Where:
MIT Museum
314 Main Street, Gambrill Center, Building E-28
Cambridge, MA 02142
Admission:
$5
Categories:
Tech
Event website:
https://mitmuseum.mit.edu/programs/write-science
Join Humanist Chaplain and author Greg M. Epstein in conversation with Thea Keith Lucas to explore global technology worship and the case for skepticism and agnosticism as a way of life.
Today's technology has overtaken religion as the chief influence on twenty-first century life and community. In Tech Agnostic, Harvard and MIT's influential humanist chaplain Grep Epstein explores what it means to be a critical thinker with respect to this new faith. Encouraging readers to reassert their common humanity beyond the seductive sheen of "tech," this book argues for tech agnosticism -- not worship -- as a way of life. Without suggestion we return to a mythical pre-tech past, Epstein shows why we must maintain a freethinking critical perspective toward innovation until it proves itself worthy of our faith or not.
Epstein asks probing questions that center humanity at the heart of engineering: Who profits from an uncritical faith in technology? How can we remedy technology's problems while retaining its benefits? Showing how unbelief has always served humanity, Epstein revisits the historical apostates, skeptics, mystics, Cassandras, heretics, and whistleblowers who embody the tech reformation we desperately need. He argues that we must learn how to collectively demand that technology serve our pursuit of human lives that are deeply worth living.
In our tumultuous era of religious extremism and rampant capitalism, Tech Agnostic offers a new path forward, where we maintain enough critical distance to remember that all that glitters is not gold -- nor is it God.
Copies of Tech Agnostic will be available for purchase onsite from the MIT Press Bookstore.
Co-presented by the MIT Radius and the MIT Press.
November 12
6 - 7:30pm
$5