Here is the full announcement:
Hampshire College Lecture Series on Science & Religion Presents
Doubt - Where You'd Least Expect It
by
Jennifer Michael Hecht
Thursday, October 25, 2007
5:30p.m., Franklin Patterson Hall, Main Lecture Hall
Hampshire College
Abstract:
The recent "God wars" hide how long these issues have been around. On both the religious and the atheist side, no one seems to know the history of religious and philosophical doubt. Indeed, they think it doesn't exist. But in fact, there has been doubt throughout history. There are instances of complete and lasting rejection of the idea of God or an afterlife in the Hebrew Bible, in the medieval Moslem world, among Western scholars during the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. The idea of a past wherein people could not imagine a world without God is essentially wrong, a 20th century misunderstanding of the contribution of the Enlightenment. Doubt is older than most faiths and full of paragons of bravery, intellect, and character. Also, in history, doubters have a much better sense of humor than do today's famous atheists. Hecht will get us thinking, talking, and especially, laughing.
Jennifer Michael Hecht is a fellow of the New York Institute for the Humanities and teaches in the Graduate Creative Writing Program at The New School, New York. She is the author of Doubt: A History, The End of Soul, and The Happiness Myth along with her poetry books, The Next Ancient World and Funny
Upcoming lectures:
- George Saliba, Thursday, March 6, 2008
- George V. Coyne, S.J., Friday, March 28, 2008
This is the second year of a three-year lecture series that aims to bring together philosophers, theologians, historians and scientists to discuss topics in science & religion. The themes for the lecture series are as follows:
2006-2007: Nature, Belief & the Supernatural
2007-2008: A History of Conflict & Cooperation
2008-2009: A Matter of Origins & the Meaning of Life
For more information on the Lecture Series, please visit http://scienceandreligion.hampshire.edu/
Sponsors:
The Hampshire College Integrated Science & Humanities Initiative
Hampshire College Office of the President
Hampshire College Office of the Dean of Faculty
The Schools of Cognitive Science, Natural Science, and Humanities, Arts & Cultural Studies
2 comments:
I wish I could be there in person, but I'm looking forward to at least being able to see the video afterwards.
I first heard of Hecht and her book on the public radio progam "Speaking of Faith" earlier this year. The podcast recording of that interview is available here:
http://speakingoffaith.publicradio.org/programs/doubt/index.shtml
Thanks for the link. I have added that to the post.
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