Connecting…
Where can technology and AI (artificial intelligence) can aid knowledge, and where it can harm human understanding?
How is medical technology changing the way we view birth and death? What happens to our connection to others when we can be anonymous online? Is social media helping or hurting social justice causes?
These are a few of the questions that this Sinai and Synapses Discussion Forum explores.
Where can technology and AI (artificial intelligence) can aid knowledge, and where it can harm human understanding?
Human beings have long wondered about the extent to which we truly have free will, or whether the path we travel is pre-ordained.
We are now in time when “owning” something is often more of a drawback than a benefit.
There are items in our world that are both spiritual and technological at the same time, just waiting for us to discover both.
Christmas lights as disruptive innovation, a rosary app, and social media as a form of connection during tragedy — here’s what’s new in religion and technology this week.
Using emojis for introspective journaling, why Muslims are using online dating, and how to slow down time — here’s what’s new in religion and technology this week.
As medical technologies continue to grow, we are able to save many more people than in the past. But the ethical challenges will only increase.
Facebook as a window into intoversion/extroversion, religious fundamentalists and robots, and the digital economy as a form of religion — here’s what’s new in religion and technology this week.
Astrophysicist and Christian John ZuHone realizes that in both his scientific life and his religious life, he must rely on something “in between” to get to what he’s really after.
Rev. Paul Raushenbush and Rabbi Josh Stanton examine the ways that changes in communication technology, and particularly the Internet, are affecting religion today.