for multiplying polynomials. The distributive property is the use of each term of one of the polynomials to multiply all the terms of the other polynomial.

From playlist How to Multilply a Binomial by a Trinomial

Related pages

T-schema | If and only if | Use–mention distinction | Bertrand Russell | Saul Kripke | First-order logic