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By John Marks Templeton

Religious Evolution: Scientists talk about Their ideals describes the highbrow and emotional trips traveled through esteemed scientists around the world. Charles Birch, S. Jocelyn Bell Burnell, Larry Dossey, Owen Gingerich, Peter E. Hodgson, Stanley L. Jaki, Arthur Peacocke, John Polkinghorne, Russell Stannard, and automobile Friedrich von Weizsacker supply bills in their spirituality and medical inquiry.

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Extra info for Spiritual Evolution: Scientists Discuss Their Beliefs

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S. Lewis once said. In contrast, opportunities to gain wisdom through suffering are abundant! I grew up in a deeply religious culture, the cotton-farming prairies of central Texas. We regarded ourselves as inhabitants of not just the Bible Belt but of the buckle of the Bible Belt. Growing up, fundamentalist Christianity was my religious sustenance which, of course, I never questioned as a child. The church was the social institution around which rural society orbited, and I was caught up in it.

As I used ever more powerful computers for my astrophysics researches, it occurred to me that the IBM 7094 could make a nice demonstration of one of Kepler’s particularly tedious problems. Kepler complained that his initial attempt to determine an orbit for the planet Mars had cost him at least seventy tries. The computer handily solved it in the minimum possible number, nine iterations. Electronic computers were then still something of a novelty, and my account, “The Computer Versus Kepler,” received unexpectedly wide publicity.

Although they seemed to know what science would save us from they were never clear about what science would save us for. Where was the evidence that the world would be a safer, saner, more fulfilling place to live if everyone would come around to thinking like materialistic scientists? True, throughout history untold nastiness has been committed in the name of religion, 3242 Templeton ch03 30 8/9/02 5:00 PM Page 30 SPIRITUAL EVOLUTION but what does science have to put in its place? If science succeeds in eradicating the religious impulse in human nature, most of our great art, architecture, and music would vanish, because it emerged from the depths of religious feeling.

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