Advancing Hospitality

Diálogos: Dinner and Discussion to Nurture Intellectual Hospitality

Historically speaking, universities have always valued pursuing truth with a spirit of discovery. Though highly aspirational, this is only possible when a community values intellectual hospitality -- the sustained practice of humility, curiosity, openness, and genuine engagement. In such a community, participants are more eager to listen than to speak, to pursue understanding rather than conflict, and to embrace introspection and self-awareness in balance with self-expression. Hardly a passive posture, this kind of hospitality encourages a rigorous yet respectful engagement with ideas through critical thinking, discernment, and an enduring willingness to consider and reconsider. It is with this spirit that Octet hosts four intellectual hospitality events. We invite you to join us!


Diálogos: The Adolescent’s Transition to Adulthood - Nancy Hill in conversation with Thea Keith-Lucas
Apr
29

Diálogos: The Adolescent’s Transition to Adulthood - Nancy Hill in conversation with Thea Keith-Lucas

The self discovery process and finding one's identity has grown increasingly complicated with modern technologies like the internet and social media. While all generations have experienced the angst and the uncertainty of becoming adults, is Generation Z experiencing it differently? What is the transition from adolescence to adulthood like for today's youth? And how do the economic landscape and senses of opportunity shape one's perception of ability to reach goals? Does society characterize Generation Z unfairly? Nancy Hill of Harvard will deliver a presentation on this topic, followed by a discussion with Thea Keith-Lucas, MIT's Chaplain to the Institute. 

Nancy Hill is a developmental psychologist whose research focuses on parenting and adolescent development. Hill’s research focuses in on two areas. First, she studies the ways race, socioeconomic status, and community context interact and impact youths’ opportunities for upward mobility, especially through secondary school and postsecondary transitions. Second, her research focuses on the relational supports and mechanisms associated with adolescents’ emerging sense of purpose and views of the economy as they influence post-secondary transitions to college and career. These include familial and school-based supportive relationships and how they support youth as they engage in school, succeed academically and hone their goals, aspirations, and sense of purpose. Hill is known for her work identifying developmentally sensitive strategies to maintain parental involvement in education during adolescence.

After seven years as MIT’s Episcopal Chaplain, Thea Keith-Lucas is the Chaplain to the Institute at MIT, which makes her the university’s primary interfaith chaplain and leader of its Office of Religious, Spiritual, and Ethical Life. She took on this role in January 2022 after serving in an interim capacity for a year and a half. From 2013 to 2020, Thea served a small community of progressive Christians as the Episcopal Chaplain at MIT. She was ordained as an Episcopal priest in 2006 and previously served parishes in Randolph, Mass. and Danvers, Mass.

This event is by invitation only. If you’re interested in attending, please email comm@octetcollaborative.org

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Diálogos: Moral Formation in a Pluralistic Society
Feb
15

Diálogos: Moral Formation in a Pluralistic Society

In an era of deep division and conflict, how should MIT think about the moral formation of its students? Does character matter, and should the university - particularly one focused on science and engineering such as MIT - play a role in building it? And how does one do so in a way that respects the pluralistic society that MIT happily supports? Join Prof. Jennifer Herdt and the Octet Collaborative for a thought-provoking conversation in pursuit of intellectual hospitality.

Jennifer A. Herdt is Gilbert L. Stark Professor of Christian Ethics at Yale University’s Divinity School.  She is the author, most recently, of Assuming Responsibility: Ecstatic Eudaimonism and the Call to Live Well(link is external).  Her 2019 book, Forming Humanity: Redeeming the German Bildung Tradition(link is external), was supported by a research fellowship from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.  She is also the author of Putting on Virtue: The Legacy of the Splendid Vices (link is external)(selected as a Choice Outstanding Academic Title), and of Religion and Faction in Hume’s Moral Philosophy(link is external), and has published widely on virtue ethics, early modern and modern moral thought, and political theology. She serves on the editorial boards of the Journal of Christian Ethics, Studies in Christian Ethics, and the Journal of Religion, and served as the 2020 President of the Society of Christian Ethics. From 2013-2021, she served as the academic dean of Yale Divinity School. She is currently researching more-than-human creaturely agency as a senior member of a research team that has received a $3.9M, 3-year collaborative grant from the Templeton Foundation(link is external) in 2020 to pursue projects in science-informed theological anthropology.

