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Vol.3-1, Ash Wednesday 2004
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Darwin's Religious Odyssey
That he directed in his will that Innes officiate at his funeral and burial in the parish churchyard, until prominent friends arranged for him to be interred with Britain's famous in its national shrine? These are among the many biographical facts that ap
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Rebuilding the Matrix: Science and Faith in the 21st Century
In this book, two decades in the making, Denis Alexander, a molecular immunologist at St. Edmunds College, Cambridge University, presents a comprehensive, closely argued, and well written historical, sociological, philosophical, and metaphysical-theologic
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Invitation to join the ST&F Network
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In the Spotlight: Some Network members take a bow
In this new feature, we invite our members to introduce themselves with short biographies. Please send your own bio-sketch to the Editor. Give your email address if you wish others to contact you.
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Network Convener speculates on myth, miracle, and the God of the Hot Big Bang
ST&F Network Convener, the Rev. Barbara Smith-Moran, was invited to participate in the Public Lecture Series organized by the Dialogue on Science, Ethics and Religion, a program of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, in Washington, D.C. On 19 February, she offered a theological response to a keynote talk by eminent astronomer and cosmologist Michael Turner, of the National Science Foundation and the University of Chicago.
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Science-and-religion talks at Sewanee and Vanderbilt in March
The Reverend Dr. Sjoerd L. Bonting, S.O.Sc., Episcopal priest and biochemist from the Netherlands will be in Tennessee in March to lecture and preach on a variety of science-and-religion topics at the University of the South (Sewanee) and at Vanderbilt University.
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"Intelligent Design" theory: No way for science to behave
The Episcopal Church, at its 1982 General Convention, resolved that creationism is unsuitable science for public education. In the past ten years or so, an updated version of creationism, called "intelligent design" theory (ID) has been proposed as legitimate science. ID is a well-dressed form of "scientific creationism," and its primary spokespersons are Michael Behe (a biochemist), William Dembski (a mathematician), and Philip Johnson (a lawyer).
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