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Paradox Lost: Longing, Alienation, and the Mystery of Humanity in a Technological Age on September 16

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Trinity International University recently issued the following announcement.

Paradox Lost: Longing, Alienation, and the Mystery of Humanity in a Technological Age

Russell Moore

September 16, 2021

11am - 12:30pm,Trinity Evangelical Divinity School

This event is free and open to the public; registration required.

The Christian concept of creation is contested in the present age for many reasons, but one of those reasons is the incredibility of a distinctiveness of humanity beyond the explainable and the material. Figures from the past century—from Walker Percy to Wendell Berry to Marilynne Robinson—though have drawn from theology, biology, psychology, and the humanities to suggest that the mysteriousness of human nature points beyond itself to a greater mystery of the cosmos. Christian theology can account both for the human similarity to the rest of nature and the human predicament of alienation from nature, and from ourselves. A sense of humanity as a paradox of integrity-in-brokenness, intelligibility-in-mystery, cultivation-in-conservation, and wayfaring-in-habitation can help us to reconcile the tensions between imagination and reason, community and individualism, and realism and justice while maintaining what we intuit to be true—that humanity is unique—alongside the challenges to that uniqueness in questions about whether humanity is alone in the universe or can be replicated by an algorithm.

You can attend this lecture in person at TEDS, or watch the live-stream on our website. More details upon registration.

This event is made possible through the support of a grant from the John Templeton Foundation. The opinions expressed in this conference are those of the participants and do not necessarily reflect the views of the John Templeton Foundation

Original source can be found here.

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