CenSAMM
  • About
  • Blog
  • News & Events
  • Conferences
  • Resources
  • Contact
  • Home
  • Artist in Residence
  • Blog

Leila

Leila's Blog 12: In conversation with Rev Dr Malcolm Brown

Leila

Leila's Blog 12: In conversation with Rev Dr Malcolm Brown

March 6, 2018

This is the fourth in a series of conversations about AI I'm recording as part of this residency. This time I meet Rev Malcolm Brown, the Director of Mission & Pubic Affairs at the Church of England. We discuss some of the contributions that religious communities can make to current conversations around ethics in AI.

Read More

Leila's Blog 11: In conversation with Dot Everyone CEO, Rachel Coldicutt.

Leila

Leila's Blog 11: In conversation with Dot Everyone CEO, Rachel Coldicutt.

February 27, 2018

This is the third in a series conversations about AI that I'm recording as part of this residency. This time, I talk to CEO of digital think tank Dot Everyone, Rachel Coldicutt. We discuss the importance of friction in a world seamlessly filtered through technology that's increasingly designed to privilege the individual's choice.

Read More

Leila's Blog 10: Why tech’s meteors can never arrive

Leila

Leila's Blog 10: Why tech’s meteors can never arrive

February 20, 2018

There’s an exciting theory going around at the moment. Maybe you’ve heard it. It says that we’re probably living in a simulation, because if it’s possible to simulate worlds, as to some extent it seems to be, then there will certainly already be loads of simulated worlds....

Read More

Leila's Blog 9: In conservation with the V&A museum's Tech Lead Duncan Gough.

Leila

Leila's Blog 9: In conservation with the V&A museum's Tech Lead Duncan Gough.

February 12, 2018

This is the second in a series of conversations about AI that I'm recording as part of this residency. The V&A museum's Tech Lead Duncan Gough and I discuss a number of issues around AI and the arts, including the distancing effect of tech's 'puppets', the bias of datasets, and the role that art and empathy should be playing.

Read More

Leila's Blog 8: In conversation with Dr Sean Power

Leila

Leila's Blog 8: In conversation with Dr Sean Power

February 6, 2018

This is hopefully the first in a short series of conversations about AI I'm recording as part of this residency. In this 35 minute chat, my friend, the philosopher Dr Sean Power and I discuss AI's popularity, its connection to ideas about apocalypses, and the real reasons we're so anxious about it all.

Read More

Leila's Blog 7: In Praise of Costume

Leila

Leila's Blog 7: In Praise of Costume

January 22, 2018

I’m now officially past the half-way point on this residency. When I started, (just eight working days ago!) I really didn’t know where the wind would take me. I certainly didn’t predict that I’d be modelling priest’s garb and positing a sort of suburban science-faith, but look at me now!

Read More

Leila's Blog 6: The Power of the Literal

Leila

Leila's Blog 6: The Power of the Literal

December 15, 2017

In the eighties we wanted money; in the nineties through to the noughties we wanted fame, and now, in the age of fake news, bare lightbulbs, twitter ticks and Wikileaks, we want transparency, and we look for it everywhere.

Read More

Leila's Blog: 5

Leila

Leila's Blog: 5

December 8, 2017

They sound like profound pronouncements, and really, who’s to say they’re not? People find meaning in tea leaves and strings of numbers, why not in the unpredictable outcomes of computer code?

Read More

Leila's Blog 4: Physical Empathy

Leila

Leila's Blog 4: Physical Empathy

November 29, 2017

​Last time, I was thinking about how a collective imagination can bond humans. This time, I’m wondering how we can extend that bond beyond the human race.

Read More

Leila's Blog 3: Towards a collective imagination

Leila

Leila's Blog 3: Towards a collective imagination

November 22, 2017

​In my last post, I was thinking a lot about time, and the Panaceans’ efforts, if not exactly to freeze it, then to erase some of the usual markers of its passing. I drew a parallel with modern mindfulness and ‘slow’ culture movements, but I think we can go a bit further.

