Episodes
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Can the Anglican Church recover, after the resignation of Archbishop Justin Welby?
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With Australia's poor track record of adoption, particularly when it comes to Indigenous families, how can we rethink adoption in a way that puts both parents and children first?
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Episodes manquant?
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Reproductive justice was a key campaign issue for Kamala Harris. Now, after a landslide defeat, Australia could be set to follow in the U.S.'s footsteps.
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How a handful of media billionaires could determine the fate of the Western world.
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What’s on the other side of the near-death experience?
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What do dancing Mormons, blind dates, and superyachts have in common?
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The ancient game of Go is a teacher of spirituality, patience, colonisation, and world affairs. So what does it when a computer beats the world Go champion?
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Constant images of suffering and trauma have been channelled through our digital devices for the past 12 months. With some people switching off in the name of self-preservation, the moral question remains as to whether this is an act of ignorant privilege or practical necessity.
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The world’s oldest profession has long been an ethical talking point, but what does God have to say about it? And what do sex workers have to say about God?
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Who we are, how we got here, and where we're going
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How right-wing extremists are taking over the conservation conversation.
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Loneliness is as deadly as being a pack-a-day smoker, but is religion the antidote to this deadly problem?
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How is fathering different from parenting?
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Every major religion condemns theft as morally unacceptable. But is this moral position always absolute?
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UK comedian David Baddiel is terrified of death and deeply moved by Jewish tradition - but he's convinced God does not exist.
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We’re all entitled to feel offended, but what happens when outrage is weaponised towards more cynical and sinister ends?
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Domestic violence is a whole-of-society problem. But how are faith communities dealing with the current crisis?
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It was an ancient preoccupation, and now it's a modern obsession. So how has something as universal as sleep remained so mysterious? And what can the cultural and religious history of sleep, dreaming and insomnia teach us today?
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Across faith traditions, the pilgrimage is a sacred journey of spiritual transformation, steeped in history and geography. Pilgrimages can be powerful life-altering experiences, but they can also be dangerous.
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Our species has plenty of experience with death, but in many families the topic remains taboo.
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