Via Media

Via Media
Via Media

We are a not-for-profit media and community organization whose work is focused on the stories we tell, the communities with whom we belong, and the purposes for which we work. We produce audio and video content that help us more deeply understand our histories, our identities, and our future.

  1. 10/10/2023

    Why Teaching Philosophy to Children Matters w/Jana Mohr Lone

    Many believe that philosophy is a niche activity of adult intellectuals. This view perpetuates a misconception, that children are incapable of deep and profound thinking about the world. The reality is that children naturally “do” philosophy all the time. They ask questions, wrestle with moral decisions, wonder about the nature of the universe, challenge authority, and even seek to understand suffering and death. If our society could foster this innate curiosity and a child’s willingness to wrestle with life’s biggest and most important questions we could transform our world in profound ways because philosophical inquiry opens our minds, nurtures humble curiosity, promotes empathy with other perspectives, and creates deep and profound meaning. If adults embraced the responsibility to ensure this kind of philosophy thrives in our children, we could powerfully transform our communities. Dr. Jana Mohr Lone holds a B.A. in Philosophy from the University of Massachusetts, a J.D. from George Washington University Law School, and an M.A. and Ph.D. in Philosophy from the University of Washington. Jana is currently an Affiliate Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Washington, and the director and co-founder of PLATO (Philosophy Learning and Teaching Organization). Jana is the founding editor-in-chief of the journal, Questions: Philosophy for Young People, co-author (with Michael D. Burroughs) of the textbook, Philosophy in Education: Questioning and Dialogue in Schools (2016), co-editor (with Roberta Israeloff) of Philosophy and Education: Introducing Philosophy to Young People (2012), and author of The Philosophical Child (2012) and Seen and Not Heard (2021).

    52 min
  2. 15/08/2023

    Understanding Transgender Identities, Lives, and Faith w/Austen Hartke

    The public conversation on gender and identity in the social and political arenas is frequently a cacophony of pejoratives, talking past one another, steamrolling, and ignorance. There persists a basic misunderstanding (some innocent, some willful) of the truth about gender, and a dismissal of people’s lived realities that ought to inform how our policies and practices affect our fellow humans’ flourishing. For those who are religious or spiritual, theological principles and teachings provide the foundational rationale for why any human expression outside the male and female binary is incongruent with God’s design for humanity. These and other teachings and perspectives take a very real toll on the very real lives of transgender people. What we need is a deeper and more compassionate humanity that listens and seeks a better and more accurate understanding Austen Hartke (http://austenhartke.com) holds a graduate degree in Old Testament/Hebrew Bible from Luther Seminary and is the Founder and Executive Director of Transmission Ministry Collective (https://www.transmissionministry.com/), an online community dedicated to the spiritual care, faith formation, and leadership potential of transgender and gender-expansive Christians. From 2015 to 2018 Austen created one hundred videos for the Transgender and Christian YouTube series (https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLwWfCs7vnwdC1wbIAmH3_kIm0fE7oN9tE), which sought to share parts of the Bible that relate to gender identity and the lives of transgender individuals. Austen is the author of Transforming: The Bible and the Lives of Transgender Christians, a book on theology and personal narratives, updated, expanded, and rereleased in March 2023.

    1 h y 17 min
  3. 17/07/2023

    A Complicated Choice: Honest Stories In The Pro-Choice Movement w/Katey Zeh

    The public debate on abortion is one of the most contentious and divisive topics of public life. The June 2022 United States Supreme Court decision, Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization (https://www.oyez.org/cases/2021/19-1392) ruled that, “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” overruling the Roe v. Wade decision of 1975 (https://www.oyez.org/cases/1971/70-18) and the Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey decision of 1992 (https://www.oyez.org/cases/1991/91-744). While these decisions have profound impact for public policy, what is missing are the stories of real people that find themselves needing to make complicated decisions regarding their reproductive health. That kind of humanity is glaringly missing in our political discourse and relegates our legal and moralistic positions and beliefs as uninformed and even harmful when we do not consider carefully and sincerely the real lives of those who seek abortions. Regardless of your convictions on abortion, we should all agree that it truly is a complicated choice, and the way forward is for us to understand better and deeper what exactly those complications are, and how they manifest in real life. Reverend Katey Zeh (https://kateyzeh.com) is an ordained Baptist minister and the Chief Executive Officer of the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice (http://www.rcrc.org/). Katey is a member of the Clergy Advocacy Board of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, the co-host of the Kindreds podcast (http://kindredspodcast.com/) and the author of two books, Women Rise Up: Sacred Stories of Resistance for Today’s revolution (https://kateyzeh.com/women-rise-up/) and A Complicated Choice: Making Space for Grief and Healing in the Pro-Choice Movement (https://www.broadleafbooks.com/store/product/9781506473499/A-Complicated-Choice) the topic of tonight’s discussion.

