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Living Dialogs, Episode 2: Biology, Computation, and Care in the Anthropocene (Part 1) With Rachel Armstrong, Dehlia Hannah, and Mette Ramsgaard Thomson

Living Dialogs, Episode 2: Biology, Computation, and Care in the Anthropocene (Part 1) With Rachel Armstrong, Dehlia Hannah, and Mette Ramsgaard Thomson

Released Friday, 27th August 2021
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Living Dialogs, Episode 2: Biology, Computation, and Care in the Anthropocene (Part 1) With Rachel Armstrong, Dehlia Hannah, and Mette Ramsgaard Thomson

Living Dialogs, Episode 2: Biology, Computation, and Care in the Anthropocene (Part 1) With Rachel Armstrong, Dehlia Hannah, and Mette Ramsgaard Thomson

Living Dialogs, Episode 2: Biology, Computation, and Care in the Anthropocene (Part 1) With Rachel Armstrong, Dehlia Hannah, and Mette Ramsgaard Thomson

Living Dialogs, Episode 2: Biology, Computation, and Care in the Anthropocene (Part 1) With Rachel Armstrong, Dehlia Hannah, and Mette Ramsgaard Thomson

Friday, 27th August 2021
Good episode? Give it some love!
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Can the buildings that we live in come alive? Could such living buildings help us to create a healthier, more sustainable future? Could they become adaptive, resilient structures that care for the planet while empathizing, comforting and inspiring us? The Living Dialogs podcast brings together scholars and thinkers to collectively reflect on living architecture and its implications for our changing world.

In each episode, guests and listeners are invited to reflect on prompts designed to encourage thoughtful, in-depth discussion. You are invited to contribute your own thoughts and questions, which may be taken up at a live webinar with the same guests a couple of weeks following each episode's release.

This extended format is born of our belief that knowledge creation is also a collaborative and living endeavor - that meaning is not simply created through the exchange of information but that ideas are formed through open and emergent conversations.

Three prominent thinkers respond to the prompt, “Living architecture should prioritize biological resources over computational resources.”  Listen in as they discuss the false dichotomy of computation vs biology, living technology and sustainability, and wonder about an ethics of Living Architecture.

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