Call for Symposium Keynote Speaker Ideas!

Hi All,

It’s time to start thinking about the spring symposium!  Every year we have a keynote speaker who can discuss something that’s related to our theme.  They don’t have to be able to speak to all possible interpretations of the theme, just say something interesting about some aspect of it.  Our theme this year is Reason(s), so please reply to this post if you have ideas for a keynote speaker.  Please give us their name, contact info (if they aren’t from Duke), and a brief note about why you think they’d be a good speaker!

Thanks!
Your Grad Mentors

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3 Responses

  1. alex.oprea says:

    Hello everyone,

    Having pondered the issue before and after a delicious turkey, here are some names that I propose for your consideration:

    – Dan Ariely (behavioral economist)
    – Alex Rosenberg (atheist philosopher)
    – Ruth Grant (political theorist/ethicist)
    – Paul Griffith (in the Divinity School and lover of both Augustine and Wittgenstein)
    – David Gatten (experimental film maker)
    – Regis Kopper (director of the dIVE)
    – Jack Knight (law school and political theory)
    – Sheila Dillon (ancient art and archeology)
    – Angela Zoss (visualization technology group coordination)
    – anyone from “How It’s Made” show
    – any of the Supreme Court justices
    – God (special thanks to Wikipedia for this overview)

    Feel free to add to this list at any of the levels of plausibility,
    Alex

  2. mneeley says:

    Hey Unis, I wanted to suggest 2 speakers that I know about. Maybe one of you can speak more to the their areas of interest…I do not know if either are available or invested though. And, they run the gambit from science to religion…

    Sarah H. Lisanby, M.D., Duke Institute for Brain Science.
    sarah.lisanby@duke.edu
    I saw her speak at the Regulator to a packed crowd and found her work and presentation to be very engaging – and it still amazes me how much technology has advanced so many different fields now that the data is so much more abundance like with Brain Imaging.

    Rabbi John Friedman, a leader at Judea Reform Congregation and in the Durham faith community…who is retiring! It would be nice for the USP to get this notable speaker before he retires next year. (Maybe there’s a Uni out there who know him or a contact?)

    “When I came here, the congregation had just elected a woman to be president of the congregation. Now gender is not noticed in that role,” Friedman said. Theological issues have changed, too, he said, like questions of Jewish families and who is a Jew. Nationwide Reform Judaism has gotten smaller, like mainline Christian denominations, though not in Durham. But the biggest two changes over the years have been in the role of women and technology, he said.

    Happy hunting!
    -Melissa
    USP Coordinator

  3. npelot says:

    Here are a few suggestions of topics and some potentially related speakers:

    – Why do we dance? How/why has the role of dance changed in North American society?
    Ava LaVonne Vinesett (ava@duke.edu)

    – Nature vs nurture
    Avshalom Caspi (avshalom.caspi@duke.edu)

    – Why we do what we do
    Dan Gilbert (gilbert@wjh.harvard.edu) or maybe one of his grad students
    Tony Robbins (http://www.tonyrobbins.com/)