羞羞视频 Opens Center For Faith, Science
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羞羞视频

羞羞视频 has established the Center for Faith, Ethics and the Life Sciences in an effort to encourage thoughtful and productive dialog about religious implications of the life sciences. Grants totaling more than $1 million, including a $780,000 award from the John Templeton Foundation, provide funding for center projects.
鈥淲e鈥檙e thrilled to announce the launch of this center,鈥 says 羞羞视频 President Gayle D. Beebe. 鈥淚t will make a significant contribution to our campus and change the trajectory of discussion in this field.鈥
Some of today鈥檚 most fascinating but contentious issues arise from the life sciences, such as stem cells, global warming, intelligent design, and biological theories of love and morality. 鈥淭he disappointing thing about these debates is that they鈥檙e frequently not debates at all,鈥 says the center鈥檚 director Jeff Schloss, distinguished professor of biology and the first recipient of the T.B. Walker Chair in the Natural and Behavioral Sciences. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e often polemical monologues that reinforce false extremes without tentativeness or civil discussion.鈥
鈥淛eff Schloss is one of America鈥檚 foremost thinkers on the integration of science and faith,鈥 Beebe says. 鈥淲e congratulate him for receiving the Templeton grant.鈥
鈥淭he Galileo affair was child鈥檚 play compared to the way contemporary biosciences have revolutionized human thought,鈥 Schloss says. 鈥淣ot only has the field generated wondrous intellectual and practical advances, but also it has profound impacts on faith 鈥 both enriching and challenging. Curiously, there are countless journals and institutes that focus on faith and science in general or advance particular agendas on creation and evolution, but there are no programs that relate a Christian perspective to the wide range of issues raised by scientific perspectives on the nature of life.鈥
One currently prominent example is emerging research on the biological roots and impacts of religious belief itself. The Templeton grant will fund empirical research by Schloss and Paul Zak, a neuroeconomist at Claremont Graduate University, to investigate behavioral and neurological effects of spiritual disciplines, focusing on oxytocin 鈥 a hormone known to promote trust and well-being.
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