Episodes
2018 Earth Day Keynote Address
Published 05/24/18
The Department of Philosophy presents Cristina Richie and her presentation on "Green Bioethics: Environmental Sustainability in Health Care"
Published 02/14/17
Inauguration of the MS Program in Environmental Science
Published 02/14/17
Published 09/20/16
Dr. Robert Curry, Liesel Schwarz, and Sr. Mary Elizabeth Clark make up the panel discussing sustainability and environment in Speaker's Corner at the Falvey Memorial Library.
Published 09/13/16
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Published 07/01/16
The task of this presentation is to dismantle the software model of the mind and a related view that says that we can survive brain uploading and other forms of radical brain enhancement because our “informational pattern” or “software” survives.
Published 06/28/16
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Published 06/28/16
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Published 06/28/16
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Published 06/28/16
Dr. Traver’s talk is titled “Sustainable Stormwater at Villanova.” He discusses the challenges of storm water sustainability in the built environment, and Villanova’s use of the campus for scholarship, teaching and as an agent for change
Published 06/10/16
The talk is based on the book Einstein’s Dice and Schrodinger’s Cat.
Published 03/14/16
Michael R Zimmerman, MD, PhD, Biology Dept., lectured on the ancient Egyptians' concept of disease and its treatment on Thursday, Feb. 18, 4 p.m., Mendel 102.
Published 02/19/16
Professor James Giordano will address the promise - and problems - of brain science, and the need for neuroethical guidance.
Published 02/05/16
In honor of the 44th annual Earth Day, Villanova University presents a Panel Discussion on Sustainable Agriculture with JoAnn Garbin, David Masur, and Brenda Gotanda.
Published 07/22/15
Dr. Horton outlines his research on sea-level rise and the process of conducting science. The panel discusses how climate change science has been politicized, the role that science plays in society, and public perceptions of climate change and science.
Published 07/21/15
Computing moved from a fringe activity to a central part of academic life in just 50 years. Timesharing, distributed computing, email, national networks, and the web are direct descendants of systems that universities and scientific researchers built.
Published 07/21/15
Villanova University's 2015 Outstanding Faculty Research Award recipient Giorgi Japaridze, PhD, professor of computing sciences, discusses his extensive research.
Published 07/08/15
Published 04/21/15
Our common ancestry with whales, horses, lions, mice, shrews, and other mammals began a long time ago. A meteor may have removed those pesky dinosaurs 65 million years ago and given our ancestors a chance to thrive. Our family has branched out quite a bit since then, although we mammals all still share many similarities. As a result, for example, we hear the world differently than our even older non-mammalian ancestors. Please join us as Dr. Todd Jackman introduces us to our family and our...
Published 01/29/14
Published 11/14/13
This is the third in the series of lectures, "Beginnings," explaining where we all came from and how we got here.
Published 10/25/13
Dr. Paul Steinhardt, Albert Einstein Professor of Science at Princeton University, and the Director of the Princeton Center for Theoretical Science, is the guest speaker at the Physics Honor Society, Sigma Pi Sigma, induction and the Physics Department's 75th Anniversary Celebration. His talk is entitled "Big Bang or Big Bounce" - Contrasting two views of the origin and evolution of the universe, and how data from the Planck satellite and the Large Hadron Collider at CERN may help to resolve...
Published 10/09/13
How did gravity sculpt enormous clouds of hydrogen into dense balls that ignited and lit up a dark sky with twinkling stars within galaxies like our own Milky Way? Why are many galaxies racing away from each other, some almost at the speed of light? How do stars transform elements like hydrogen into the carbon from which you, and I, and all life on earth are made? How did a supernova's violent death bring about the birth of our sun and the earth just over 4.5 billion years ago. Dr. Edward...
Published 10/07/13
Dr. Philip Maurone, Chair of the Department of Physics, begins the year-long lecture series "Beginnings" with a presentation about how you, the earth, the Sun, and 100 billion galaxies each with 100 billion stars began 13.82 billion years ago as a single infinitely hot and dense point smaller than a pin head. The series presents the world's greatest detective story; many scientists have pieced together evidence for a narrative about the origins of the universe, stars, galaxies, our solar...
Published 09/27/13