This event is by invitation only. If you’re interested in attending, please email comm@octetcollaborative.org

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Diálogos: Conversations across Disagreement, Difference, and Discipline
Dec
15

Diálogos: Conversations across Disagreement, Difference, and Discipline

What is the importance of academic collaboration across disciplines and lines of difference? How might the academic vocation be served - and better serve the common good - by the restoration of literal and figurative “common tables”? Join Prof. Alan Love and the Octet Collaborative for an evening of stimulating conversation and intellectual hospitality around a table of our own!

Alan C. Love, Ph.D., is a professor in the College of Liberal Arts at the University of Minnesota. He also serves as director of the Minnesota Center for Philosophy of Science. Love’s research focuses on conceptual issues in biology and has concentrated on evolutionary developmental biology (Evo-devo), developmental biology, molecular biology, and paleontology (among others).  Love uses a combination of approaches to investigate a variety of philosophical questions concerning conceptual change, explanatory pluralism, knowledge structure, reductionism, the nature of historical science, and interdisciplinary epistemology. Other areas of interest include the role of history in philosophical research and the nature of intuitions generated by thought experiments in philosophical inquiry.

This event is by invitation only. If you’re interested in attending, please email comm@octetcollaborative.org

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Diálogos: How Can Science Serve the Common Good?
Oct
19

Diálogos: How Can Science Serve the Common Good?

At a moment when science is of pivotal importance in addressing societal problems, societal distrust of science is on the rise. What is the role of science and leading scientific institutions like MIT in restoring that trust and ensuring that science serves the common good? Join Dr. Joshua Swamidass and the Octet Collaborative for a discussion of this critical topic that pursues rigorous dialogue and intellectual hospitality.

Dr. S. Joshua Swamidass is an associate professor in the Division of Laboratory and Genomic Medicine at Washington University in St Louis. He holds an MD and PhD (Information and Computer Sciences) from the University of California, Irvine. Both a scientist and a physician, he uses computational methods to study information at the intersection of medicine, chemistry, and biology. 

This event is by invitation only. If you’re interested in attending, please email comm@octetcollaborative.org

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Diálogos: An Exploration of Mental Health with Nii Addy
Apr
12

Diálogos: An Exploration of Mental Health with Nii Addy

Join the Octet Collaborative and Nii Addy for dinner and a discussion of mental health that engenders intellectual hospitality, open dialogue and a rigorous inspection of ideas. Open to MIT Faculty and Staff.

Nii Addy is the Albert E. Kent Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Associate Professor of Cellular and Molecular Physiology and the inaugural Director of Scientist Diversity and Inclusion at Yale School of Medicine. He is also Director of the Faculty Mentoring Program for Minority Organization for Recruitment and Expansion (MORE) and co-chair of the Career Development Subcommittee of the Anti-Racism Task Force in the Yale Department of Psychiatry. He contributes to graduate student and postdoctoral training and to diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives through his efforts on campus and in scientific societies.

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Diálogos: Sexuality, Gender, and Technology with Andy Crouch
Feb
23

Diálogos: Sexuality, Gender, and Technology with Andy Crouch

Technological advances have impacted the deepest questions of what it means to be human. Join the Octet Collaborative and Andy Crouch for dinner and a discussion of technology, sexuality, and gender that engenders intellectual hospitality, open dialogue and a rigorous inspection of ideas. Open to MIT Faculty and Staff.

Andy Crouch is partner for theology and culture at Praxis, an organization that works as a creative engine for redemptive entrepreneurship. His writing explores faith, culture, and the image of God in the domains of technology, power, leadership, and the arts. He is the author of five books (plus another with his daughter, Amy Crouch): The Life We're Looking For: Reclaiming Relationship in a Technological World, The Tech-Wise Family: Everyday Steps for Putting Technology in Its Proper Place, Strong and Weak: Embracing a Life of Love, Risk and True Flourishing, Playing God: Redeeming the Gift of Power, and Culture Making: Recovering Our Creative Calling.

