Simon Bridge said:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negative_feedback
That would be pretty precise for a definition.
In your example - the op amp in the dashed lines is in negative feedback because the inverting input is connected to the output via a passive element (the resistor). The other op-amp is not because it's output has to pass through an active element (an op-amp) first. That help?
The wikipedia link is correct but the business about passing through an active element is not. I can tell you signals pass through many active elements in negative feedback electronic systems all the time. When your instructor included the active element caveat, I am sure he meant there was no opportunity for signal inversion (ie making it negative).
As usual, the wikipedia article is correct but often clear as mud because of the language used. The diagram on the page showing a general feedback model is what you should look at. If the loop gain (ie the gain from the output of the adder, passed through A to the output and then passed through B back to the point where it gets added to the input again) is negative, you have negative feedback. If it is positive, you have positive feedback.
If the loop gain is negative, the output of the adder can be thought of as an error between the output and the input. B in this case takes some sort of measurement of the output and compares it to what is desired by *subtracting* it from the input (this for negative feedback). The error is then amplified by some huge amount** in A. This huge amount guarantees that the error will stay close to zero. This is the idea behind negative feedback.
(** a huge amount may have undesirable consequences such as overshoot and ringing as the system seeks zero error)
As mentioned, for negative feedback to occur, the loop gain must be negative (again this is the gain from the error summer through A and B). In your notes, the loop gain is the gain from the output of the first amplifier (Voa), which is calculating an error through subtraction, to Vna. This gain must be *positive* to have negative feedback occurring. It's positive this time because the first amp is subtracting this number from the input. So a positive error from the first error amp gets positive gain from the second amp and is subtracted from the input. Higher error acts to reduce the error, the definition of negative feedback.
When you start adding capacitors or inductors into the loop, you find that your loop gain will become frequency dependent. This means it is possible for negative feedback to turn into positive feedback for certain signal frequencies (eg, a formerly positive quantity could become negative with sufficient phase shift). Several of your courses will expend considerable time on making sure the overall system will be stable despite this frequency dependence of the loop gain.
Positive feedback is not always bad. Oscillators, for example, depend on positive feedback to start (via thermal noise) and maintain an oscillating signal without input. In this case the loop gain is designed to generate the right amount of positive feedback to sustain oscillation at a specific frequency.