When navigating life’s biggest questions, adults often lean on scientific evidence, religious faith, or a mixture of both to understand the world around them. A survey of American adults reveals that ...
AUGUSTA, Ga. — Science180, the trusted U.S.-based organization at the intersection of science and faith, announced today a historic discovery from its founder, Beninese-American scientist Dr.
Ecology and faith seem to be seeing eye to eye more often these days as authors blend their interest in climate, flora, fauna, and more in new books that also highlight the role God or a higher power ...
Francis Collins explains why many of history’s greatest scientists believed faith and science could work together.
The conflict between science and religion may have its origins in the structure of our brains, researchers at Case Western Reserve University and Babson College have found. Clashes between the use of ...
Why is Christian Science in our name? Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and we’ve always been transparent about that. The church publishes the ...
The “Great Commoner,” William Jennings Bryan, an outspoken proponent of the historic Christian faith, and the “Great Agnostic,” Clarence Darrow, a critic of Bryan and the faith he espoused, headlined ...
Gerard Baker’s excellent column “Faith, Freedom and the Long Thread of Technology” (Free Expression, April 1) explains that religious belief and technology need not be in conflict. I believe he could ...
In his magnum opus Either/Or, Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard argued that the scientific method could neither prove nor disprove any religious belief. Instead, religion requires a leap of faith.
Many towering figures in history assured us that life doesn't end in the physical realm, Thomas P. Durso writes.