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Diálogos: The Overturning of Roe v. Wade with David Skeel
Dec
15

Diálogos: The Overturning of Roe v. Wade with David Skeel

There may be no more contentious issue in America - including among Christians - then the overturning of Roe v. Wade. Join the Octet Collaborative and legal scholar David Skeel for dinner and a discussion of abortion policy that engenders intellectual hospitality, open dialogue and a rigorous inspection of ideas. Open to MIT Faculty and Staff.

David Skeel is S. Samuel Arsht Professor of Corporate Law at the University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School. He is the author of True Paradox: How Christianity Makes Sense of Our Complex World (InterVarsity, 2014); The New Financial Deal: Understanding the Dodd-Frank Act and Its (Unintended) Consequences (Wiley, 2011); Icarus in the Boardroom (Oxford, 2005); Debt’s Dominion: A History of Bankruptcy Law in America (Princeton, 2001); and numerous articles on bankruptcy, corporate law, financial regulation, Christianity and law, and other topics.

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Diálogos: Love Your Neighbor - a Neuro-Theological Discussion of the Second Greatest Commandment with Christy Vines
Oct
14

Diálogos: Love Your Neighbor - a Neuro-Theological Discussion of the Second Greatest Commandment with Christy Vines

Join the Octet Collaborative and Christy Vines for dinner and a discussion of race and difference that engenders intellectual hospitality, open dialogue and a rigorous inspection of ideas. Open to MIT Faculty and Staff.

Christy Vines, President and CEO of Ideos Institute, is a published writer, international speaker, and the executive producer of the 2022 documentary film, "Dialogue Lab: America," a moving take on the current state of division and polarization in America.

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Past Events

Diálogos: Are We in this Together? Cultivating the Virtues in a Pluralistic University, with Jennifer Herdt

February 15, 2024 - In an era of deep division and conflict, how should MIT think about the moral formation of its students? Does character matter, and should the university - particularly one focused on science and engineering such as MIT - play a role in building it? And how does one do so in a way that respects the pluralistic society that MIT happily supports? Prof. Jennifer Herdt led thought-provoking conversation in pursuit of intellectual hospitality. An essay by Prof. Herdt, summarizing many of the themes of her talk, may be downloaded here.

Jennifer A. Herdt is Gilbert L. Stark Professor of Christian Ethics at Yale University’s Divinity School.  She is the author, most recently, of Assuming Responsibility: Ecstatic Eudaimonism and the Call to Live Well(link is external).  Her 2019 book, Forming Humanity: Redeeming the German Bildung Tradition(link is external), was supported by a research fellowship from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.  She is also the author of Putting on Virtue: The Legacy of the Splendid Vices (link is external)(selected as a Choice Outstanding Academic Title), and of Religion and Faction in Hume’s Moral Philosophy(link is external), and has published widely on virtue ethics, early modern and modern moral thought, and political theology. She serves on the editorial boards of the Journal of Christian Ethics, Studies in Christian Ethics, and the Journal of Religion, and served as the 2020 President of the Society of Christian Ethics. From 2013-2021, she served as the academic dean of Yale Divinity School. She is currently researching more-than-human creaturely agency as a senior member of a research team that has received a $3.9M, 3-year collaborative grant from the Templeton Foundation(link is external) in 2020 to pursue projects in science-informed theological anthropology.

Diálogos: Conversations across Disagreement, Difference, and Discipline, with Alan Love

December 15, 2023 - What is the importance of academic collaboration across disciplines and lines of difference? How might the academic vocation be served - and better serve the common good - by the restoration of literal and figurative “common tables”? Dr. Alan Love led a discussion of the value of making the sacrifices necessary to preserve interdisciplinary dialogue and pursue intellectual hospitality.

