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15 Dec, Physics & Art Mondays: Telling Storys, Making Worlds

With Ruth Müller (Professor of Science and Technology Policy, TUM Munich Center for Technology in Society) and Florian Dirnberger (Research group leader at the Center for Quantum Engineering in the Physics Department, TUM School of Natural Sciences)

Physics & Art Mondays
15 December 2025

Agenda
18:30 Get-together with light drinks and snacks
18:45 - 20:45 Telling Stories, Making Worlds
What gets to count as nature? For whom, and when? The documentary 'Storytelling for Earthly Survival' (2016) by filmmaker and activist Fabrizio Terranova is a cinematic portrait of scholar and feminist thinker Donna Haraway, whose groundbreaking work envisions more-than-human futures, collective survival, and ethical coexistence within the entangled worlds of nature, culture, and technoscience. With particular reference to Feminist Science and Technology Studies (STS), the subsequent panel discussion between Ruth Müller and Florian Dirnberger will focus on how one can develop methodologies to critically engage with science through sustainable and holistic thinking. The event is a collaboration with the seminar ‘Physics as Practice: Science and Society in the Making of Knowledge’ of the Department of Science, Technology and Society (TUM).

Venue: Academy of Fine Arts Munich, Akademiestr. 2 (Old Building), Old Assembly Hall,  room A.EG.01

 

 

15 Dec, Physics & Art Mondays: Telling Storys, Making Worlds

With Ruth Müller (Professor of Science and Technology Policy, TUM Munich Center for Technology in Society) and Florian Dirnberger (Research group leader at the Center for Quantum Engineering in the Physics Department, TUM School of Natural Sciences)

Physics & Art Mondays
15 December 2025

Agenda
18:30 Get-together with light drinks and snacks
18:45 - 20:45 Telling Stories, Making Worlds
What gets to count as nature? For whom, and when? The documentary 'Storytelling for Earthly Survival' (2016) by filmmaker and activist Fabrizio Terranova is a cinematic portrait of scholar and feminist thinker Donna Haraway, whose groundbreaking work envisions more-than-human futures, collective survival, and ethical coexistence within the entangled worlds of nature, culture, and technoscience. With particular reference to Feminist Science and Technology Studies (STS), the subsequent panel discussion between Ruth Müller and Florian Dirnberger will focus on how one can develop methodologies to critically engage with science through sustainable and holistic thinking. The event is a collaboration with the seminar ‘Physics as Practice: Science and Society in the Making of Knowledge’ of the Department of Science, Technology and Society (TUM).

Venue: Academy of Fine Arts Munich, Akademiestr. 2 (Old Building), Old Assembly Hall,  room A.EG.01

 

 

15 Dec, Physics & Art Mondays: Telling Storys, Making Worlds

With Ruth Müller (Professor of Science and Technology Policy, TUM Munich Center for Technology in Society) and Florian Dirnberger (Research group leader at the Center for Quantum Engineering in the Physics Department, TUM School of Natural Sciences)

Physics & Art Mondays
15 December 2025

Agenda
18:30 Get-together with light drinks and snacks
18:45 - 20:45 Telling Stories, Making Worlds
What gets to count as nature? For whom, and when? The documentary 'Storytelling for Earthly Survival' (2016) by filmmaker and activist Fabrizio Terranova is a cinematic portrait of scholar and feminist thinker Donna Haraway, whose groundbreaking work envisions more-than-human futures, collective survival, and ethical coexistence within the entangled worlds of nature, culture, and technoscience. With particular reference to Feminist Science and Technology Studies (STS), the subsequent panel discussion between Ruth Müller and Florian Dirnberger will focus on how one can develop methodologies to critically engage with science through sustainable and holistic thinking. The event is a collaboration with the seminar ‘Physics as Practice: Science and Society in the Making of Knowledge’ of the Department of Science, Technology and Society (TUM).

Venue: Academy of Fine Arts Munich, Akademiestr. 2 (Old Building), Old Assembly Hall,  room A.EG.01