Winter 2008

Faith in Science

"In the beginning God..."

"Science and religion...are friends, not foes, in the common quest for knowledge. Some people may find this surprising, for there's a feeling throughout our society that religious belief is outmoded, or downright impossible, in a scientific age. I don't agree. In fact, I'd go so far to say tha if people in this so-called "scientific age" knew a bit more about science than many of them actually do, they'd find it easier to share my view."

Theologian and physicist John Polkinghorne, Quarks,Chaos and Christianity

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Podcasts
  • Interview with Dr. Stephen Meyer
    Dr. Stephen Meyer, senior fellow at the Discovery Institute, discusses Intelligent Design v Darwinism, Science v Religion, and his part in the new documentary "Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed".click on the title    Dr. Stephen Meyer Interview...
  • 95 the Talk Show
    We discuss the current issue on Intelligent Design
  • 95 the Talk Show
    Dr. Harry Poe interview...
Previous Editions
Articles from the Latest Issue

Ryan Lutz
Poetry
Metamorpheus     No matter how prosaic, practical Or boring we may be, like everybody else We have dreams.                    Leave earth behind, go flying like pelicans Through air, the most respected of us stroll In crowded pavements naked as...

Dr. Michael Salazar
On the Antithesis in Science
You will have noticed, I trust, how many today treat the subject of faith as peripheral to one’s daily experience.  Christian and non-Christians may differ in their faith, but they more-or-less believe the same things.  They both think they...

Stephen C. Meyer
The Demarcation of Science and Religion
The History of Science and Religion in the Western Tradition (Garland Publishing) January 1, 2000 (reprinted with permission of the author) Introduction What is science? What is religion? How do the two intersect? Historians of science address these questions...

Dr. Dennis Sullivan
A Thirty-Year Perspective on Personhood: How Has the Debate Changed?
From Ethics and Medicine, 17:3 (2001): 177-186.   Introduction The concept of personhood remains the central and enduring focus of any intelligent discussion of bioethical norms. Whether the perspective is secular or religious, couched in theological discourse or philosophical...