Lectures and Lecturing
Found in 344 Collections and/or Records:
Untitled rough lecture notes and figures, c. 1948
Untitled rough lecture notes and figures by Martin Rivers Pollock, annotated '?1948'. The lecture notes are manuscript, the figures are ink-drawn with both manuscript and typescript text.
Various Marjory Kennedy-Fraser manuscripts, deposited in 1967, 1 April 1923-19 May 1967
Video cassette labelled 'Medtronic: 'Cells from cloned embryos in research and therapy', speaker Dr. I. Wilmut, 11/7/05, 90 mins (speaker reference copy)', 11 July 2005
Contains tapes and discs featuring audio and audiovisual recordings taken from various events, many of which feature Ian Wilmut as a speaker. Also present are discs containing some of Ian Wilmut's presentation slides and texts.
Visit to Mexico and Cuba, 1961
The material consists of manuscript and typescript outlines of lectures, notice for lectures in Mexico, etc. by Martin Rivers Pollock, 1961.
Visit to Poland, May 1963, 1963
Volume of manuscript notes on David Hume's lectures on Scots Law at Edinburgh, 1811
Volume of student lecture notes entitled "Heads of Dr. Ferguson's Lectures 1760", 1760
This item is a volume of student lecture notes entitled "Heads of Dr. Ferguson's Lectures 1760", 44-page long, apparently by a student who attended Adam Ferguson's lectures at the University of Edinburgh. As the title suggests, these are the "heads" or outlines of the course, but with a fair bit of detail included. The lectures concern mankind in its divisions, social actions, forms of government, etc.
What is Christianity?, c1935
Lecture by John Baillie, examining Jesus Christ and the fundamentals behind Christianity.
'What is molecular biology?', Inaugural Lecture, University of Edinburgh, 1966
The material relates to 'What is molecular biology?', Inaugural Lecture, University of Edinburgh by Martin Rivers Pollock, 1966. It consists of a 1 page typescript 'Preamble' (incomplete and crossed out) and a 15 page typescript with extensive manuscript corrections.
What is the Bible?, 1912
Lecture by John Baillie, examining the Bible and its history.