Episodios

  • The Radical Hope Podcast: Social Media
    Jan 20 2025

    In this episode Nicky and Matthew welcome Professor Martyn Percy to the podcast to discuss the significance of social media in Communications, Faith based Organisations and Dialogue in the public square. We cover topics from realism, to missionary anthropology, to the Makin Review and the resignation of Justin Welby, to the democratisation of information, and the revolution that social media and digital spaces is bringing about akin to that of the printing press and the reformation.

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    47 m
  • The Radical Hope Podcast: Stories
    Nov 19 2024

    This podcast is hosted by Dr Matthew Barber-Rowell, communications officer and research fellow for the William Temple Foundation, and a Dean’s scholar at Virginia Theological Seminary and Vice President for Communications at VTS Nicky Burridge. In this series we explore the contours of communications faith based organisations and dialogue in the public square. We will draw on stories and experiences from both sides of the Atlantic and consider what these might mean for people and institutions who are seeking to contribute to public life in the UK, US and around the world.

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    30 m
  • Ethical Robots: Theological and Philosophical Frontiers
    Jul 31 2024

    In this special edition of the William Temple Foundation Podcast, our Director of Research Chris Baker, hosts a panel of international experts who explore the theme of Ethical Robots through the lenses of theology and philosophy, offering innovative insights from their own work and discussing key emerging issues such as the current paradigm shift in Artificial Intelligence (AI) in a post-digital world. Guests include Canon Dr Eve Poole (Widely acclaimed Theologian and Institutional Leader), Prof Nigel Crooke (Oxford Brookes University), Dr Anna Puzio (University of Twente and University of Oxford) and Rev Eric Trazzo (University of Divinity, Australia). Each panelist offers a 10 minute reflection from their own work, and then Prof Baker guides an open dialogue, exploring the future of this pioneering and interdisciplinary dialogue.


    This podcast is offered in memory of Rev Dr John Reader, William Temple Research Fellow and Chair of the Ethical Future Network at University of Oxford, who passed away unexpectedly in late 2023.

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    1 h y 9 m
  • Deep Time. Ep6. Tim Middleton and Richard Irvine
    Apr 19 2024

    Richard Irvine ends the series by joining the dots between geology and anthropology. Are these vast timescales ultimately dehumanising? And can we learn something about time from monastic communities?

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    31 m
  • Deep Time Ep5. Tim Middleton and Simone Kotva
    Apr 12 2024

    In this episode, Simone Kotva speaks about deep time, religious apocalypse, and the ‘end of the world’. She makes the case that what we believe is potentially much less important than spiritual exercises and practices of attention for encouraging ecological concern.

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    32 m
  • Deep Time Ep4. Tim Middleton and Cecil Abungu
    Apr 5 2024

    In this episode, Cecil Abungu explains some of the philosophy of longtermism, and how it ties in to both the effective altruism movement and the study of existential risk. He also explores a variety of African perspectives on longtermism, suggesting how western voices might learn from indigenous thought when discussing the distant future.

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    29 m
  • Deep Time Ep3. Tim Middleton and Michelle Bastian
    Mar 29 2024

    Michelle Bastian raises some possible concerns with deep time thinking. She introduces a wide range of different ways of thinking about time, and reflects on some of the links between time and power. Are some of the popular engagements with deep time causing more harm than good?

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    37 m
  • Deep Time Ep 2. Tim Middleton and Manjana Milkoreit
    Mar 22 2024

    Manjana Milkoreit discusses the importance of imagination for thinking about the future. From climate fiction to dystopian film, she digs into what such creations reveal about our current priorities in the present—and why such imaginings need to be grounded in diverse communities.

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    35 m