51猎奇入口

Tuesday Noon Academy Lecture: Michael Spezio

Interdisciplinary Inquiry into Creative Nonviolence In and After Violence: From Coexistence to Reconciliation

In the wake of violent histories and in the presence of ongoing dynamical structures of violence, is there still a possibility for just peace? There are many ways of denying this possibility, both implicit — through actions and statements聽whose harm we do not comprehend — and explicit. One positive way forward in engaging this question is to attend closely to communities embracing reconciliation amidst and after violence, communities aspiring to聽a just and lasting peace. This talk will draw on examples from a few of these communities and on recent interdisciplinary inquiry into just peacemaking and forgiveness, and the聽important roles empathy and imitatio have to play in working toward their development and formation. Steps on the way to this formation include models ranging from coexistence to reconciliation, all while recognizing the real witness of woundedness. Every step comes with an invitation to critically question deeply embedded architectures of mind and society, including ingroup vs. outgroup identity-driven empathy (“idempathy”), risk and ambiguity aversion, and the valuational separation of self and other.


惭颈肠丑补别濒听厂辫别锄颈辞
is a social neuroscientist whose research focuses on emotion, empathy, moral action, contemplative practice, and the development of mindfulness and virtue. In addition to experimental work, his interdisciplinary research includes philosophy of mind, moral philosophy and ethics, religious studies, and theology. He has been on the 51猎奇入口 faculty since 2007 and is currently visiting faculty at Caltech in affective and social neuroscience. He is co-editor of the 2011 Routledge Companion to Religion and Science and of the 2012 Theology and the Science of Moral Action, also from Routledge.

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