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Religion, Technology, and Human Presence
Steven Barrie-Anthony
12 episodes
1 day ago
How can professors and teachers create relevant and effective courses on the themes of religion technology and human presence? This set of interviews with a dozen scholars from across the academic disciplines and theologians provides a window into cutting-edge pedagogies surrounding the the themes of religion technology and human presence. The courses and pedagogical strategies that we discuss in this series emerge from a variety of settings—from liberal arts colleges to research universities. This limited series is designed to help educators scholars and journalists think about how to teach and communicate about these complex and entangled elements of contemporary society in ways that are compelling and meaningful. The interviews are a result of Public Theologies of Technology and Presence a research initiative based at the Institute for Buddhist Studies in Berkeley and funded by the Henry Luce Foundation.
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Education
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How can professors and teachers create relevant and effective courses on the themes of religion technology and human presence? This set of interviews with a dozen scholars from across the academic disciplines and theologians provides a window into cutting-edge pedagogies surrounding the the themes of religion technology and human presence. The courses and pedagogical strategies that we discuss in this series emerge from a variety of settings—from liberal arts colleges to research universities. This limited series is designed to help educators scholars and journalists think about how to teach and communicate about these complex and entangled elements of contemporary society in ways that are compelling and meaningful. The interviews are a result of Public Theologies of Technology and Presence a research initiative based at the Institute for Buddhist Studies in Berkeley and funded by the Henry Luce Foundation.
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Education
Episodes (12/12)
Religion, Technology, and Human Presence
Episode 12: Series Intro by Bradley Onishi
Welcome you to our conversations on religion, technology, and human presence, hosted in conjunction with Public Theologies of Technology and Presence, which is a research and journalism initiative based at the Institute of Buddhist studies in Berkeley and funded by the Henry Luce foundation.The program is led by director Steven Barrie-Anthony. Over recent decades, technologies have radically reshaped human relationships in ways that evoke deep questions such as what it means to be human and to be present with others. The Public Theologies of Technology and Presence initiative gathers and funds leading scholars of religion and theologians from universities across the US, and journalists, for projects and collaborations addressing the impacts of technologies on human relationships.The project gathers these scholars of religion from universities across the USA and it includes a central focus on pedagogy.One of the goals is to develop powerful and effective ways of teaching these themes within religion and theology curriculum. Many grantees are teaching courses in this vein. And so this podcast provides a window into the work they're doing in the classroom and beyond. We hope that it provides a significant resource for university and theology teachers who are approaching the themes of human presence, relationship and technology. What you will find here are conversations with about a dozen scholars, practitioners, and professors who share their insights from teaching wide, arrange of traditions and themes related to human presence and technology. 
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4 years ago
1 minute

Religion, Technology, and Human Presence
Episode 11: Yoga, Buddhism, and Human Enhancement
Stuart Ray Sarbacker is an Associate Professor in the School of History, Philosophy, and Religion at Oregon State University. His research and teaching center on the relationships between the Indian religious and philosophical traditions of Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism.He discusses the implications of emerging technology on human relationships by examining how the philosophical and contemplative traditions of yoga and of Buddhism address the effect of human augmentation on interpersonal relationships. He explains how yoga and Buddhist traditions view the disciplining of mind and body as producing extraordinary modes of perception and action that have profound, but morally ambiguous, implications on human relationships.
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4 years ago
30 minutes

Religion, Technology, and Human Presence
Episode 10: Sexuality, Technology, and the Fourth Industrial Revolution
Sheila Briggs is Associate Professor of Religion and Gender Studies at the University of Southern California. Briggs discusses her approach to research and pedagogy at the intersection of sexuality, technology, and modernity. According to Briggs, sexuality shapes the full range of our interpersonal relationships. We are present to one another not only as friends and lovers but also as citizens, workers and consumers. The impacts of technology in one area of our lives affect us in others: one cannot isolate our interpersonal relationships from how we are economic and political actors. To think about how technological innovation is affecting our sexuality, we need to go beyond a discussion of social media and dating apps.
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4 years ago
25 minutes

Religion, Technology, and Human Presence
Episode 9: Video Games and the Problem of Evil
Gregory Price Grieve is Professor and Head of the Department of Religious Studies at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. His current research uses video games to explore the category of evil in contemporary life. Grieve discusses how video games differ from other media such as film and printed literature, because they do not merely represent evil as an audio/visual layer, or tell about evil as narrative, but simulate immersive worlds in which players dwell. Because of such immersion, video games reveal the ways in which digital technologies reshape human relationships.
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4 years ago
32 minutes

Religion, Technology, and Human Presence
Episode 8: Technological Sabbaths
Amy Sue Bix is Professor of History at Iowa State University and director of ISU’s Center for Historical Studies of Technology and Science. Her 2013 book ‘Girls Coming to Tech!’: A History of American Engineering Education for Women (MIT Press) won the 2015 Margaret Rossiter Prize from the History of Science Society. She discusses her research and teaching surrounding the phenomenon of "tech sabbaths," the religious, social, and popular meanings of the twenty-first-century movement encouraging people to adopt regular breaks from smartphone and Internet use.
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4 years ago
31 minutes

Religion, Technology, and Human Presence
Episode 7: Contemplative Media Studies
Kevin Healey is an Associate Professor of Communication at the University of New Hampshire. His work focuses on the ethical and religious dimensions of digital culture. Kevin’s latest book, co-authored with Robert H. Woods, Jr., is "Ethics and Religion in the Age of Social Media: Digital Proverbs for Responsible Citizens". He discusses his multi-faceted approach to teaching in contemplative media studies, relatively new field that integrates empirical social-science research (neuroscience, medicine, psychology, psychiatry) with insights derived from first-person contemplative practices (mindfulness training, meditation, yoga, arts and music therapy).
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4 years ago

