Newsletter  Volume 6 Issue 12
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Upcoming Events


Lunch Colloquium
Paul Courtright
February 18, 2020


WEBCAST ONLY
Paul Courtright
February 18, 2020




Lunch Colloquium
Pearl Dowe
March 2, 2020


WEBCAST ONLY
Pearl Dowe
March 2, 2020


February 10, 2020

This issue of our newsletter is sent to members and friends of the Emory University Emeritus College (EUEC). I hope the newsletter will help keep you informed about our activities and help you feel connected with our members throughout the U.S.  On the left are links to our website and links to contact either me or the EUEC office.   

 
With best wishes,
Gray 


Gray F. Crouse
Director, EUEC
In this Issue:
DirectorMessage from the Director
 
We had yet another fascinating talk last week by John Banja. Some of us have probably considered what effect robots are having, and will have, on the workforce, but probably fewer have considered how artificial intelligence might affect the workforce. The talk led to an equally fascinating discussion. If you missed the talk, you can read Sidney Perkowitz's excellent article on the talk below and will soon be able to watch a video of the talk, thanks to Don O'Shea and his great work in preparing the video for posting. We are really fortunate to have members who are willing to write about our talks and who do such excellent jobs, as you no doubt are aware from previous reports. Sometimes there is a particularly apt fit between speaker and writer, as is the case in this issue with Sidney Perkowitz. In his article, Sidney cites a book review he wrote four years ago on the topic of artificial intelligence and whether it might replace humans, and also responds to an audience question about good films on AI.  It turns out that Sidney has reviewed many films on AI! If you notice a particular upcoming topic for which you would like to write an article that not only summarizes a talk but also reflects your own special interests and areas of expertise, please let Gretchen Schulz know!
 
We have been looking forward to Kristin Mann's talk next week, but we found out last Friday afternoon that she would have to cancel her talk due to a family emergency. Gretchen Schulz and her committee keep a list of possible speakers for future Lunch Colloquiums (a long one due to the extraordinary talent at Emory). Thanks to Gretchen's fast work in issuing an invitation and Paul Courtright's generous acceptance, we have a speaker for next week (and one we have wanted to hear for a long time). Many of you know Paul and are aware of his courage in writing on topics that can elicit strong public controversy. (Not that Paul is the first Emory faculty member to spark a religious controversy, as anyone who remembers Thomas J. J. Altizer -- the subject of the 1966 "Is God Dead?" TIME magazine cover - can attest!)  It will be a wonderful opportunity to hear from such a courageous scholar--and one who is a recent recipient of a Helibrun Fellowship.
 
It is always a great pleasure to announce our EUEC award winners and the date for the reception to honor them and the newest Heilbrun Fellowship recipients and our new members and donors. Please save the date April 16 on your calendar and read below to see who this year's awardees will be.
   
I am very grateful to Gretchen Schulz, Ann Hartle, and Marge Crouse for help with editing and proofing.  
LCFeb18TopLunch Colloquium--Tuesday, February 18

 







The Arrogant King and his Dutiful Daughter: A Cautionary Tale from Ancient India


The Luce Center
Room 130
11:30-1:00







Paul Courtright, Professor Emeritus of Religion  
 
 
Click here to read more below about this Lunch Colloquium


LCFeb3TopLunch Colloquium--Monday, February 3









Artificial Intelligence and the Western Workforce: Will AI Take Our Jobs?
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

John Banja, Professor, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Medical Ethicist, Center for Ethics, Emory University

 

Click here to read more below about this Lunch Colloquium 



FacAcTopFaculty Activities





Save the Date!  April 16, 2:00 - 4:00 p.m.


Our annual Awards and New Members Reception will be April 16 at 2:00 p.m. in Governors' Hall of the Miller-Ward Alumni House.  We will honor many of our members at this reception.

