The bounds of knowledge, and the knowledge of bounds
Gilbert Márkus, an ex-Dominican and leader [sic] of Glasgow’s Catholic Worker community, wrote about faith and science in the Guardian this Saturday under the title ‘Face to Faith: Christians who attempt to mix God and science will only end up undoing the story of Genesis’, quoting several from the Order of Preachers inter alios. (Strangely, I could not find it on the Guardian’s otherwise-excellent free website, but found it in the proprietary LexisNexis.)
Update: The article is now available.
Also deserving attention are two deals in which the British ex-public defence-research company QinetiQ is involved: selling the 1901 census to Friends Reunited, and approaching Carlyle group (mentioned in Fahrenheit 9/11) about its own privatization.
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The article cited, by Gilbert Márkus, is now available: Face to Faith: Christians who attempt to mix God and science will only end up undoing the story of Genesis.
Paraphrasing something a guy I know said, don’t believe science masquerading as religion or religion masquerading as science.
BBC Radio 4’s Start the Week lineup today includes Richard Dawkins, Richard Harries (Bishop of Oxford), and Barbara Ehrenreich.