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Sobre nosotros

Profs and Pints (https://www.profsandpints.com) brings professors and other college instructors into bars, cafes, and other venues to give fascinating talks or to conduct instructive workshops. They cover a wide range of subjects, including history, politics, popular culture, horticulture, literature, creative writing, and personal finance. Anyone interested in learning and in meeting people with similar interests should join. Lectures are structured to allow at least a half hour for questions and an additional hour for audience members to meet each other. Admission to Profs and Pints events requires the purchase of tickets, either in advance (through the ticket link provided in event descriptions) or at the door to the venue. Many events sell out in advance. Your indication on Meetup of your intent to attend an event constitutes neither a reservation nor payment for that event.

Although Profs and Pints has a social mission--expanding access to higher learning while offering college instructors a new income source--it is NOT a 501c3. It was established as a for-profit company in hopes that, by developing a profitable business model, it would be able to spread to other communities much more quickly than a nonprofit dependent on philanthropic support. That said, it is welcoming partners and collaborators as it seeks to build up audiences and spread to new cities. For more information email profsandpints@hotmail.com.

Thank you for your interest in Profs and Pints.

Regards,

Peter Schmidt

Eventos próximos

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  • Profs & Pints Philadelphia: Satanic Panics

    Profs & Pints Philadelphia: Satanic Panics

    Black Squirrel Club, 1049 Sarah St, Philadelphia, PA, US

    Profs and Pints Philadelphia presents: “Satanic Panics,” a look at waves of fear of demonic activity as an American tradition, with Luxx Mishou, cultural historian and former instructor at the U.S. Naval Academy and area community colleges.

    The 1980s found the United States gripped by fear of Satanic cults targeting children. They were believed to be corrupting young ones in daycare centers and tempting teens through subliminal messages on heavy metal albums or through the quiet inclusion of demonic rituals in role-playing games. Satanic serial killers supposedly stalked the suburbs. Doctors helped patients uncover what were claimed to be repressed memories of ritualistic satanic abuse.

    Parents, police, and politicians were urged to protect impressionable youths from both moral and physical danger. With Satanic cults deemed to be a real and material threat, it was a frightening time for everyone, including those who suddenly came under suspicion for doing evil deeds.

    Then, suddenly, it all faded from public consciousness, just as surely as did eighties fads such mullet haircuts, leg warmers, and Cabbage Patch Kids.

    Why did it all start? Why did it stop? And has this happened before or since?

    Hear such questions tackled by Luxx Mishou, a cultural historian and media specialist who has long researched the devious and villainous in cultural artifacts. She’ll discuss moral panics as a longstanding cultural tradition, with each new one stemming from fear of cultural shifts and shaped by the time and place where it occurred. Among the panics we’ll look into are the Red Scare of the 1950s and the public response to the gruesome 1969 murders committed by the Manson Family.

    Delving into the 1980s panic, Mishou will describe how it began with the 1980 publication of psychiatrist Lawrence Pazder’s memoir Michelle Remembers, detailing the suppressed memories of ritualistic abuse reportedly suffered by a patient. As that book quickly became a best seller, its ideas saturated American culture. A California daycare center became the focus of a three-year investigation, followed by three years of trials, based on allegations that its owner had engaged in secret ritualistic abuse of the children in its care.

    Mishou will lead you through the media that convinced the public that devil worshipers were among them, and she’ll talk about how reactions to imagined threats can have very real social costs. (Advance tickets: $13.50 plus processing fees. Doors: $17, or $15 with a student ID. Doors open at 3:30 pm. Talk starts at 4:30.)

    Image by Canva.

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    15 asistentes
  • Profs & Pints Philadelphia: The Neanderthals Among Us

    Profs & Pints Philadelphia: The Neanderthals Among Us

    Black Squirrel Club, 1049 Sarah St, Philadelphia, PA, US

    Profs and Pints Philadelphia presents: “The Neanderthals Among Us,” on the genetic legacy of our ancestors’ pairings with Homo neanderthalensis and what such genes tell us about prehistoric life, with Alexander Platt, evolutionary geneticist and senior research scientist at University of Pennsylvania's Perelman School of Medicine.

    [Advance tickets: $13.50 plus processing fees, available at https://events.ticketleap.com/tickets/profs-and-pints-black-squirrel/neanderthals-among-us .]

    “Extinction” is a slippery word. Neanderthals went extinct tens of thousands of years ago, yet in a sense they’re more genetically present on Earth than ever given all of the markers of Neanderthal ancestry found mixed in the genes of the eight billion Homo sapiens around today. Moreover, Neanderthals aren't the only type of humans whose extinctions weren’t the end of the line.

    Come to Philadelphia’s Black Squirrel Club to learn about fascinating research on the relationship between Neanderthals and modern humans being done by the University of Pennsylvania’s Tishkoff Lab. That lab, broadly devoted to studying genetic variation in global populations, generated worldwide headlines in February with a study finding that most of our Neanderthal ancestry appears to come from the pairing of male Neanderthals with Homo sapiens females

    Dr. Alexander Platt, lead co-author of the recent study, will talk about what we know about human-Neanderthal interactions and the major questions that have yet to be answered.

    You’ll learn how fossil evidence helps us know where and when individuals from various early human groups lived, while anatomical similarities between them let us speculate about their respective migration histories and their relationships. Genetic evidence, from both modern humans and samples of ancient DNA, offers us fresh insights into the connections between some of them.

    Dr. Platt will talk about how modern humans and Neanderthals shared a common ancestor over 500,000 years ago. They then spent hundreds of thousands of years evolving on separate continents, only to encounter each other repeatedly over the last 250,000 years, during which their interactions and interbreeding left each carrying a complex set of genetic relics of the other.

    Exactly how and why such pairings took place is one of the key mysteries that Dr. Platt and his colleagues are working to solve. To get a better sense of how sex differences shaped those interactions, the researchers contrast genetic diversity in non-sex chromosomes with genetic diversity in the X chromosome, more reflective of the history of women than men.

    You’ll emerge from the talk with a much better understanding of how breakthroughs in genetics are contributing to our understanding of human evolution, as well as a recognition that our own genetic makeup tells us about our roots in prehistory. (Doors: $17, or $15 with a student ID. Guests are welcome to arrive any time after 5:30. Talk starts at 6:30.)

    Image: A reconstruction of a Neanderthal man on display at the Neanderthal Museum in Mettman, Germany (Neanderthal Museum / Wikimedia Commons).

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    5 asistentes

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