Religion: November 2006 Archives

Religion in the news

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Over the past year many of the popular weekly news magazines, like Newsweek, Time, and US News and World Report, have featured cover stories on religious themes, most involving religion in the public sphere. Below are links to a number of these cover stories, accessed through the database Academic Search Premier.


WHERE WE STAND ON FAITH.
(Cover story)
Newsweek

Religious Protection. (Cover story)
New Republic

In Search of The Spiritual. (Cover story)
Newsweek

A New Welcoming Spirit in the Mosque. (Cover story)
Newsweek

DOES GOD WANT YOU TO BE RICH? (Cover story)
Time

God vs. Science. (Cover Story)
Time

A Passionate Voice And a Moral Vision. (Cover story)
Newsweek

A New Social Gospel. (Cover story)
Newsweek

The Case Against Faith.
(Cover story)
Newsweek

A Shepherd Protects His Own Backyard. (Cover story)
Newsweek

Debating 'Da Vinci' (Cover story)
U.S.News & World Report

The Kingdom of Christ. (Cover story)
U.S.News & World Report

THE WAYS OF OPUS DEI. (Cover story)
Time

---Fred Rowland

Gay Rights in the Middle East

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Hassan El Menyawi will speak on Monday, November 27, at 2pm in the Women's Studies Lounge on the 8th Floor of Anderson. The title of his presentation is Activism from the Closet: Gay Rights in the Middle East. Menyawi is currently Assistant Professor at the United Nations University for Peace, teaching courses on international law and human rights.

Toward Global Democracy
is an article by Manyawi published in the Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies.

---Fred Rowland

Wendy Doniger to speak at UPenn

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Professor Wendy Doniger of the University of Chicago will give presentations at the University of Pennsylvania on Wednesday (11/8, 5:15, Logan 17) and Thursday (11/9, 3:00pm, Penn Humanities Forum, 3619 Locust Walk).

“Mythology of Gender in Kama-Sutra” (Wednesday) // “Bisexuality in Classical India: A Workshop'' (Thursday)

These events are co-sponsored by Fund to Encourage Women (FEW) of the Trustees' Council of Penn Women, Department of South Asia Studies, Department of Religious Studies, and Women’s Studies and the Alice Paul Center.

Here's a description of Doniger from the University of Chicago Divinity School web site.
Here are some works by Doniger (books) (articles1) (articles2).

Darwin Exhibit at the Franklin Institute

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There's a Darwin Exhibit running at the Franklin Institute from October 6 to December 31 that I will try to get to. Darwin is arguably the most influential thinker of the past two centuries and his theories continue to be a rich source of inspiration and controversy. I'm not sure the exhibit will be as "astonishing" as the Franklin Institute self-reports but certainly worth seeing. Museums have become a bit like theme parks so get ready for plenty of rides, games, and make-believe as you enter Chuckie D's world. Getting back to the real world, the University of Cambridge's Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities is hosting The Complete Works of Charles Darwin Online, described as the "largest collection of Darwin's writings ever published". Thanks to science librarian Kathy Szigeti for pointing this site out for me. Check it out, it looks very impressive.

You might also take a look at some of the books the library has from Richard Dawkins and the late Stephen Jay Gould, two scientists who have done much to make Darwin accessbile to popular audiences. William A. Dembski has written a lot in support of Intelligent Design. Here's a review in the Skeptic magazine of five different books (including one edited by Dembski) that challenge evolutionary theory. As the name suggests, the Skeptic is all about debunking, in this case Creationism/Intelligent Design. Here John C. Polkinghorne, physicist and theologian, critiques "Darwinian thinking" run amok. Mary Midgley is a philosopher who has written some interesting stuff on the religion in science.

Finally, we are often romantically inclined to see Big Ideas as the result of some lone genius working his magic, the paradigmatic cases in science being Newton and Einstein. It's important to remember in this case that Darwin was not the only one who was thinking about the principles and lines of evidence that would lead to the theory of evolution. Alfred Russell Wallace came up with the mechanism of natural selection about the same time that Darwin did, which just goes to show that Big Ideas are often "in the air".

Also, take a look at my Science and Religion subject guide for more resources on the intersection of science and religion.

--Fred Rowland

About this Archive

This page is a archive of entries in the Religion category from November 2006.

Religion: October 2006 is the previous archive.

Religion: December 2006 is the next archive.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

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