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Christine Rosen is a fellow of the Ethics and Public Policy Center and an adjunct scholar of the American Enterprise Institute. She has served as a senior fellow of the Independent Women's Forum, and writes for The New Atlantis. Her areas of research include bioethics and contemporary genetics, the history of the American eugenics movement, and women's history.
People, People who Poke People . . . For several years, Christine Rosen has been writing a series of articles for The New Atlantis about the technologies of everyday life. Treating everything from computer games and personal identity (in "Playgrounds of the Self") to the effects of the proliferation of images in our culture, mediated by PhotoShop, Powerpoint, and other technologies (in "The Image Culture"), to online dating services (in "Romance in the Information Age"), Rosen has skillfully scrutinized how new ways of mediating space, time, and relationships are not simply new ways of accomplishing venerable ends, but, all too often, profoundly new practices with deep effects on the soul. . . .
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Christine Rosen, on how and why early 20th century American religious leaders encouraged eugenics in the name of moral progress (MARS HILL AUDIO Journal, ) MHT-070.2.2
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