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If Christians Read Scripture Like Jews Do, Continued (Ari Lamm): Rabbi Dr. Ari Lamm returns to continue discussing the fascinating and fruitful ways that Jews approach studying Scripture. Dr. Lamm's Orthodox Jewish upbringing taught him to embrace the view of the Hebrew Bible as layered, complex, and challenging—for, ... by The Biblical MindUNLIMITED
The Knowledge Crisis and Misinformation in Biblical Perspective (Bonnie Kristian)
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The Knowledge Crisis and Misinformation in Biblical Perspective (Bonnie Kristian)
ratings:
Length:
41 minutes
Released:
Nov 18, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Constant cries of "fake news" and misinformation point to a central issue in our culture: we have far too much information from far too many sources, and we do not know whom to trust. Whether captivated by online communities and YouTube personalities or glued to Twitter and news sites, we consume a lot of content but remain ignorant, apathetic, and anxious.
In this episode, Dru interviews Bonnie Kristian about her new book Untrustworthy: The Knowledge Crisis Breaking Our Brains, Polluting Our Politics, and Corrupting Christian Community. They discuss the dangers of our culture's approach to knowledge, the importance of emotion and tradition in developing our beliefs, and how our daily practices shape our knowledge-acquisition. As we critically evaluate our habits, we can learn to better cultivate our attention and equip ourselves to receive and consider information.
Bonnie Kristian is a journalist and author. Currently, she writes the column "The Lesser Kingdom" at Christianity Today. Her work has been featured in The New York Times, USA Today, Politico, and The Daily Beast. Additionally, she holds a Master's degree in Christian Thought from Bethel Seminary.
Show notes:
0:00 The dangers of the knowledge crisis
4:30 Habituation from media
6:50 Emotion and reason in the evangelical world
8:57 The role of tradition
10:52 Good epistemic practices and information overload
14:28 Trustworthy guides and sources of information
20:18 Blind-spots in reporting
24:03 Bonnie's interest in epistemology
28:00 The influence of YouTube and TikTok
32:48 Can we escape our bad knowledge systems?
35:35 Practices to develop right thinking
Show notes by Micah Long
In this episode, Dru interviews Bonnie Kristian about her new book Untrustworthy: The Knowledge Crisis Breaking Our Brains, Polluting Our Politics, and Corrupting Christian Community. They discuss the dangers of our culture's approach to knowledge, the importance of emotion and tradition in developing our beliefs, and how our daily practices shape our knowledge-acquisition. As we critically evaluate our habits, we can learn to better cultivate our attention and equip ourselves to receive and consider information.
Bonnie Kristian is a journalist and author. Currently, she writes the column "The Lesser Kingdom" at Christianity Today. Her work has been featured in The New York Times, USA Today, Politico, and The Daily Beast. Additionally, she holds a Master's degree in Christian Thought from Bethel Seminary.
Show notes:
0:00 The dangers of the knowledge crisis
4:30 Habituation from media
6:50 Emotion and reason in the evangelical world
8:57 The role of tradition
10:52 Good epistemic practices and information overload
14:28 Trustworthy guides and sources of information
20:18 Blind-spots in reporting
24:03 Bonnie's interest in epistemology
28:00 The influence of YouTube and TikTok
32:48 Can we escape our bad knowledge systems?
35:35 Practices to develop right thinking
Show notes by Micah Long
Released:
Nov 18, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (90)
- 45 min listen