Religion, Technology, and Human Presence
Episode 6: Modernity, Presence, and Temporality
Dr. R. John Williams is Associate Professor at Yale University where he teaches in the departments of English and Film and Media Studies. He is the author of "The Buddha in the Machine: Art, Technology and the Meeting of East and West" (Yale University Press, 2014), which examines the role of technological discourse in the development of Asian religious experience in the United States and Europe. Here he discusses his courses on modernity, time, human presence, and "futurology" as ways to understand how human relationships with technology have changed in the modern era.
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4 years ago
27 minutes

Religion, Technology, and Human Presence
Episode 5: Chinese Religions, Moral Attention, and Technological Presence
Beverley McGuire is an Associate Professor at the University of North Carolina Wilmington. As a historian of religion specializing in Chinese Religions, McGuire examines the impact of digital technology on moral attention—the capacity to discern and attend to the morally salient features of a given situation. Although most scholars associate moral attention with Western philosophers, Chinese religious traditions describe various means of facilitating moral attention, including Confucian techniques of moral cultivation, Daoist practices of “fasting the mind,” and Buddhist meditation. This project considers ways in which digital technologies can distract us from other people and disrupt our moral attention, and ways in which digital technologies might enhance our interpersonal relationships and develop our moral attention.
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4 years ago
27 minutes

Religion, Technology, and Human Presence
Episode 4: Monsterology: Technological Hauntings
Dr. Stephen T. Asma is Professor of Philosophy and Founding Fellow of the Research Group in Mind, Science and Culture at Columbia College Chicago. Asma is the author of ten books, including Why We Need Religion (Oxford University Press, 2018), The Evolution of Imagination (University of Chicago Press, 2017), On Monsters: an Unnatural History of Our Worst Fears (Oxford, 2009), and The Gods Drink Whiskey (HarperOne, 2005). He writes regularly for the New York Times, the Chronicle of Higher Education, and Aeon. He discusses how his recent book, "The Emotional Mind: The Affective Roots of Culture and Cognition" (with Rami Gabriel) informs his approach to teaching at the intersection of philosophy, religion, technology, and monsters. Yes, monsters.
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4 years ago
27 minutes

Religion, Technology, and Human Presence
Episode 3: Religion, Ethics, AI, Computing, and Robotics
Noreen Herzfeld is the Nicholas and Bernice Reuter Professor of Science and Religion at St. John’s University and the College of St. Benedict. She holds degrees in Computer Science and Mathematics from the Pennsylvania State University and a Ph.D. in Theology from the Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley. Herzfeld is the author of In Our Image: Artificial Intelligence and the Human Spirit (Fortress, 2002), Technology and Religion: Remaining Human in a Co-Created World (Templeton, 2009), The Limits of Perfection in Technology, Religion, and Science (Pandora, 2010), and editor of Religion and the New Technologies (MDPI, 2017). A leading voice on the relationship between religion and technology, Herzfeld discusses her approaches to teaching ethical issues in robotics, AI, and computing.
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4 years ago
27 minutes

Religion, Technology, and Human Presence
Episode 2: Technology and Human Personhood
Ilia Delio, OSF holds the Josephine C. Connelly Endowed Chair in Theology at Villanova University. She is the author of eighteen books and numerous articles. She lectures nationally and internationally on various topics in Science and Religion, including religion and evolution, consciousness and complexity, integral ecology, and artificial intelligence. Her most recent book is "The Hours of the Universe: Reflections on God, Science, and the Human Journey" (Orbis). She discusses her research and teaching, focusing on a number of core questions: How did we arrive at a level of technological dependence? Where are we going with our technologies? What is the human person? What do we hope for as persons and as community? Can technology help us create a more unified world?
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4 years ago
26 minutes

Religion, Technology, and Human Presence
Episode 1: Teaching Religion and Tech: Ethical and Historical Considerations
Devin Singh is Associate Professor of Religion at Dartmouth College, where he teaches courses on modern religious thought in the West, social ethics, and philosophy of religion. He is the author of Divine Currency: The Theological Power of Money in the West (Stanford 2018), as well as of articles on religion and money appearing in Implicit Religion, Political Theology, and The Huffington Post. He discusses his research and approach to teaching "Religion and Technology" by interrogating the following questions: In what ways is technology a response to the difficulties of labor and work, the biological limitations of bodies and lifespans, or the unpredictable forces of nature, for instance? What do Western religious and philosophical traditions have to say about such forms of augmentation of life capacities and processes? What promises and perils arise from technological progress? Why is the problem of technology seemingly central to the question of modernity, and how does religion fit in, if at all?
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4 years ago
25 minutes

Religion, Technology, and Human Presence
How can professors and teachers create relevant and effective courses on the themes of religion technology and human presence? This set of interviews with a dozen scholars from across the academic disciplines and theologians provides a window into cutting-edge pedagogies surrounding the the themes of religion technology and human presence. The courses and pedagogical strategies that we discuss in this series emerge from a variety of settings—from liberal arts colleges to research universities. This limited series is designed to help educators scholars and journalists think about how to teach and communicate about these complex and entangled elements of contemporary society in ways that are compelling and meaningful. The interviews are a result of Public Theologies of Technology and Presence a research initiative based at the Institute for Buddhist Studies in Berkeley and funded by the Henry Luce Foundation.