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High Gravity= {Religion + Science} _________________________ Philip Clayton

High Gravity= {Religion + Science} _________________________ Philip Clayton Claremont School of Theology October 2013 Class 6. High Gravity= {Religion + Science} _________________________ Ethics, Technology … and Religion. Ethics in Research: Stem cell research

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High Gravity= {Religion + Science} _________________________ Philip Clayton

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  1. High Gravity= {Religion + Science} _________________________ Philip Clayton Claremont School of Theology October 2013 Class 6

  2. High Gravity= {Religion + Science} _________________________ Ethics, Technology … and Religion

  3. Ethics in Research: • Stem cell research • Ethical issues at the start and end of life • The rights of subjects in scientific experiments • Warfare technologies • Ethics in Applications: • Activity vs. passive euthanasia • Quality of life concerns • “Designer drugs”: the ethics of pharmaceuticals • Computers, ethics, and Artificial Intelligence • Access to medical technologies

  4. Ethics and the Environment

  5. Thesis Scientific facts + religious interpretations and motivations ------------ > More powerful forms of prophetic activism

  6. THE ENVIRONMENTAL SITUATION

  7. Climate Change

  8. Threats to Animals & Plants: EXTINCT The Golden Toad (Bufo periglenes) The Harlequin Frog (Atelopus varius)

  9. Irreversible Changes to Ecosystems & Animals Mount Schrankogel, Austria

  10. Islets off of Antarctica's Anvers Island

  11. Portage Glacier, 2005 Portage Glacier, 1914

  12. Marr Ice Piedmont in Antarctica, 2000

  13. Bangladeshi Village, 2005

  14. Seasons are Changing The Swamp Sparrow in the Southern United States

  15. Extreme Weather Heat Wave in Chicago, 1995

  16. Tuvalu in the South Pacific, 2005

  17. Guangdong Province in China, 2005

  18. Water Crisis

  19. Less than 1% of the world's water is readily available for direct human uses • 1/3 of the world's population live in countries that are experiencing moderate to high water stress • Floods and droughts claim lives and cripple economies • By the year 2025, 2/3 of the world's population could be facing serious problems with water availability.

  20. Children playing in heavily polluted river in the slums near Bombay, India.

  21. The Aral Sea

  22. The Bohai Sea, China • China’s most polluted sea absorbs nearly 5.7 billion tonnes of sewage & 2 million tonnes of other solid waste each year—43 out of 52 rivers flowing into it are severely polluted. • In 2006 80% of the 112 discharge outlets in Tianjin, Shandong, Liaoning and Hebei frequently discharged chemicals, industrial waste and sewage into the sea. • Fish are dying & a massive algal bloom, or red tide, has invaded it. • Still the local government is planning more miles of factories and harbor facilities.

  23. Bohai Sea, China

  24. Carbon Emissions

  25. Mexico City

  26. Population Growth

  27. Beginning of Time--1830: 1 Billion • 1830-1930: 2 Billion • 1930-1960: 3 Billion • 1960-1975: 4 Billion • 1975-1987: 5 Billion • 2005: More than 6.5 Billion • 2050: Expected to reach 9.2 Billion • Current Rate: 80 Million per year

  28. Solutions:

  29. Wind Power

  30. Sustainable Development The Genzyme Center

  31. Paris Bike Share

  32. Consume Less, Share More, Live Simply

  33. So… Is it happening? Is the data enough?

  34. Again… Is it happening? Why not? What role can (must) the religious traditions play? What in our theological traditions allows us to play this role?

  35. Ethics at the Beginning and End of Life

  36. Technology & Eschatology

  37. Transhumanism … the belief or theory that the human race can evolve beyond its current physical and mental limitations, esp. by means of science and technology.

  38. Ray Kurzweil, The Singularity “Within a few decades, machine intelligence will surpass human intelligence, leading to The Singularity -- technological change so rapid and profound it represents a rupture in the fabric of human history. The implications include the merger of biological and nonbiological intelligence, immortal software-based humans, and ultra-high levels of intelligence that expand outward in the universe at the speed of light…”

  39. Ray Kurzweil on religion: “A primary role of traditional religion is deathist rationalization – that is, rationalizing the tragedy of death as a good thing. Malcolm Muggeridge articulates the common view that ‘if it weren’t for death, life would be unbearable.’ But the explosion of art, science, and other forms of knowledge that the Singularity will bring will make life more than bearable, it will make life truly meaningful …” The Singularity is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology, 372.

  40. We are merely information: “The self-awareness that we call consciousness is not a supernatural soul, but the natural consequence of our semantic complexity that gives us the ability to conceptualize ourselves. As information, we can be translated from one storage medium to another, combined with other information, and expressed through an almost infinite variety of instrumentalities. When we emerge into cyberspace, we should no more lament the loss of the bodies that we leave behind than an eagle hatchling laments the shattered fragments of its egg when it first takes wing…” William Sims Bainbridge, The Immortality Institute

  41. Ray Kurzweil. The Singularity is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology, p. 20.

  42. Discussion and Q & A

  43. www.philipclayton.net

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