Central Conversations is our signature series of pre and post-show discussions, symposia, and special events. An opportunity to take a deep dive into the subject matter and themes of the play, Central Conversations offers patrons introductions to world class scholars, scientists, humanists, community leaders, activists and other people who are shaping the world that we live in.
Central Conversations are live, happening here and now, and seek to connect people in our audience with the work on our stages.
Explore Upcoming Central Conversations:
November
No Events
December
Familiar Yet New: Why We Love Adaptations04dec9:00 pm9:00 pm(GMT-05:00)
Event Details
Adaptations are increasingly popular in our entertainment today: from films to theater, many Oscar, Emmy, and Tony Award winners are adapted from previous-existing works. This begs the question:
Event Details
Adaptations are increasingly popular in our entertainment today: from films to theater, many Oscar, Emmy, and Tony Award winners are adapted from previous-existing works. This begs the question: why do we love adaptations so much? Join us for a conversation as we try to solve this question, and perhaps learn along the way why original works struggle to gain recognition.
Speakers for this event
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Debbie Danielpour
Debbie Danielpour
Debbie Danielpour writes screenplays, libretti, fiction and nonfiction. She has been a professor of fiction and screenwriting for over twenty years—at San Francisco State University, Emerson College, Harvard University, and now at Boston University. Her fiction has been published in numerous literary magazines, her academic work in several books and journals. Her seventh feature screenplay, We’re All Here will be shot this year. She collaborated on the libretto for Margaret Garner with Toni Morrison, wrote a musical adaptation of the young adult novel The Great Good Thing, and the farcical musical The King’s Ear based on the biblical story of Esther. Professor Danielpour has an AB from Harvard College, an MA in film production and screenwriting from San Francisco State University, and an MFA in fiction and literature from the Bennington Writing Seminars.
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Lee Mikeska Gardner
Lee Mikeska Gardner
Artists and Audiences for "Galileo's Daughter"05dec9:00 pm9:00 pm(GMT-05:00)
Event Details
Join us for a conversation with the cast and creative team of Galileo’s Daughter about bringing this production to the stage.
Event Details
Join us for a conversation with the cast and creative team of Galileo’s Daughter about bringing this production to the stage.
Faith & Discovery: Bridging Belief and Science in a Modern World06dec9:15 pm9:15 pm(GMT-05:00)
Event Details
Join us for a conversation about how faith and science influence each other, socially and culturally, and how people navigate both in their lives. Our special guests will
Event Details
Join us for a conversation about how faith and science influence each other, socially and culturally, and how people navigate both in their lives. Our special guests will explore how scientists reconcile faith with their pursuit of knowledge and how theologians reframe belief in light of scientific advances.
Speakers for this event
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David Kaiser
David Kaiser
David Kaiser is Germeshausen Professor of the History of Science and Professor of Physics at MIT. He is the author of several award-winning books about modern physics, including How the Hippies Saved Physics: Science, Counterculture, and the Quantum Revival (2011) and Quantum Legacies: Dispatches from an Uncertain World (2020). A Fellow of the American Physical Society, Kaiser has received MIT’s highest honors for excellence in teaching at both the undergraduate and graduate-student levels. A frequent contributor to National Public Radio and PBS NOVA television documentaries, his work has also been featured in Science, Nature, the New York Times, and the New Yorker magazine.
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Ian Hutchinson
Ian Hutchinson
Ian H. Hutchinson is Professor Emeritus of Nuclear Science and Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His primary research interest is plasma physics, especially the magnetic confinement of plasmas (ionized gases): seeking to enable fusion reactions, the energy source of the stars, to be used for practical energy production. He and his MIT team designed, built and operated the Alcator C-Mod tokamak confinement device, an international experimental facility whose plasma temperatures reached beyond 50 million degrees Celsius, and are prototypical of a future fusion reactor.His doctoral studies, as a Commonwealth Scholar at the Australian National University, involved experiments on one of the earliest tokamaks to operate outside the Soviet Union. After ground-breaking research (1976-9) on MIT’s earliest major tokamak experiment, he experimented on a different confinement configuration, the Reversed Field Pinch, at the U.K. Atomic Energy Authority, where he made landmark measurements of the structure of magnetic turbulence showing that it could explain the energy transport. He returned to MIT in 1983 as a member of the Nuclear Engineering department faculty. He directed the Alcator project from 1987 to 2003, and served as Head of the MIT Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering from 2003 to 2009.His personal scientific contributions span many areas of plasma physics, including the first direct measurement of anomalous resistivity during MHD disruptions and of hollow current profiles during current rise, the first observations of polarized tokamak electron cyclotron radiation and development of diagnostics of thermal and nonthermal electron distributions based on it, fundamental theory of Mach probes to measure plasma flow, comprehensive computational and analytic studies of the interaction of flowing plasmas with embedded objects, and the theory of electron holes.In addition to 250 journal articles on a variety of plasma phenomena, Dr. Hutchinson is widely known for his standard textbook on measuring plasmas: Principles of Plasma Diagnostics (2002), and A Student’s Guide to Numerical Methods (2015), both published by Cambridge University Press. He has served on numerous national fusion review panels, and on the editorial board of Physics of Fluids B, Physical Review E, and the New Journal of Physics, He was editor in chief of the journal Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion (2000-4). He was the 2008 Chairman of the Division of Plasma Physics of the American Physical Society. He is a fellow of the American Physical Society and of the Institute of Physics. He received the 2022 Ronald C Davidson award for plasma physics of the American Institute of Physics.Hutchinson is also the author of the computer program TtH a TeX to HTML translator, widely used for web-publishing of mathematics. He has written and lectured extensively on the relationship between science and the Christian faith, and authored the books Monopolizing Knowledge: A scientist refutes religion-denying reason-destroying scientism (2011) and Can a scientist believe in miracles? (2018). He is an enthusiastic fly-fisherman, squash player, and choral singer.
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Megan Ulishney
Megan Ulishney
Dr. Megan Loumagne Ulishney is a Catholic feminist theologian who works at Boston College as Assistant Professor of Systematic Theology.
Megan’s doctoral research at the University of Oxford focused on the doctrine of original sin and, in particular, on the challenges and opportunities for the doctrine in a post-Darwinian world. This project formed the basis of her first book, which was published with Oxford University Press in March 2023.
Megan’s current research is tentatively entitled: “Beauty in the Wild: Ecological Aesthetics, Theology, and Feminism,” and it draws from the Theology, the sciences, and gender theory to explore the entanglements of nature, gender, and beauty.
Megan is very interested in questions related to theology and science, especially evolutionary biology and anthropology, and the intersection of these fields with Christian theology.
January
No Events