EUEC Faculty Awards of Distinction and the Distinguished Service Award

It is a great pleasure to announce the award winners for this year.  Many thanks to our Awards and Honors Committee for their work in determining the winners of this year's awards.  The Committee is chaired by Jim Roark with members Donna Brogan, Jim Keller, and Marianne Scharbo-DeHaan.  The recipients this year are:

EUEC Faculty Awards of Distinction
  • David Eltis, Professor Emeritus of History
  • Joseph E. Hardison, Professor of Medicine, Emeritus
  • Holly York, Senior Lecturer Emerita of French

EUEC Distinguished Service Award
  • Helen S. O'Shea, Professor of Nursing, Emerita

Heilbrun Distinguished Emeritus Fellowship 

 

  • Kristin Mann, Professor Emerita of History
  •  Oded Borowski, Professor Emeritus of Biblical Archaeology and Hebrew

 

New Members and Donors 

 

We will also recognize members who have joined in the past year and those who have donated to EUEC in the past year. This is a large and fantastic group and we hope many of you will be present to celebrate them!

 

 

LCFeb18BotLunch Colloquium--Tuesday, February 18


The Arrogant King and his Dutiful Daughter:  
A Cautionary Tale from Ancient India

Paul Courtright, Professor Emeritus of Religion
   
Currently in the final year of the work on Indian history and religion that his recent Heilbrun grant has helped to support, Paul will offer an illustrated talk on a "Cautionary Tale" he examined in the course of his research. It features a number of Hindu gods as well as the king and daughter referenced in the title of the tale. Hating the god whom his daughter opts to marry, the king refuses to let them participate in a fire sacrifice, the ritual meant to sustain the world. We won't spoil the suspense about what ensues here (Paul will let us know how it works out during our gathering, of course). We'll only say, as he does, that the tale might be compared with Greek or Shakespearean tragedies and, though deeply Indian, resonates as they do with universal themes of power, loyalty, violence, love, and "the ultimate order of things."
 
About Paul Courtright

Paul received his BA from Grinnell College, MDiv from Yale University, and PhD from Princeton University. He taught at Williams College and the University of North Carolina at Greensboro before coming to Emory. His teaching interests focus on religions of South Asia, particularly Hinduism; religious change in nineteenth century India, and visual cultures in colonial India. He is the author of Ganesa: Lord of Obstacles, Lord of Beginnings (Oxford, 1985), co-editor of From the Margins of Hindu Marriage: Essays in Gender, Culture and Religion (Oxford, 1995), and various articles in the Encyclopedia of Religion (Macmillan, 1987; second edition,2005). He has received research grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the American Council of Learned Societies, the American Institute of Indian Studies, the National Humanities Center, and The Bill and Carol Fox Center for Humanistic Inquiry at Emory University. He is currently completing The Goddess and the Dreadful Practice (Oxford, forthcoming). He is also conducting research on the role of satire and caricature in late eighteenth and early nineteenth century India.

    
LCFeb3BotLunch Colloquium--Monday, February 3


Bracing for the Oncoming Wave of Artificial Intelligence:

Its Likely Impact on Jobs, Work, and Human Flourishing


John Banja, Professor, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Medical Ethicist, Center for Ethics, Emory University
 
Computer researchers, psychologists, philosophers, and other academic experts have been working on artificial intelligence (AI) since the 1960s. The field became famous for over-promising and under-delivering, expressed in a standing joke: "We will achieve true AI twenty years from now, and always will." But now that AI has left academia for the real world, some reactions see the apocalypse coming. Elon Musk, Bill Gates, and Stephen Hawking have all expressed concerns about the dire existential effects AI will have on humanity. 

 

Fortunately, John Banja began his talk on AI with a useful categorization that puts things in perspective. Current AI is now in a state of "narrow intelligence," meaning it does some specific things like playing chess very well. Next on the list to achieve is "general intelligence," replicating the qualities of reasoning, planning, problem solving, and so on that define a successfully functioning human brain. This lies decades away. The final, perhaps truly apocalyptic stage is "superintelligence," where artificial brains and minds become far superior to humanity in their speed and scope, perhaps achieved within a large fraction of a century.

 

Even narrow intelligence is useful in society, for example in medicine, as Banja pointed out. AI in the form of neural nets, large collections of processing nodes linked somewhat like brain neurons, can be trained to recognize significant patterns in medical images with the same success rate as that of human physicians. These systems have successfully diagnosed diabetic retinopathy from retinal images and identified some forms of skin cancer. A more general application, "Deep Patient," was trained on the medical records of 1.6 million hospital patients and outperformed other methods in predicting what diseases might develop in a test group of 100,000 patients. Maybe, Banja speculated, the doctor's office visit of the future will be a matter of engaging an AI that makes a diagnosis and issues a prescription. Diagnosis could also be done through a smartphone, giving people across the globe ready access to medical care.

