Ecumenical Worship Service - Ash Wednesday
Wednesday, March 5, 2025 5:00–6:00 PM
- LocationRooke Chapel, 104 - Rooke Chapel Main Sanctuary
- DescriptionService starts at 5pm. We welcome you to attend our Ecumenical Ash Wednesday worship service in collaboration with Catholic Campus Ministries.
- Websitehttps://calendar.bucknell.edu/religious-and-spiritual-life/event/49557-ecumenical-worship-service-ash-wednesday
- CategoriesOpen to the Public, Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, Religious and Spiritual, Student Events
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- Mar 58:00 PMRec SwimFor the most up-to-date schedule, please click the link below:Rec Swim Schedule - Spring 2025 (https://docs.google.com/document/d/1WSOf_7W_He-IgX21Vj97r5vhmI8GXEAMpfeOAOlLqZ4/edit?usp=sharing)
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- Mar 612:00 PMFOR YOU: The Comfortable Alienation of AI ExhibitionThis exhibition places artificial intelligence into an historical context as artists mark milestones in the development of technology and its impact on society. These artists alternately embrace AI for its potential to reflect the human condition and critique it for its seductively banal entertainment value and potential for social isolation.
- Mar 64:30 PMHealth Humanities Lecture | Cyborgs in Corporate CareHealth Humanities Event - Reading Group / Speaker Thursday, March 6, 2025 4:30p-6:00p Hildreth-Mirza Hall, Great Room 101 Speaker: Ashley Shew is an associate professor of Science, Technology, and Society at Virginia Tech. Bio: Her work is in philosophy of technology at its intersection with animal studies, disability studies, bioethics, and emerging technologies. She is author of Animal Constructions and Technological Knowledge (2017) and Against Technoableism: Rethinking Who Needs Improvement (2023). Shew loved her medical humanities minor in undergrad, and is excited to hang out with Health Humanities people at Bucknell! Talk Title: Cyborgs in Corporate Care Abstract: Being a cyborg can be dangerous - with parts of your body owned, managed, maintained by companies. To be cyborg is to be tracked and surveilled, and to be misunderstood and misread. This talk centers disabled experiences of technology and care, looking at important real cases of cyborgs made more vulnerable by their participation in the "proper" systems of technology research and design, development, maintenance, health, and infrastructure. Technologies for disability are nearly always cast as life-changing (and sometimes they are), but there's a lot that is obscured by our typical narratives about technology and disability. We need more context of understanding to see the structural factors that guide disabled technology use, and shape our lives. Specific cases include a bionic-eye company gone belly-up, a life-changing brain-implant forcibly removed, state systems for attendant care, and more. We need this context and these cases to reimagine our systems of technology and care, and to arrive at a better understanding of disability and healthcare. Shew will mention AI at some point, if you are working up a bingo sheet of academic hot topics.
- Mar 67:00 PMStadler Center Open Mic for UndergradsStudent Open Mic Literary Reading
- Mar 67:00 PMFinding the MoneyStephanie Kelton is a leading expert on Modern Monetary Theory and a former Chief Economist on the U.S. Senate Budget Committee (Democratic staff). She was named by POLITICO as one of the 50 people most influencing the policy debate in America. She is a regular commentator on national radio and broadcast television. Her highly-anticipated book, The Deficit Myth, became an instant New York Times bestseller. https://stephaniekelton.com/ (https://stephaniekelton.com/) Film showing followed by audience Q&A with Stephanie Kelton, Professor of Economics and Public Policy at Stony Brook University. Funding provided by BIPP and the University Lecture Committee