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Arthur
Peacocke
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The
following biography is from the Templeton Foundation site and marks the
award of the Templeton Prize to Arthur Peacocke in 2001.
The Rev. Canon Dr. Arthur Peacocke As senior lecturer in biophysical chemistry at the University of Birmingham in England conventional church teaching left him disenchanted. Seeking an alternative to automatic acceptance of Church or scriptural authority, he began a thorough study of theology, and with the encouragement of a professor, Geoffrey Lampe. In 1960, he received a Diploma in Theology an in 1971, a Bachelor of Divinity from Birmingham University. It was at this time that his scientific and theological pursuits tangibly merged with the publication of Science and the Christian Experiment, which he wrote while still a full-time scientist with a research group working on the physical chemistry of DNA and proteins. In 1973, the book won the prestigious Lecomte du Noüy Prize, the first global recognition of Peacocke as a leader in the new discipline of science and religion. That same year, he became Dean of Clare College, Cambridge, allowing him to pursue more fully his interdisciplinary vocation. Among his other major publications in this area are Creation and the World of Science (1979), which established further his international reputation, Intimations of Reality: Critical Realism in Science and Religion (1984), Theology for a Scientific Age (1990, 2nd edition 1993, including his 1993 Gifford Lectures), God and the New Biology (1994), From DNA to DEAN: Reflections and Explorations of a Priest-Scientist (1996), God and Science: A Quest for Christianity Credibility (1996), and Paths from Science Towards God: The End of All Our Exploring (2001). See Also Wikipedia . |
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