The Religious Studies Project

The Religious Studies Project

Podcasts and Resources on the Contemporary Social-Scientific Study of Religion

  1. 07/04/2023

    Harm, AI, and Religion | Discourse! June 2023

    In our final Discourse! episode of the season, Andie Alexander, Craig Martin, and Paul-François Tremlett team up to discuss the concept of “harm” and religion as it pertains to recent legislation in Texas, the role of religion in politics in Scotland’s recent election for First Minister, and questions of AI, religion, and desire. It’s quite the conversation, so be sure to tune in! Related Articles “Bill to Force Texas Public Schools to Display Ten Commandments Fails” NYT “Texas lawmakers approve bill to allow school districts to replace counselors with chaplains” Washington Post “Unlicensed religious chaplains may counsel students in Texas’ public schools after lawmakers OK proposal” Texas Tribune “Trouble in Texas: Lone Star State legislators are trying to merge religion and public education — and other states are following suit” Americans United “Gov. Greg Abbott signs legislation barring trans youth from accessing transition-related care” Texas Tribune “Can humans ever understand how animals think?” The Guardian “Seeing Spirituality in Chimpanzees” The Atlantic “AI will be everywhere, but its rise will be mundane not apocalyptic” The Guardian “‘They’re afraid their AIs will come for them’: Doug Rushkoff on why tech billionaires are in escape mode” The Guardian “Is No 10 waking up to dangers of artificial intelligence?” The Guardian “AI ‘godfather’ Geoffrey Hinton warns of dangers as he quits Google” BBC “Alabama Legislature votes to ban gender-affirming medical care for transgender youth” NPR “Alabama urges court to revive strict ban on gender-affirming care for minors” Reuters “Alabama becomes the 22nd state to allow people to carry concealed guns without permit” CNN GlasgowGPT “It’s not bigoted to criticize Kate Forbes. Sometimes, in politics, religion is fair game“ “Kate Forbes says trans women are ‘biological males’ as SNP leadership candidate faces more questions“

    50 min
  2. 05/01/2023

    Supreme Court to Coulter: Negotiating Religion in the Public Sphere | Discourse! April 2023

    In this episode, religious studies scholars Matt Sheedy and Tyler Tully, along with host Candace Mixon, discuss the ramifications of the in-progress Supreme Court case Groff vs. Dejoy, the Catholic Church’s decision to rescind the Doctrine of Discovery, and a recent controversial tweet by the conservative media pundit, Ann Coulter. In threading these discussions together, they consider religion as negotiated in the public sphere and the limits of accommodations across religious boundaries. In Groff vs. Dejoy, one issue at play is the interpretation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, directly related to workplace accommodations, including for religious reasons. Current precedent reflects on the issue of hardship for the employer in accommodating the request, and that hardship must only be minimal for the employer to find it unable to be accommodated. As the court may widely expand the grounds through which employees may seek religious accommodations, our guests consider the ramifications of this (especially for non-Christian practices and on non-linear framings of time) and connect to broader impacts of religion in recent Supreme Court decisions, such as overturning Roe vs. Wade. Tully and Sheedy respond to the Catholic Church’s rescinding of the Doctrine of Discovery, demonstrating the Vatican’s “doublespeak” as it downplays the interconnection between “religion” and “politics.” Finally, Sheedy introduces listeners to the incendiary tweet by Ann Coulter that abortion should be banned “for registered republicans only.” The guests consider what happens when legal debates become part of public rhetoric and who is left out when it goes mainstream.

    48 min
  3. 03/27/2023

    Religion under Attack? | Discourse! March 2023

    This month’s Discourse is hosted by Suzanne Newcombe, who’s joined by Michael Munnick and Carmen Becker. They start by discussing the recent shooting at a Jehovah’s Witness Hall in Hamburg and how it has reopened discussions about discrimination. They then turn to Scotland, where discrimination is again an issue in the election of Nicola Sturgeon’s successor as Leader of the SNP. Are Kate Forbes’ opinions on equality criticised for being religious, or for not being progressive? And finally, they discuss the case of Isabel Vaughan-Spruce, a pro-life activist arrested apparently for the crime of praying as a protest outside a UK abortion clinic. Articles Discussed “Hamburg holds service for Jehovah’s Witness shooting victims“ “Hamburg shooting: Seven killed in attack on Jehovah’s Witness hall“ “Hamburg shooting: seven people killed in Jehovah’s Witnesses hall“ “Zeugen Jehovas beklagen Täter-Opfer Umkehr” (YouTube) “Gedenkfeier für die Opfer: Zeugen Jehovas fühlen sich ausgegrenzt” (YouTube) “BELGIUM: Jehovah’s Witnesses acquitted on appeal for alleged discrimination and incitement to hatred“ “SNP leadership: The perils of mixing politics and faith“ “Scottish nationalism now ‘more religion than politics’ says Better Together strategist“ “Kate Forbes faces backlash over gay conversion therapy comments during SNP leadership debate“ “British pro-life advocate again arrested for ‘thoughtcrime’ of silent prayer near abortion clinic“ Video of arrest (Twitter) “Law and religion round-up – 12th March“ “CPS rejects charges against Catholic arrested for ‘thought crime’ prayers“ “Catholic woman prosecuted for silently praying outside abortion clinic is CLEARED after arrest by police sparked fury among supporters who condemned ‘thoughtcrime‘”

    53 min
4.4
out of 5
84 Ratings

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Podcasts and Resources on the Contemporary Social-Scientific Study of Religion

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