It's Personal: Paul and Neuroscience on Personal Action and the Intersubjective Self
Sponsor(s): Franklin Humanities Institute (FHI)
** Light lunch provided - RSVP to sarah.rogers@duke.edu by Monday 9/5 (please note any dietary restrictions) **
Susan Eastman
Associate Research Professor of New Testament, Duke Divinity School
This presentation explores models of the body as self-relation and as other-relation in interpretations of Paul, and in Vittorio Gallese's work on mirror neurons, and asks how the interface between them might inform accounts of personal action. How might questions of personhood evolve in an interdisciplinary neuroscience and religious studies perspective? The talk will conclude with consideration of strategy and structure for a Bass Connections research team on interdisciplinary personhood.
Contact: Sarah Rogers