16 episodes

The Institute for Cross-Disciplinary Engagement at Dartmouth, (ICE@Dartmouth) is dedicated to transforming the dialogue between the sciences and the humanities in order to explore fundamental questions where a cross-disciplinary approach is essential. ICE hosts and funds in-residence fellows to further its core mission and to foment new directions for the engagement of the sciences, the humanities, and human spirituality.

In each episode the host, Franklin Jacoby, will converse with one of the past fellows of ICE about their work.

ICE@Dartmouth Podcast Franklin Jacoby

    • Science
    • 5.0 • 3 Ratings

The Institute for Cross-Disciplinary Engagement at Dartmouth, (ICE@Dartmouth) is dedicated to transforming the dialogue between the sciences and the humanities in order to explore fundamental questions where a cross-disciplinary approach is essential. ICE hosts and funds in-residence fellows to further its core mission and to foment new directions for the engagement of the sciences, the humanities, and human spirituality.

In each episode the host, Franklin Jacoby, will converse with one of the past fellows of ICE about their work.

    While We Wait for the World’s End

    While We Wait for the World’s End

    For his most recent book, Notes from an Apocalypse, Mark O’Connell traveled around the world, visiting people and visiting places. He documents an attempt to come to grips with how a fear about the end of the world has affected the lives of different people and shaped different landscapes. It is a surprisingly complex topic that touches on not only the environment, but also race, gender, class, wealth, and modern society. For this episode, we’re going to talk about this expansive project and about how he has welded a variety of notes into a single book about our 21stcenturies fears for the future.

    • 36 min
    A Moment in Time: Thinking about Chronology in Physics and the New Testament

    A Moment in Time: Thinking about Chronology in Physics and the New Testament

    Theoretical physics and religion are not obviously related in any precise or close way. And yet they have fed one another fruitfully in different ways and at various times throughout history. Today I’m going to get a glimpse of that productive exchange by talking to Dr Emanuele Ciancio about two concepts of time in the New Testament and in theoretical physics.

    • 47 min
    Clouds Across Our Galaxy: A Conversation with David Grinspoon about Earth and Alien Climates

    Clouds Across Our Galaxy: A Conversation with David Grinspoon about Earth and Alien Climates

    Earth's climate and atmosphere are incredible: they allow us to live and breath in a relatively stable and comfortable environment. Even though they are less hospitable, other objects in our solar system also have atmospheres and climates and we can learn a lot about our own planet and how it is changing by studying these alien systems. Dr David Grinspoon is an expert comparative planetologist, as well an author and public speaker. We're going to talk about the study of alien planets, climate change, and how to be a responsible scientist in the age of climate change and science skepticism. 

    • 43 min
    Signals, Communication, and Science: Damian Sowinski on Using Information Theory to Understand the World

    Signals, Communication, and Science: Damian Sowinski on Using Information Theory to Understand the World

    Information Theory is a fundamental part of modern computing and communication that helps us better send, receive, and interpret signals. It's been with us in some form since the early 20th century and without it, modern conveniences like talking on the phone, listening to the radio, or placing an online order may look very different or not even be possible. But Information Theory can offer us much more than a few modern conveniences. It may also help us better understand how to think, learn, and do science.  

    In this episode, I'm going to talk with Dr Damian Sowinski first about what this theory is, and then what it might be able to tell us about how we can both study and better understand the world around us. 

    • 46 min
    The Many Forms of the Divine: A Conversation with Mary-Jane Rubenstein on Pantheism, Nature, and Science

    The Many Forms of the Divine: A Conversation with Mary-Jane Rubenstein on Pantheism, Nature, and Science

    Most of us probably associate the divine with the Christian God, or at least with a monotheistic, anthropomorphized God, but of course this is not the only way to think of divinity and one fascinating and controversial alternative is pantheism, the view that the material world, universe, or nature is what is divine. Thinking of divinity in this way has enormous implications for all sorts of aspects of human life and I'm going to speak with Dr Mary-Jane Rubenstein about how to make sense of pantheism in the world today and what some of its implications are. 

    • 43 min
    Narrating Science: A Conversation with Tasneem Husain about Fiction, Storytelling, and Understanding Science

    Narrating Science: A Conversation with Tasneem Husain about Fiction, Storytelling, and Understanding Science

    How do you talk to people about science? This should be easy, after all science seems to be about facts, evidence, and uncovering truths about the natural world. But of course it is not easy and we can find ourselves in the midst of controversies, especially when scientific findings suggest we should modify our behavior or adjust our habits. Partly we face this difficulty because science can be very difficult to understand and describing how science works (not just what scientists say we should do) is hard to do concisely. 

    Few forms of expression are as well equipped for handling complex topics as literature. If there is a sure way to talk about science effectively, it must certainly involve storytelling. For this episode, I'll be talking with Dr Tasneem Zehra Husain about her work as a writer and as a scientist and about how fiction can transform science into something we can apprehend . 

    • 51 min

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