Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Fr. Robert J. Spitzer SJ (born May 16, 1952) is a Jesuit priest, philosopher, educator, author, speaker, and retired President of Gonzaga University in Spokane, Washington. Spitzer is founder and currently active as president of the Magis Center of Reason and Faith, a non-profit organization dedicated to developing educational materials on the ...
Gay Wickydkewl [28] David K. Smith: British Gay ProfessorDaveatYork [29] Dodie Clark: British Bisexual doddleoddle, doddlevloggle, dodieVEVO [30] [31] Doug Armstrong: British Gay Epiphanized, Doug's Life [32] Eden Estrada: Mexican-American Transgender Eden the Doll [33] Elijah Daniel: American Gay Elijah Daniel, Elijah and Christine, Elijah ...
B. Jack Baran; Chucky Bartolo; Matt Baume; María Becerra; Willam Belli; Magdalen Berns; Morgan Berry; Alex Bertie; Shannon Beveridge; Art Bezrukavenko; Juno Birch
YouTube Music is a music streaming service developed by the American video platform YouTube, a subsidiary of Alphabet's Google. The service is designed with an interface that allows users to simultaneously explore music audios and music videos from YouTube-based genres, playlists and recommendations.
Magis Institute originally was created simply to be a center for Catholic spirituality. In 2008, Father Spitzer and his associates at Magis considered how they might offer a reasoned, scientific alternative viewpoint to those publicly expressed by "new atheism" writers such as Christopher Hitchens and Richard Dawkins.
The duo had occasionally worked with Radio 1 before, making videos for the station's YouTube channel [37] and presenting two Christmas broadcasts. The show was designed to be an interactive, audio-visual broadcast involving music videos made by viewers, physical challenges performed on air by Dan and Phil, and song requests from listeners.
Spitzer was a major architect of the modern classification of mental disorders.In 1968, he co-developed a computer program, Diagno I, based on a logical decision tree, that could derive a diagnosis from the scores on a Psychiatric Status Schedule which he co-published in 1970 and that the United States Steering Committee for the United States–United Kingdom Diagnostic Project used to check ...
Spitzer based his findings on structured interviews with 200 self-selected individuals (143 men, 57 women). He told The Washington Post that the study "shows some people can change from gay to straight, and we ought to acknowledge that". [66] Spitzer's study caused controversy and attracted media attention. [67]