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Niels Henrik Gregersen photo

Living in a World of Shocks and Resilience: Towards a Theology of Disasters

Niels Henrik Gregersen | In this lecture, Professor Gregersen argues that theology and science need to address both deep-seated human experiences of resonance with our world as well as the discrepancies that we experience as shocks.
Niels Henrik Gregersen photo

An Ecotheology of Wondering, Intervening, and Enmeshment: Deep Incarnation and the Three Ecologies

Niels Henrik Gregersen | Ecotheology has been criticized for promoting an indiscriminate ethic based on a selective use of the sciences. In order to reorient the discourse, Professor Gregersen presents a typology of three ecologies.
Niels Henrik Gregersen photo

Christ in a World of Creativity and Suffering: Deep Incarnation and the Evolution of Biological Agency

Niels Henrik Gregersen | In this lecture, Niels presents his influential notion of “deep incarnation,” which draws on the broad-scale material meaning of the biblical concept of “flesh” as well as early patristic Christologies.
Deb Haarsma

Christian Ministry in Pandemic Times

Deborah Haarsma | When should and shouldn’t Christians listen to science?  How can Christians bring a faithful witness to the public square?  How do we address tensions and misinformation in our churches? 
Deb Haarsma

One Human Family: Christian Reflections on Racism and Science

Deborah Haarsma | Genetics shows that we are a remarkably unified species. The scriptures go further, teaching that every person is made in the image of God and we are to love every neighbour.
Deb Haarsma

Christ and the Cosmos: The Universe Seen through the Eyes of Biblical Faith

Deborah Haarsma | An astronomer gives a visual tour of the cosmos while pondering recent discoveries from the perspective of Christian faith.
Sy Garte

A Scientist’s Journey from Atheism to Faith

Sy Garte | This talk focuses Dr. Garte's early upbringing in atheism, his induction into a scientific worldview, and the beginnings of his questioning of materialism based on quantum physics and molecular biology.
Peter Harrison

The Shifting Territories of Science and Religion

Peter Harrison | In this lecture Peter suggests that the concepts 'religion' and 'science' are essentially modern inventions that often fail to capture the essence of the activities as they are conducted in practice.
David Robinson

Beyond ‘Design’: Evolutionary Biology and a Theology of Preservation

David Robinson | This lecture revisits the nineteenth-century context of William Paley's famous argument that the precise functionality of nature leads us to infer a divine designer, as well as Charles Darwin's critical response in On the Origin of Species.
Jens Zimmerman

Who am I? Personhood, Consciousness, and Transhumanist Visions

Jens Zimmermann | This lecture argues that modern culture embraces a reductive model of human identity and perception based on an already defunct scientific epistemology.
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