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Neither Meat Machines nor Visible Angels: The Human Person in Light of Neuroscience and Theological Anthropology

Fr. Ezra Sullivan, O.P., Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas, Rome

Friday, July 17, 6 PM EDT

Amazing recent – and ongoing – discoveries in neuroscience open up a broader understanding of who we are as human beings. But to understand the human person in full, neuroscience necessarily enters into dialogue with other disciplines, especially philosophy and theology. Fr. Sullivan invites us into that dialogue, drawing on the rich tradition of Thomistic thought.

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DiGiovanni Hall, St. Paul’s/Harvard Catholic Center (29 Mount Auburn Street, Cambridge) & Livestreamed
Reception to follow | Open to all, reservation encouraged & required for livestream

Co-sponsored by the Society of Catholic Scientists; the Thomistic Institute at Harvard University; the Abigail Adams Institute; the Harvard Christian Alumni Society; the St. Benedict Institute at Hope College; the St. Kateri Institute at Williams College; and the Institute of Theology, Imagination, and the Arts in the University of St Andrews (UK).