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Professor John Hull has been totally blind for 10 years. Managing at work is easy, he says, with a bit of patience and ingenuity, but at home—unable to read or to see the smile of his child—he is confronted by his irretrievable loss. He has come to see his blindness as a gift of God’s grace. The subject of discussion in this program is how one can believe in a loving God when there is so much suffering in the world; the issue is debated by a rabbi, a former Church of England minister, and a vicar’s wife whose daughter has Down’s syndrome. (28 minutes)



 
    

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Part of the Series : Right or Wrong? A Discussion of Ethical Issues
     


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Responding to the Handicapped

There is a tendency to think of people with disabilities as one group facing exactly the same challenges and to treat them as if their disabilities are the most significant thing about them. On the other hand, people with disabilities have to deal no...(more details)
 
Understanding Hearing Loss

This program explains sound, hearing, hearing loss, and the relationship between listening to speech and different kinds of hearing loss. It includes realistic simulations of what speech sounds like with different kinds of hearing loss, and useful hi...(more details)
 
Green Medicines

The rainforests of the world are our most prominent pharmacy and drugstore. More than a third of all prescription medicines in the western world are derived from rainforest plants. Yet, at the present rate of destruction of these forests worldwide, w...(more details)
 
The Great Health Care Debate

This program with Bill Moyers examines the role of the media and special interest groups in the demise of national health care reform. More than $100 million has been spent on public relations, advertising, lobbying, and lawyering in connection with ...(more details)
 
Signing and Language

Scientists have only recently begun to show interest in signing as language; the common assumption was simply that sign language was a kind of substitute for the spoken word, using the hands to form letters and words. But now linguists have come to r...(more details)
 


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