Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgement
- Part One Science and Society
- 1 Science and Human Experience: (Mephistopheles Is Alive and Well and Living in the Space Age)
- 2 Does Science Undermine our Values?
- 3 Can Science Serve Mankind?
- 4 Modern Science and Contemporary Discomfort: Metaphor and Reality
- 5 Faith and Science
- 6 Art and Science
- 7 Fraud in Science
- 8 Why Study Science? The Keys to the Cathedral
- 9 Is Evolution a Theory? A Modest Proposal
- 10 The Silence of the Second
- 11 Introduction to Copenhagen
- 12 The Unpaid Debt
- Part Two Thought and Consciousness
- Part Three On the Nature and Limits of Science
- References
5 - Faith and Science
from Part One - Science and Society
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2014
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgement
- Part One Science and Society
- 1 Science and Human Experience: (Mephistopheles Is Alive and Well and Living in the Space Age)
- 2 Does Science Undermine our Values?
- 3 Can Science Serve Mankind?
- 4 Modern Science and Contemporary Discomfort: Metaphor and Reality
- 5 Faith and Science
- 6 Art and Science
- 7 Fraud in Science
- 8 Why Study Science? The Keys to the Cathedral
- 9 Is Evolution a Theory? A Modest Proposal
- 10 The Silence of the Second
- 11 Introduction to Copenhagen
- 12 The Unpaid Debt
- Part Two Thought and Consciousness
- Part Three On the Nature and Limits of Science
- References
Summary
Why do faith and science often seem to be in conflict? Is such conflict necessary? Past confrontations such as those involving Galileo are now acknowledged as unnecessary. Will current confrontations also seem unnecessary 350 years from now?
This essay is based on a talk given in 1983 on the occasion of the discourse of His Holiness Pope John Paul II for the Inauguration of the Symposium organized for the 350th Anniversary of the publication of the book by Galileo Galilei entitled Dialogo sopra i due massimi sistemi del mondo.
It is gratifying to hear the courageous and thoughtful discourse of His Holiness for the inauguration of this symposium organized on the occasion of the 350th anniversary of the publication of the book by Galileo Galilei entitled Dialogo sopra i due massimi sistemi del mondo.
To address ourselves to those issues producing unnecessary confrontation between science and faith in the spirit so movingly expressed by John Paul, to follow the wish of Saint Robert Bellarmine “that useless tensions and harmful rigidities between faith and science be avoided,” we must turn our attention to current propositions that produce controversy. Today these are often biological: such questions as the origin of intellect, the nature of consciousness, the meaning of soul, the construction from ordinary materials of the special entity that is ourselves and the definition of life itself.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Science and Human ExperienceValues, Culture, and the Mind, pp. 57 - 58Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2014