Read More

Leila's Blog 2: Stopping Time

Leila

Leila's Blog 2: Stopping Time

November 16, 2017

This week I’ve been thinking about individual perceptions of time. Some of us feel its passing keenly, while others, like the Panaceans, see themselves as an integral part of a timeline that never ends. Like a cartoon character, they stretch out every fingertip and toe, straining to stop the clock for as long as possible, before that terrible ripping sound begins...

Read More

Leila's Blog: 1

Leila

Leila's Blog: 1

November 9, 2017

I visited the CenSAMM offices in Bedford in the last week of September, and had a couple of fascinating days immersing myself in the world of the Panaceans

Read More

CenSAMM

© CenSAMM
All rights reserved.

  • Sitemap
  • Terms of Use
  • Cookies & Privacy Policy
  • Web Design by Chameleon
Contact Details

CenSAMM
Faculty of Divinity
University of Cambridge
West Road
Cambridge
CB3 9BS

Tel:

Explore CenSAMM
  • Conferences
  • Events
  • About
  • Blog
  • Resources
  • Contact
  • The Panacea Charitable Trust
  • The Panacea Museum
  • Faculty of Divinity, University of Cambridge
Newsletter Signup

Stay up to date with CenSAMM News and Information

  • Homepage
  • About
    • People
      • Prof. James Crossley
    • The Panacea Museum
    • The Panacea Charitable Trust
    • MF Norwegian School of Theology
    • FAQs
  • Blog
  • News & Events
  • Conferences
    • Anglo-Israelism and the British Imperial Imagination
    • Apocalyptic Nostalgia? Cold War Imagery in Popular Culture
    • The Next Quest for the Historical Jesus
    • The Study of Apocalyptic and Millenarian Movements Conference 2022
    • The Study of Apocalyptic and Millenarian Movements Conference 2021
    • Apocalypse and Utopia, 1914-1945
    • Video Games and Religion: Apocalypse and Utopia
    • Apocalypticism and Millenarian Movements in the Ancient World
    • Virtual Symposium: The Cold War and the End Times
    • The Study of Apocalyptic and Millenarian Movements Conference 2020
    • The Study of Apocalyptic and Millenarian Movements Conference 2019
    • Natural Disasters and the Apocalypse (1500 to Present) Sept 13, 2018
    • Apocalypse in Art: The Creative Unveiling (June 28 and 29, 2018)
      • Apocalypse in Art: The Creative Unveiling (June 2018) media archive
    • AI and Apocalypse (April 5 and 6, 2018)
      • AI and Apocalypse conference (April 2018) media archive
    • Archive 2017
  • Resources
    • Critical Dictionary of Apocalyptic and Millenarian Movements (CDAMM)
    • Online resources (open-access videos and podcasts)
      • Definitions and General Themes
      • Biblical, early Christian, and early Jewish millenarian and apocalyptic movements
        • Apocalypticism and related ideas in the Bible, early Judaism and early Christianity
        • Jesus and the Gospels
        • Paul
        • Book of Revelation
        • Gnosticism
      • Medieval
      • Reformation, early modern and nineteenth century
      • Twentieth century and contemporary
        • Waco, David Koresh and the Branch Davidians
      • Culture
      • AI
      • Environmental issues
    • Profiles of Millenarian & Apocalyptic Movements
      • Brahma Kumaris
      • Branch Davidians
      • Christian Zionism
      • Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
      • Environmental Millenarianism
      • ISIS
      • Neturei Karta
      • Peoples Temple
      • Plymouth Brethren Christian Church
      • Rastafari
      • Sadrist Movement
      • Standing Rock Sioux
      • Strauss-Howe Generational Theory
      • Survivalists
      • Technological Millenarianism
    • CenSAMM Videos on Apocalypticism and Millenarianism
    • CenSAMM Interviews, Roundtables, and Seminars
    • Movies & Books
  • Contact

Share

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Email
Copy