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Science and the Three Monotheisms in the 21st Century, A New Partnership? (SSQ Granada 2002)

SSQ II: Science and the Three Monotheisms in the 21st Century, A New Partnership?
August 2002, Granada Spain

Welcome - Bob Russell (CTNS)
Monotheisms and Modern Science: Three Traditions, One Cosmos?
John Polkinghorne (Cambridge University) | Interview
Noah Efron (Bar Ilan University) | Interview
Bruno Guiderdoni (Paris Institute of Physics) | Interview
Natural Law and Divine Creation: Monotheistic Perspectives on Complexity and Emergence
Ayub Ommaya (Georgetown University)
Norbert Samuelson (Arizona State University)
George F.R. Ellis (University of Capetown)
Neuroscience and the Person in the Religious Traditions
Stephen Kosslyn (Harvard University)
Andrew Newberg (University of Pennsylvania)
Faraneh Vargha-Khadem (Institute of Child Health)
Biotechnology, Ethics, and the Spiritual Traditions
Carl Feit (Yeshiva University) | Interview
Munawar Anees (Interdisciplinary University of Paris) | Interview
William Hurlbut (Stanford University) | Interview
The Cloning and Stem Cell Controversies: Scientific, Theological, and Ethical Issues
Ted Peters and Gaymon Bennett (CTNS)
Modern Science, Contemporary Politics, and Living Traditions: Is there Hope for Peace?
Tsevi Mazeh (Tel Aviv University) | Interview
S. Jocelyn Bell Burnell (Open University) | Interview
Mehdi Golshani (Sharif University) | Interview
Closing Comments
Ian Barbour (Carlton College)


Science, Values, and the Limits of Knowledge (SSQ Tokyo 2002)
Science and the Three Monotheisms in the 21st Century, A New Partnership? (SSQ Granada 2002)
Life on a Threatened Planet - Genetic Controversy and Environmental Ethics (Berkeley 2002)
Science, Technology and Values: Worldviews in Dialogue (India 2002)
African Culture, Modern Science, and Religious Thought (Nigeria 2001)
Biology, Religion and Origins (Vancouver BC 2001)
Interpreting Evolution: Scientific and Religious Perspectives (Haverford 2001)
Eschatology, Immortality, and the Future of the Cosmos (Berkeley 2001)
Neuroscience, Religious Experience and the Self (Montreal 2001)
Genomics, Nanotechnology and Robotics (San Francisco 2001)
Dreams and Dreaming, Neuroscientific and Religious Visions (Los Angeles 2001)
Genetic Engineering and Food for the World (New York 2001)
Biological and Cosmological Evolution (Adelaide 2001)
Genes and Justice (Berkeley 2001)
Creativity, Spirituality, and Computing Technologies (SSQ San Jose 2000)
Evolution and Providence (Berkeley 2000)
Ethics, Values and Personhood (Seattle 2000)
Science and Suffering (Seattle 1998)
Events Index