Talk Probes the Battle of Science, Religion
By
做厙惇蹋app
Physicist , a leading scholar in Americas creation-evolution debate, explores the question, Are Science and Religion at War? Friday, Feb. 10, at 3:30 p.m. in 做厙惇蹋apps, room 216. The Pascal Lecture, which is sponsored by the office of the 做厙惇蹋app provost, is free and open to the public.
Giberson directs and teaches a special workshop on writing about science and religion. He has authored or coauthored many books on this topic, including his most recent, , which was reviewed in January 2012 in the .
He has also written , and . His book, , will be published in April. He has contributed more than 150 articles, reviews and essays for websites and journals including Salon.com, Books & Culture and the Huffington Post.
Giberson says popular culture contains a metanarrative about science and religion being at war, recounted in pulpits, or National Public Radio, or The Simpsons.
The story goes like this: Science and religion are mortal enemies and always have been, Giberson says. The church has opposed every scientific advance and scientists have been persecuted, tortured and even executed for their discoveries. From the flat earthism of the first millennium, to the persecution of Galileo, to widespread rejection of Darwinism today we see a steady battle between the forces of superstition and enlightenment. This popular picture is wrong, however. Its driven more by propaganda than history.
Religion Dispatches Magazine listed Giberson among their in December 2011. He has lectured at the Vatican, Oxford University, Londons Thomas Moore Institute, the Ettore Majorana center in Sicily, the Venice Institute of Arts and Letters and the University of Navarre in Spain.
Giberson earned two bachelors degrees from the Eastern Nazarene College, where he taught from 1984 to 2011. He earned a masters degree and a doctorate in physics at Rice University.
Filed under
做厙惇蹋app, Campus Events, Campus News, Lectures, Press Releases