Straight Talk: The Persistence of Race in Scientific Research
Click here for a free recording of the event!
Straight Talk: The Persistence of Race in Scientific Research
Join us for another amazing, interactive discussion on some of today’s hottest topics lead by our esteemed panel of guests. This conversation between philosophers and scientists will not only interrogate some of the enduring ideologies of race in America but also some of the reasons behind its continued resonance within the scientific community, largely in the field of genetic research.
Guests Include:
The Black National Anthem will be performed by Shades of Yale.
Melissa Garafola, Connecticut Science Center
Genomics Educator
Sarah M. Roe, PhD, Southern Connecticut State University
Director of the Research Center on Values in Emerging Science and Technology
Cleo Rolle, PhD, Capital Community College
Assistant Professor, Biotechnology Program Coordinator
Quayshawn Spencer, PhD, University of Pennsylvania
Robert S. Blank Presidential Associate Professor of Philosophy
Keitra Thompson, DNP, MSN, FNP-BC, Yale School of Medicine
Postdoctoral Fellow, National Clinician Scholars Program/VA Advanced Fellowship Program
An Hour with an Expert: Dr. Elena Tej Grewal
Check out our very first installment of An Hour with An Expert hosted by the Research Center on Values in Emerging Science and Technology!
An Hour with an Expert: Dr. Elena Tej Grewal
SCSU Professors Dr. Roe (History) and Dr. Antonios (Computer Science) team up to ask today’s leading science and industry experts important contemporary questions.
Dr. Elena Tej Grewal is a data scientist, small businesswoman, nationally cited education expert and multi-racial progressive leader. As Head of Data Science at Airbnb, Dr. Grewal was a force for change, helping lead efforts to close a gender pay gap and end discrimination against Black customers. Now, Dr. G hopes to tackle inequities in New Haven’s health, wealth, education and public safety head-on.
Click on this link to learn from our discussion!
Learn more about Data Science!
Event Supported By:
The Research Center on Values in Emerging Science and Technology
SCSU STEM-IL
SCSU Department of History
SCSU Department of Computer Science
SCSU Data Science Program
The Persistence of Race in Scientific Research
Thursday, February 18, 2021 6:00PM
Straight Talk: The Persistence of Race in Scientific Research | Connecticut Science Center (ctsciencecenter.org)
Click here for a free recording of the event!
Straight Talk: The Persistence of Race in Scientific Research
Join us for another amazing, interactive discussion on some of today’s hottest topics lead by our esteemed panel of guests. This conversation between philosophers and scientists will not only interrogate some of the enduring ideologies of race in America but also some of the reasons behind its continued resonance within the scientific community, largely in the field of genetic research.
Guests Include:
The Black National Anthem will be performed by Shades of Yale.
Melissa Garafola, Connecticut Science Center
Genomics Educator
Sarah M. Roe, PhD, Southern Connecticut State University
Director of the Research Center on Values in Emerging Science and Technology
Cleo Rolle, PhD, Capital Community College
Assistant Professor, Biotechnology Program Coordinator
Quayshawn Spencer, PhD, University of Pennsylvania
Robert S. Blank Presidential Associate Professor of Philosophy
Keitra Thompson, DNP, MSN, FNP-BC, Yale School of Medicine
Postdoctoral Fellow, National Clinician Scholars Program/VA Advanced Fellowship Program
Event: Earning Trust through Public Science Writing
Wednesday, November 13 1-2 p.m. Engleman Hall A 120
Special Guest Dr. Sarah Tinker Perrault (University of California, Davis) describes how science writers can develop readers’ trust by taking on scientist-citizen roles in their writing. She will present three dimensions of trustworthiness — knowledge, integrity, and respect for readers — and demonstrate how each matters if scientists are to serve as trusted advisers on scientific topics in a public sphere characterized by uncertainty, cultural diversity, and heterogeneous and sometimes conflicting sets of values.
Following the talk, Dr. Tinker Perrault will host a science-writing workshop for those interested in learning more about how to better communicate with publics about science-related issues.
Light refreshments will be served!
For further information, please contact Dr. Sarah Roe at RoeS1@SouthernCT.edu.
Ethics, Information, and Our “It-from-Bit” Universe
Ethics, Information, and Our “It-from-Bit” Universe
Author: Terrell Ward Bynum
Southern Connecticut State University
The essence of the Computer Revolution is found in the nature of a computer itself. What is revolutionary about computers is logical malleability.
James H. Moor 1985
It from bit . . . every particle, every field of force, even the spacetime continuum itself . . . derives its function, its meaning, its very existence from [bits].
John Archibald Wheeler 1990
Abstract: Using information technology, humans have brought about the “Information Revolution,” which is changing the world faster and more profoundly than ever before, and generating an enormous number of ethical “policy vacuums”. How is this possible? An answer is suggested by ideas from James Moor regarding “logical malleability,” in his classic paper “What is Computer Ethics?” (1985) The present essay combines Moor’s ideas with the hypothesis that all physical entities — including spacetime and the universe as a whole — are dynamic data structures. To show the usefulness of taking such an approach, in both physics and in computer ethics, a suggested “it-from-bit” model of the universe is briefly sketched, and relevant predictions are offered about the future of computer and information ethics.