Science and Religion-Summer 2013

Science and Religion-Summer 2013 Since the Enlightenment science and religion have often been seen at odds with one another, especially in the West.

Writing in the Disciplines (WID) course at The George Washington University
REL3990W/UW2020: Science and Religion
First Summer Session (May 20-June 29) M-TH 12:30-2:00 This course will analyze and question the basic premises of this dichotomy, delving into the relationship between faith and reason and its origins as well as how this relationship has been understood and treated historically. By ana

lyzing the basic premises of religion and science as well as particular scientific ideas ranging from evolution and the big bang theory to artificial intelligence and the multiverse, this course will investigate the responses of various religions to scientific topics as well as engage critics within the perceived debate between science and religion. In addition to these topics and ideas, this course will serve as a introduction to the method and style in which scholars of religion research and write. The study of religion is an interdisciplinary field engaging the disciplines of sociology, anthropology, history, philosophy, and theology. Therefore, this course will engage methods of interdisciplinary research as well as discuss methods for writing and researching within these various fields that comprise the study of religion.

Officially up on the University Writing Program's Website:http://www.gwu.edu/~uwp/new/summer13.html
02/27/2013

Officially up on the University Writing Program's Website:

http://www.gwu.edu/~uwp/new/summer13.html

Since the Enlightenment science and religion have often been seen at odds with one another, especially in the West. This course will analyze and question the basic premises of this dichotomy, delving into the relationship between faith and reason and its origins as well as how this relationship has…

02/13/2013

Course Description:

Since the Enlightenment science and religion have often been seen at odds with one another, especially in the West. This course will analyze and question the basic premises of this dichotomy, delving into the relationship between faith and reason and its origins as well as how this relationship has been understood and treated historically. By analyzing the basic premises of religion and science as well as particular scientific ideas ranging from evolution and the big bang theory to artificial intelligence and the multiverse, this course will investigate the responses of various religions to scientific topics as well as engage critics within the perceived debate between science and religion.

In addition to these topics and ideas, this course will serve as a introduction to the method and style in which scholars of religion research and write. The study of religion is an interdisciplinary field engaging the disciplines of sociology, anthropology, history, philosophy, and theology. Therefore, this course will engage methods of interdisciplinary research as well as discuss methods for writing and researching within these various fields that comprise the study of religion.

About the Professor:http://gwu.academia.edu/ShannonBerry
02/13/2013

About the Professor:

http://gwu.academia.edu/ShannonBerry

Right now I am finishing (that is a relative word) my Ph.D. in Christian theology at the Catholic University of America. My research is mainly in theology and the arts and science and theology, particularly ecology. Hopefully, these will intersect in

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Washington D.C., DC

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