Dr. Alan Love, Ph.D., is a professor in the College of Liberal Arts at the University of Minnesota. He also serves as director of the Minnesota Center for Philosophy of Science. Love’s research focuses on conceptual issues in biology and has concentrated on evolutionary developmental biology (Evo-devo), developmental biology, molecular biology, and paleontology (among others).  Love uses a combination of approaches to investigate a variety of philosophical questions concerning conceptual change, explanatory pluralism, knowledge structure, reductionism, the nature of historical science, and interdisciplinary epistemology. Other areas of interest include the role of history in philosophical research and the nature of intuitions generated by thought experiments in philosophical inquiry.

Diálogos: How Can Science Serve the Common Good? with Joshua Swamidass

October 19, 2023 - At a moment when science is of pivotal importance in addressing societal problems, societal distrust of science is on the rise. Dr. Joshua Swamidass led a conversation exploring the role of science and leading scientific institutions like MIT in restoring that trust, and ensuring that science serves the common good.

Dr. S. Joshua Swamidass is an associate professor in the Division of Laboratory and Genomic Medicine at Washington University in St Louis. He holds an MD and PhD (Information and Computer Sciences) from the University of California, Irvine. Both a scientist and a physician, he uses computational methods to study information at the intersection of medicine, chemistry, and biology. 

Diálogos: an Exploration of Mental Health with Nii Addy

April 12, 2023 - A discussion of why investigations of faith and mental health have historically ignored and even feared one another, and the mutual benefit of bringing them into a united conversation

Nii Addy is the Albert E. Kent Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Associate Professor of Cellular and Molecular Physiology and the inaugural Director of Scientist Diversity and Inclusion at Yale School of Medicine. He is also Director of the Faculty Mentoring Program for Minority Organization for Recruitment and Expansion (MORE) and co-chair of the Career Development Subcommittee of the Anti-Racism Task Force in the Yale Department of Psychiatry. He contributes to graduate student and postdoctoral training and to diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives through his efforts on campus and in scientific societies.

Diálogos: Sexuality, Gender, and Technology with Andy Crouch

February 23, 2023 - A discussion of how technology has impacted our deepest understanding of what it means to be human, and how we might enter into conversations about sexuality and gender with wisdom and compassion

Andy Crouch is partner for theology and culture at Praxis, an organization that works as a creative engine for redemptive entrepreneurship. His writing explores faith, culture, and the image of God in the domains of technology, power, leadership, and the arts. He is the author of five books (plus another with his daughter, Amy Crouch): The Life We're Looking For: Reclaiming Relationship in a Technological World, The Tech-Wise Family: Everyday Steps for Putting Technology in Its Proper Place, Strong and Weak: Embracing a Life of Love, Risk and True Flourishing, Playing God: Redeeming the Gift of Power, and Culture Making: Recovering Our Creative Calling.

Diálogos: The Overturning of Roe v. Wade with David Skeel

December 15, 2022 - A discussion of how we might pursue open and productive dialogue concerning abortion policy, and gain a better understanding of the intersection between faith, personal narratives, and politics

David Skeel is S. Samuel Arsht Professor of Corporate Law at the University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School. He is the author of True Paradox: How Christianity Makes Sense of Our Complex World (InterVarsity, 2014); The New Financial Deal: Understanding the Dodd-Frank Act and Its (Unintended) Consequences (Wiley, 2011); Icarus in the Boardroom (Oxford, 2005); Debt’s Dominion: A History of Bankruptcy Law in America (Princeton, 2001); and numerous articles on bankruptcy, corporate law, financial regulation, Christianity and law, and other topics.

Diálogos: Love Your Neighbor - a Neuro-Theological Discussion of the Second Greatest Commandment with Christy Vines

October 14, 2022 - A discussion of the neuroscience of tribalism and how we might engage in more civil dialogue about race and difference.

Christy Vines, President and CEO of Ideos Institute, is a published writer, international speaker, and the executive producer of the 2022 documentary film, "Dialogue Lab: America," a moving take on the current state of division and polarization in America.