GU4411: Religion, Mind and Science Fiction | B. Faure

Religion
Undergraduate and Graduate Seminar
M 2:10-4PM

While not yet fully recognized as a literary or philosophical genre, science fiction, through the “dislocation” it operates, raises (or amplifies) questions that have long been the preserve of religion, metaphysics, or philosophy, and it has brought some of these questions into the realm of popular culture. Science fiction is often perceived as hostile to religion, yet it often blurs the boundaries between science and religion. Recent science fiction, unlike the traditional “space opera,” revolves around the relations between the human mind and Artificial Intelligence — a challenge that our fast-evolving technoscientific society is confronting with a new sense of urgency. This course examines overlapping issues and questions shared by religion and science fiction.

Link to Vergil
Note: only courses offered during the two previous semesters have active Vergil links.