Science is expected to be objective: however, since practiced and produced by humans, it has to reflect human flows – prejudices, stubbornness, malice, and the tendency to be misused. No wonder an excellent scientist like John Eccles proclaimed science to be among the most personal activities he had known. By analysing a few examples from the history of science (in particular the intellectual development of Van Rensselaer Potter, the American onco-biochemist and bioethics pioneer), as well as the current trend of the evidence-based approach, the present paper will try to demonstrate that denying, distrusting, and opposing science for the sake of religion, as seen so many times in human history, has significant similarities to the overestima...
In this paper the focus is on the extreme epistemological complexity of the relationship between rel...
The science education literature suggests that the public and students often hold narrow stereotypic...
Overview: Human beings have an innate desire for a sense of purpose. They want to understand the wor...
Science is expected to be objective: however, since practiced and produced by humans, it has to refl...
Do scientists see conflict between science and faith? Which cultural factors shape the attitudes of ...
In this paper I first explain the difference between three kinds of questions (purely scientific, pu...
Proceedings of the 14th conference of the South African Science and Religion Forum (SASRF) of the Re...
In this book, the words ‘science’ and ‘social science’ are used in their limited sense tha...
When Christians reject the claims of scientific experts, are they being irrational? Much of recent d...
Sociologists of the 19th and the 20th centuries were tackling the relation between science and relig...
Science and religion are most usually compared on epistemic grounds: what do they tell us about the ...
Any dialogue between science and religion is a difficult one. The fundamental reason for this is tha...
Speaking for God has been part of religion for many years. However, science has come in the past few...
In a recent paper, Kowalski and Mrdjenovich (2017) advised against indiscriminate dichotomization. W...
This short tribute to Ján Podolák comments on the space between two extremes: pure science and blind...
In this paper the focus is on the extreme epistemological complexity of the relationship between rel...
The science education literature suggests that the public and students often hold narrow stereotypic...
Overview: Human beings have an innate desire for a sense of purpose. They want to understand the wor...
Science is expected to be objective: however, since practiced and produced by humans, it has to refl...
Do scientists see conflict between science and faith? Which cultural factors shape the attitudes of ...
In this paper I first explain the difference between three kinds of questions (purely scientific, pu...
Proceedings of the 14th conference of the South African Science and Religion Forum (SASRF) of the Re...
In this book, the words ‘science’ and ‘social science’ are used in their limited sense tha...
When Christians reject the claims of scientific experts, are they being irrational? Much of recent d...
Sociologists of the 19th and the 20th centuries were tackling the relation between science and relig...
Science and religion are most usually compared on epistemic grounds: what do they tell us about the ...
Any dialogue between science and religion is a difficult one. The fundamental reason for this is tha...
Speaking for God has been part of religion for many years. However, science has come in the past few...
In a recent paper, Kowalski and Mrdjenovich (2017) advised against indiscriminate dichotomization. W...
This short tribute to Ján Podolák comments on the space between two extremes: pure science and blind...
In this paper the focus is on the extreme epistemological complexity of the relationship between rel...
The science education literature suggests that the public and students often hold narrow stereotypic...
Overview: Human beings have an innate desire for a sense of purpose. They want to understand the wor...