Lecture 62: The Myth of Rustam and the Formation of Collective Unconscious

Please Note: Due to downed trees at Montgomery College, the lecture is cancelled for tonight and substitute night for this lecture will be on Thursday June 27th at 7:30 pm
When: Thursday June 27, 2013 – 7:30 PM
Where: Montgomery Community College (Rockville Campus) – Humanity Building (HU), Conference Room 009 (Get Directions, Campus Map )

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Speaker: Dr. Aram Hessami
Language: Farsi

Synopsis:

What does the Myth of Rustam reveal about the Iranian psyche? Is this myth a unique cultural narrative or a universal human experience? Could it be both? Offering an interpretive understanding of this myth, the talk will explore the tension between the particular and the universal. Through the analysis of this myth, I will explore the post-modern approach to the understanding of this myth and what myths in general tend to disclose about human beings.

About the Speaker:

Dr. Aram Hessami is a professor of Political Science and Philosophy at Montgomery College in Rockville Maryland. He received his BA, MA, and Doctorate in Political Science from The George Washington University in 1993. Dr. Hessami’s specialization is in Western Political Thought and Post-modern philosophy. His research and publications are focused on Democratic Transition, Discourse Theory and Social Change. He co-edited a book, Contemporary Social Discourse. He has presented his papers and ideas in various colleges and universities including University of Massachusetts, University of Boston, University of South Carolina, University of Maryland Baltimore County, Baltimore School of Law, and The George Washington University. Dr. Hessami is on the Board of Directors and a vice-president of Iranian Academic & Professional Association. He is a on the Board of Damavand Cultural Society. Dr. Hessami is one of the founders and the Director of Institute for Advanced International Studies in Washington D.C.

Fee (including dinner): $5 Students, $15 Public

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Lecture 61: NeuroEngineering is the Future!

When: Thursday May 9, 2013 – 7:30 PM
Where: Montgomery Community College (Rockville Campus) – Humanity Building (HU), Conference Room 009 (Get Directions, Campus Map )

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Speaker: Dr. Yousef Salimpour, Ph.D.
Language: English

Synopsis:

We are on the cusp of a broad revolution, one with startling implications for perception, cognition, emotion, and indeed, personal identity. Still in its relative infancy, this rapidly progressing field is poised to move from perceptual aids such as cochlear implants to devices that will enhance and speed up thought to the ultimate goal of researchers, that of downloading the mind from its bound state in the body to a platform-independent existence. Neuroengineering draws on the fields of computational neuroscience, experimental neuroscience, clinical neurology, electrical engineering and signal processing of living neural tissue, and encompasses elements from robotics, cybernetics, computer engineering, neural tissue engineering, materials science, and nanotechnology. Prominent goals in the field include restoration and augmentation of human function via direct interactions between the nervous system and artificial devices. This brief survey covers the science that will make these transformations possible. It begins by describing very briefly how the brain works from an engineering point of view, including an overview of the architecture of the brain. It then examines the current state-of-the-art neural technologies, including devices that read from the brain, and devices that can write information into the brain. It also describes how insights from the nascent field of consciousness studies show how the full transfer of the soul could be realized. Finally, it considers what it would be like to be a mind unbound, and the possibilities beyond those found in ordinary corporeal life.

About the Speaker:

Dr. Yousef Salimpour is currently a postdoctoral research fellow at the Department of Biomedical Engineering and Neurology Department in Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. He has received his B.Sc. and M.Sc. in electrical engineering and biomedical sciences from Sharif University of Technology and Ph.D. in NeuroScience from Iran’s Institute for Research in fundamental Sciences. Dr. Salimpour has served as an editor for several biomedical engineering journals and conferences and published articles mainly covering psychophysical and neurobiological data analysis. His interests include non-invasive brain stimulation in humans, optimal control, and Parkinson’s disease.

Fee (including dinner): $5 Students, $15 Public

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Lecture 60: Iranian Culture: Its Sense and Sensibilities in a Post-modern World

When: Thursday April 11, 2013 – 7:30 PM
Where: Montgomery Community College (Rockville Campus) – Humanity Building (HU), Conference Room 009 (Get Directions, Campus Map )

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Speaker: Dr. Hossein Seif Zadeh, PhD
Language: Farsi

Synopsis:

Concerned with the diminishing social cohesion in Iranian social life, Professor Seifzadeh will de-construct some of the key tendencies of Iranian culture in three domains of mind, social context, and behavior. Dr. Seifzadeh will provide an analysis of our existential social psyche in a nation long in history and cultural influences. The main question, thus, becomes whether or not as a thriving community, we –as Iranians-are able to reconcile the cosmopolitan demands of a post-modern era and globalization with that which is uniquely Iranian.

About the Speaker:

Professor Seifzadeh has accomplished his Ph.D. at University of California-Santa Barbara. His post-doctorate was at the Center for Middle Eastern Studies, at Harvard University, where he served twice as a research fellow and twice at the Middle Institute in DC. He has more than 200 articles in Persian and English, in addition to 22 published books. 3 books over Iranian foreign policy plus 1 on an “Iranian approach to theory-building” is under review for getting permit for publishing in Iran. He has attended many conferences around the world, and now is a part-time lecturer of politics at Montgomery college-Rockville.

Fee (including dinner): $5 Students, $15 Public

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