Princeton CCSR
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Princeton University Center for Culture, Society & Religion is an academic initiative promoting scholarly research, teaching & public discussion about religion
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http://ccsr.princeton.edu 28-01-2013 18:33:51
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Thanks to Lauren Lauren K. McCormick McCormick's new web exhibit, Let There be Light, you can get your hands (digitally) on artifacts from the biblical world and explore them with modern imaging technology. Check it out! ccsr.princeton.edu/news/2024/jpf-…
Suzanne van Geuns asks how incel mass killers can teach us about the social roots of violence. tif.ssrc.org/2024/09/25/rab…
Long before global popularity of mindfulness and meditation, Buddhism provided cultures with conceptual tools to understand illness and ways to care for the sick. Join Pierce Salguero and Liya Xie in conversation 10/21, live at Princeton and online: ccsr.princeton.edu/events/2024/rp…
In Season 2 Episode 1, we talk with Professor Rebecca Flemming about ancient gynecology, wandering wombs, and what agency women had over the healing of their bodies. Exeter Classics Listen on all your podcast apps or at womenwhowentbefore.com/episodes/wande…
NEW | William Stell explores Biblical literalism's role among American evangelicals, especially when making arguments about marrying same-sex couples and ordaining LGBTQ people. tif.ssrc.org/2024/11/13/the…
Read Visiting Fellow Rachel Carbonara 's latest on why RFK Jr's "Make America Healthy Again" appeals to both "wellness babes" and conservative Christian "mamas": martycenter.org/sightings/the-…
Quantum Mysticism? Tune in at 12:30 ET today to watch CCSR Fellow Rachel Carbonara explain the overlap of quantum physics and spirituality. Org by Andrew Mark Henry of Religion for Breakfast. Suggested donation $15. eventbrite.com/e/quantum-myst…
We're pleased to announce that Connor Martini Connor Martini will be joining us this Fall as Postdoc in Religion & the Public Conversation. His work explores how scientists approach & apprehend the unknown; he'll pursue a project on the theme "Detection." ccsr.princeton.edu
Read Jonathan Gold's new essay introducing The Immanent Frame's series on Karmic Historiography: "Call it karmic historiography when we interrogate history for where it is, potentially, the outcome of accumulated moral acts—whether positive or negative." tif.ssrc.org/2025/08/06/kar…