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The Shadow Gospel in Education
06/15/2025
Whitney Phillips & Mark Brockway

 

People often blame the chaotic precarious political landscape in the US on polarization and culture wars, with the wars playing out in the classrooms and campuses. Instead, Whitney Phillips and Mark Brockway argue that the seeming left-right battle is the result of 80 years of densely overlapping religious and secular messages that have transformed how we see education. Whitney Phillips is Ass’t Prof. of Inf. Politics and Media Ethics at the U of O, and author of You Are Here and Share Better and Stress Less. Mark Brockway is Assistant Teaching Professor in Pol. Sci. at Syracuse University.

 

Issues Facing our Beloved Forest Park
06/08/2025
Will Aitchison

 

Our speaker, Will Aitchison, will lead us through stages of Forest Park, from formation through the adoption in 1995 of the Forest Park Natural Resources Management Plan to restore “ancient forest”, and the city’s subsequent failure to conduct necessary scientific studies of the park. He’ll cover development pressures on the Park from mountain biking and PGE, and list organizations protecting the park, ending with a look to the future. Will Aitchison is a labor lawyer, long-time Willamette Heights resident, and president of the Coalition to Protect Forest Park.

 

Griefbots, LLMs, and the Technological Uncanny
06/01/2025
Prof. Kirk Besmer

 

Over Zoom, Prof. Kirk Besmer presents how radically novel technologies produced by rapid innovation - such as ‘lab-grown meat’ and CRISPR gene editing - may engender an unsettling experience that something fundamental has been altered, an experience he calls the ‘technological uncanny,’ He will explore the notion with two current technologies that can induce the experience, griefbots and companion chatbots, as a place to begin philosophizing about our technological condition. Kirk Besmer is currently a Professor of Philosophy at Gonzaga University, and a Co-Editor-in-Chief of Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology. Note: 1st Sundays have more interaction, and some live music.

 

The Neurobiology of Religious Experiences
05/25/2025
Dr. Sarah Strand

 

Dr. Sarah Strand returns to discuss the neurobiological basis of out-of-body experiences (OBEs), beginning with a description and testimony given by those who have had an OBE, then a brief tour of the brain and the neuroanatomy responsible for OBEs. While OBEs are not always interpreted as religious, there is a compelling neurobiological explanation for why they often are. The presentation will conclude with a discussion of the implications of these findings on the role of religion in the lives of individuals as well as in our worldwide community.  Dr. Strand is an associate lecturer in the Psychology Department at California State University, Sacramento. She received her Ph.D. in Behavioral Neuroscience from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and has been lecturing about religion and neuroscience since 2010. In 2019, she created a Psychology of Religion course for Sacramento State, and in 2022, extended her teaching to Finland and Sweden.

 

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