    56 min
  4. 04/07/2023

    Stewards of Eden: What the Bible Says About Creation Care w/Sandra Richter

    Our worsening ecological crisis is wreaking havoc all over the world and is increasingly threatening the viability of life on this planet. But while this continued degradation of pollution and extraction is advanced through political policies and social practices, the root problem is truly a philosophical and spiritual deficiency. For many Christians, at the core are the beliefs that humans are separate from nature, that we are to have “dominion” over the world, that we are to subdue nature to our will and control, that the elements of this planet are a commodity to be used for all that we think that it’s worth, and that the ultimate focus of spiritual faith is the afterlife, the destination of heaven, and the salvation of our souls. What is profoundly tragic is that this view of faith is antithetical to what is actually taught in the biblical texts. From Genesis through Revelation, the Bible asserts that the redemption of all of creation is central to its good news, and that teaching is woven through the narratives, the law codes, the prophecies, and the theologies that we find in its writings. And our commission as human beings is to responsible stewards, to advance caretaking, protection, and sustainability of the land as fundamental to our being made in the image and likeness of God, for our existence, and our thriving. Dr. Sandra Richter is the Robert H. Gundry Chair of Biblical Studies at Westmont College and the author The Epic of Eden: A Christian Entry into the Old Testament, and her most recent book Stewards of Eden: What Scripture Says About The Environment and Why It Matters where she illuminates for us all of these perspectives and more. Here is my conversation with Dr. Sandra Richter. Resources: Climate Stewards Carbon Calculator for churches: https://www.climatestewards.org/carbon-calculators/ Kevin’s Review of Stewards of Eden: https://vialogue.wordpress.com/2020/06/22/stewards-of-eden-reflections-notes/ Co-Sponsor Spark.Church: https://www.spark.church

    1 h y 2 min
  5. 13/12/2022

    Genetics and Justice: Why Understanding DNA Matters For Social Equality w/Kathryn Paige Harden

    The discovery and study of genetics began in 1896 when a Swiss chemist, Johann Friedrich Miescher identified a protein that he called nuclein, which later became known as deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). Then in 1953, James Watson and Francis Crick identified the now famous double-helix structure of DNA giving us further insight into the structural foundation of our biology. But what this molecule actually means has been complicated by eugenic philosophies, racism, and scientific misunderstandings of causal relationships, all used as a biological justification for our social stratifications. In response, those who care deeply about equality and social justice have derided genetic studies as either irrelevant or invalid, and all this makes it difficult to ascertain the truth of the matter. Kathryn Paige Harden is a professor of psychology at the University of Texas where she directs the Developmental Behavior Genetics Lab and co-directs the Texas Twin Project. Her work is focused on behavioral genetics, the study of how our genes influence our behavior. Her book The Genetic Lottery: Why DNA Matters for Social Equality proposes that DNA really does influence, guide, and direct the kind of person we become which includes aspects like temperament, intelligence, and physical characteristics. But this fact is not the whole truth, and suggesting that this information determines our social structures is wrong. Rather, genetic expression should come together in a synthesis of both our biology and our environment , and we get to choose how we engage with the science of genetics with our core values of justice and equality.

    1 h y 6 min
  6. 06/12/2022

    Christian Environmentalism: Science, Faith, Climate, and Care w/Dorothy Boorse & Brian Webb

    The ecological crisis that we call climate change is upon us and populations around the world are suffering devastating loss, forced migration, and death. And persistent scientific analysis for almost a century has left no doubt that human activity is the cause. Evangelical Christians, as a substantive population in American politics do not have a great reputation when it comes to the climate crisis. But the reason for this is a complicated story and requires nuance and explanation. Recently, the National Evangelical Association published a report entitled Loving The Least of These: Addressing a Changing Environment. This document encourages and equips Christians to care about the environment as core and central to the Evangelical call to love one’s neighbor. It is a comprehensive report providing theological, scientific, philosophical, and strategic perspectives needed to generate action. Dorothy Boorse is a professor of Biology at Gordon College and the lead author of the report. Brian Webb is an Environmental Studies professor at Houghton College and co-directs the Christian Climate Observers Program, a program that trains Christian leaders to attend the United Nations annual Conference on Climate Change. In this conversation we discuss why white evangelicals are the least likely group to agree that human caused climate change is real, why this report from the National Association of Evangelicals matters, what strategies we should consider when having conversations on this topic, and the challenges of living in a polarized political climate. All of this so we can find a better way forward in this urgent and critical issue.

    1 h y 8 min

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We are a not-for-profit media and community organization whose work is focused on the stories we tell, the communities with whom we belong, and the purposes for which we work. We produce audio and video content that help us more deeply understand our histories, our identities, and our future.

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