Teresia M. Hazen discusses how and why gardens and nature are used in health and human service agencies to promote physical and mental health, coping, and well-being. She discusses strategies to help us support our personal health programs and also to encourage health and community well-being. Teresia M. Hazen has been with Legacy Health in Portland since 1991. Legacy promotes gardens in healthcare to enhance supportive environments of care for patients, families, and neighbors.
Video of Programs (search and sort)
This is a presentation by William Ames. He writes: “I was a humanist long before I realized that there was any organization like this one. I don't claim to be an expert on any of this, and what I know comes from voracious, eclectic curiosity. Everything I say today is documented, and I encourage you to check it for yourselves. I intend to cover the scientists and their discoveries that forced educated people to abandon belief in the literal truth of the biblical Genesis story.”
Elizabeth Van Boskirk discusses episodic tremor and slip events in Cascadia as observed by a network of Plate Boundary Observatories. Earthscope's Plate Boundary Observatory (PBO) tensor borehole strainmeter (BSM) network has 75 sites along the Western Coast of the United States of America and southern Canada. Elizabeth Van Boskirk holds an M.S. from the University of Arkansas. She currently works with an NSF & NASA funded Plate Boundary Observatory, which is part of the larger Earthscope project.
Steve Goldman discusses the history of humanism with a look to its future. He looks at Greek and Roman models of humanism and what was kept alive by the Arabs. He then discusses the Renaissance and the Enlightenment and how humanism prepares the way for a scientific frame of mind and a standard of value grounded in serving human life and the betterment of society. Goldman is a graduate of the 'Great Books' program. His degrees are in philosophy. He teaches at Portland State University.