 

This is an example of AI becoming sufficiently powerful to match and extend human capabilities. If that were to happen, Banja went on to note, then unlike older technological upheavals that freed people from labor so they could think, AI might take over thinking as well. The result could be untold effects on the jobs available to people, with disastrous ripples in the general economy that result in new, perhaps undesirable, political arrangements. And if alternatively AI creates a world of greater productivity and material comfort, can people find meaning where instead of a required "job," they must bring passion and creativity to discretionary "work" that they love to do?

 

Judging by the full room, and the appreciative reactions to Professor Banja's energetic delivery, people were both engrossed and entertained by his talk. The interest continued in a long Q&A period that covered topics from the use of AI in warfare to potential Chinese leadership in AI and the human-AI interaction.

 

And at this point, your reviewer can expand the answer to a question that also came up after the talk: What are some good films about AI? I've reviewed many, and I recommend these four: Colossus: The Forbin Project (1970), a truly frightening story about an AI that takes over the world; the wonderful Blade Runner (1982) coupled with the less wonderful but still interesting Blade Runner 2049 (2017), and Ex Machina (2014). All give insights into the human-AI interaction and show how hard it would be to really construct an artificial mind (and body) that functions at a fully human level.

 
--Sidney Perkowitz
 

FacAcBotFaculty Activities


Timothy McDonough
Professor Emeritus of Theater Studies



Tim McDonough performed his "A Bunch of Different Ways I'd Like to Die" on October 19 at the 2019 United Solo Theater Festival in New York City.  Only eleven projects out of one hundred twenty were chosen for "Critics Choice" and Tim's was one of those.  Some of the comments in the Critics Choice review included "From dying during a day out in New York City to dying onstage and receiving a standing ovation, 'A Bunch of Different Ways I'd Like to Die' throws ideas at the wall to see what sticks" and "What makes Mr. McDonough a brilliant artist is how he draws from personal experience to speak to the human condition."
 
The entire review may be read by clicking here

 

 

 

Jagdish Sheth

Charles H. Kellstadt Chair in Marketing

 

 

 

Jag Sheth is receiving India's third highest civilian award, the Padma Bhushan, for literature and education. The award, which was announced on India's 71st Republic Day, recognizes Indians who have made exemplary contributions on a global scale and generated national pride. This is the first time the award is being given to honor efforts in the marketing and business discipline. Jag is one of only four Indian Americans among the 140 Padma Awardees for 2020.

 

Jag is a member of our Executive Committee, and he and his wife Madhu are underwriters of our annual Sheth Distinguished Lecture.  

 

The complete report on Jag's award can be read by clicking here

  

 

 

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WalkBotWalking the Campus with Dianne

  
All aboard!   The photo from our last walk shows an old door and signage from the Depot, located on Eagle Row just beyond the bridge that crosses over the roadway.

According to an Emory Magazine article from Autumn 2000:

The depot was constructed in 1916 as a station for the Seaboard Air Line Railway. Until 1947, the official name of the station was "Emory, Georgia." That year it was changed to "Emory University" to better reflect its ties to the school. At one time, travelers could board the Silver Comet at Emory's small-town station and get off in the bustling megalopolis of New York City without ever having to switch trains.

Passenger service from the depot was discontinued in the fall of 1969, and the following year parcel service was stopped. For a short time, the long, narrow red brick building was used as a student art gallery, and then in 1972 it was converted into the Emory Employees Federal Credit Union. At one time, rumors circulated that the station would be turned into an English pub, but in 1982 the building became The Depot restaurant.
As you can see in the photo below, the old Depot Sign is still in place:



In more recent times, the building became a student hangout called Dooley's Den, and then on August 27, 2016, Kaldi's opened a full-service cafe at the Depot.  Which, by the way, sells a tasty avocado sandwich, among other good treats.   

.


For our next walk, let's go from a historical space to a fairly new space that features some modern art.  Hint:  We've discovered another piece of modern art in this building before. 

Where will you find this on the Emory Campus?




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Emory University Emeritus College

The Luce Center
825 Houston Mill Road NE #206

Atlanta, GA 30329

   

Emory University Emeritus College, The Luce Center, 825 Houston Mill Road NE #206, Atlanta, GA 30329
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