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  • • 19/04/2024

    Anita Cloete - Watching and being watched: Negotiating identity in a digital age

    Anita Cloete is a full Professor at Faculty of Theology, Stellenbosch University, South Africa. Her research areas are Youth culture, Spirituality, Religion, and media. She published and supervised several postgraduate students in these areas. She edited a book with the title: Interdisciplinary reflections on the Interplay between Religion, Film and Youth (2019)

  • • 19/04/2024

    Taimaya Ragui - Digital Theology: A Privileged Theological Discourse

    Tai currently serves as Academic Lead at The Shepherd's Academy of Oxford Centre for Religion and Public Life.

  • 19/04/2024

    Mark Nam - Techno-Orientalism

    Mark has a critical interest in ’Techno- Orientalism’, the imagining of East-Asian peoples and places in technological terms in media.

  • • 19/04/2024

    Elizabeth Widya

    Paper Title: Gen-Z Religious e- Xpression: The Iruption of Digital Spirituality and The Disruption of Cybertheology Cathecesis in Indonesia."

    Bio: Elizabeth Widya is an independent researcher and theology learner at Marturia Christian College in the Special Region of Yogyakarta, Indonesia. In her theological learning process, she is interested in and delves into areas such as digital theology, Asian theology, disability theology, and contextual theology

  • • 19/04/2024

    Michael Toy

    Michael Toy is a PhD candidate in Religious Studies at Te Herenga Waka Victoria University of Wellington researching digital religion in Aotearo

  • • 19/04/2024

    Iona Curtius - Cyborgs vs the Metaverse

    An early 90s collection of essays on ‘Cultures of Technological Embodiment’ states in its introduction that ‘It should, perhaps, come as no surprise to us that, in an increasingly hyper-aestheticized everyday life, it is through various fictions that we endeavour to come to know ourselves.’ In this paper I analyse the ‘various fictions’ of three sci-fi movies to explore how societal ideas of and feelings towards technology and embodiment have shifted in the past 40 years and where we might (want to) go in future. I do this by examining how they treat three binaries: body/mind, human/technology, female/male. I hope to show a significant (though by no means unambiguous) trajectory: earlier science fiction, especially cyberpunk, portrayed the human mind as good, technological bodies as bad. RoboCop exemplifies this inclination. The birth of the internet began a shift, clearly demonstrated by The Matrix’s adamant insistence that the human mind cannot be trusted. Dangerous technology lurks not only in the physical machine but in the digital mind. Advancements in Artificial Intelligence and the explosion of social media now lead us to seek refuge in our bodies, rather than our weak minds. Transcendence will help us explore this final movement. Underneath this primary story I want to tease out a significant subplot, exploring the ways in which gender gets mixed up in these portrayals of bodies, minds, humans, cyborgs, and technology. If theology and the church are to engage in public discourses around religion, science, and technology, we must examine the way we culturally code and imagine technology, including its relation to embodiment – as well as understanding the fears that drive these characterisations. Only then can we meaningfully respond to them.

  • 19/04/2024

    Msgr. Lucio Adrian Ruiz

    Msgr. Lucio Adrian Ruiz is an Argentinian priest (1965). He completed his studies at the Major Seminary of Santa Fe, Argentina. He obtained a Master’s in Business Administration (MBA) at the Polytechnic University of Madrid and a License in Fundamental and Dogmatic Theology at the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross, in Rome, with a thesis on the Theology of Communication.

    Member of the International Forum on the Theology of Communication. He obtained his PhD in Biomedical Engineering from the Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingenieros de Telecomunicación at the Polytechnic University of Madrid. He worked as a professor at the Theological Pastoral Institute (ITEPAL) in Bogotá and was guest professor of tele-training courses for Latin America at the Pontifical Gregorian University. Professor at the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross in Rome. He carried out his ministry at the Holy See as Head of the Vatican Internet Service; he was a member of the Vatican Media Centre Commission for the reform of Holy See communication. With the creation of the new Dicastery in the Roman Curia, he was appointed Secretary of the Dicastery for Communication, Holy See, where he oversees projects such as "The Church is listening to you" and "Digital Synod"

  • • 19/04/2024

    Elsa Marty

    Bio: Elsa Marty has a Ph.D. in Theology from the University of Chicago and is currently a Teaching Fellow at the Institute for Vaishnava Studies.

  • AI XR Martin Luther Avatar invites to GoNeDigital Conference
    • 19/04/2024

    AI XR Martin Luther Avatar invites to GoNeDigital Conference

    Rev. Ralf Peter Reimann is the Internet Commissioner of the Evangelical Church in the Rhineland.

    He holds a master's degree in computer science and serves as President of the World Association of Christian Communication (European Region)

  • • 19/04/2024

    Simon Werrett - Can we build authentic relationships in the metaverse?

    Simon is the Digital Lead for Coffee Shop Sunday, a Methodist project and the Community and Digital Pastor at an Essex Baptist Church. He has several postgraduate qualifications in theology (including digital) and in 2023 started the University of Chester Professional Doctorate program focusing on the theology of the avatar

  • • 19/04/2024

    Rainer Gotschalg Topological interferences of digital spaces.

    Rainer Gottschalg (*1985); degree in German (B.A.) and Theology (Dr. theol.); graduated in Münster, Germany, then pursued a doctoral scholarship in the theological excellence program "Cultures Religions Identities" at PLU Salzburg, Austria. Currently undertaking a post -doctoral project on an anthropological foundation for a theological theory of science in the context of digitalization.

  • • 19/04/2024

    Axel Siegmund

    Axel Siegemund

    Ramayana and Confucianism: Mainstreaming Asian Religious thought through digital design

    Axel Siegemund contributes to Ethics of technology from an engineering perspective. His habilitation thesis in intercultural technology ethics was awarded with the Hanns Lilje Prize for Technology and Economy in 2023.

  • • 19/04/2024

    Dan Washbrook - Third Space

    Rev. Daniel Washbrook is a curate in the Church of England and is currently completing his MA in Digital Theology with Spurgeon’s College. He is interested in concepts of digital placemaking, particularly within the context of video games

  • • 19/04/2024

    Steve Taylor - Digital activism as justice-making

    Rev Dr Steve Taylor PhD is a public scholar, working for AngelWings Ltd in research consultancy. Steve is author of 4 books, 56 published academic outputs and over 270 public writing pieces and maintains academic accountability as Senior Lecturer, Flinders University