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John Polkinghorne

John Charlton Polkinghorne KBE FRS (16 October 1930 – 9 March 2021) was an English theoretical physicist, theologian, and Anglican priest.[10] A prominent and leading voice explaining the relationship between science and religion, he was professor of mathematical physics at the University of Cambridge from 1968 to 1979, when he resigned his chair to study for the priesthood, becoming an ordained Anglican priest in 1982. He served as the president of Queens' College, Cambridge, from 1988 until 1996.

John Polkinghorne
Polkinghorne in 2007
President of Queens' College, Cambridge
In office
1988–1996
Preceded byRonald Oxburgh
Succeeded byLord Eatwell
Personal details
Born
John Charlton Polkinghorne

(1930-10-16)16 October 1930
Weston-super-Mare, Somerset, England
Died9 March 2021(2021-03-09) (aged 90)
Cambridge, England
CitizenshipUnited Kingdom
Spouse
Ruth Polkinghorne
(m. 1955)
Awards
Ecclesiastical career
ReligionChristianity (Anglican)
ChurchChurch of England
Ordained
  • 1981 (deacon)
  • 1982 (priest)
Offices held
Academic background
Alma materTrinity College, Cambridge
ThesisContributions to Quantum Field Theory (1955)
Doctoral advisor
Influences
Academic work
Discipline
Sub-discipline
School or tradition
Institutions
Doctoral students
Main interests
Notable works

Polkinghorne was the author of five books on physics and twenty-six on the relationship between science and religion;[11] his publications include The Quantum World (1989), Quantum Physics and Theology: An Unexpected Kinship (2005), Exploring Reality: The Intertwining of Science and Religion (2007), and Questions of Truth (2009). The Polkinghorne Reader (edited by Thomas Jay Oord) provides key excerpts from Polkinghorne's most influential books. He was knighted in 1997 and in 2002 received the £1-million Templeton Prize, awarded for exceptional contributions to affirming life's spiritual dimension.[12]

Early life and education

Polkinghorne was born in Weston-super-Mare on 16 October 1930 to Dorothy Charlton, the daughter of a groom and George Polkinghorne, who worked for the post office. John was the couple's third child. There was a brother, Peter, and a sister, Ann, who died when she was six, one month before John's birth. Peter died in 1942 while flying for the Royal Air Force during the Second World War.[13]

He was educated at the local primary school in Street, Somerset, then was taught by a friend of the family at home, and later at a Quaker school. When he was 11 he went to Elmhurst Grammar School in Street, and when his father was promoted to head postmaster in Ely in 1945, Polkinghorne was transferred to The Perse School, Cambridge.[13] Following National Service in the Royal Army Educational Corps from 1948 to 1949, he read mathematics at Trinity College, Cambridge, graduating in 1952 as Senior Wrangler, then earned his PhD in physics in 1955, supervised by the Nobel laureate Abdus Salam in the group led by Paul Dirac.[14]

Career

Physics

He joined the Christian Union of UCCF while at Cambridge and met his future wife, Ruth Martin, another member of the union and also a mathematics student.[13] They married on 26 March 1955, and at the end of that year sailed from Liverpool to New York.[13] Polkinghorne accepted a postdoctoral Harkness Fellowship with the California Institute of Technology, where he worked with Murray Gell-Mann.[13] Toward the end of the fellowship he was offered a position as lecturer at the University of Edinburgh, which he took up in 1956.[13]

After two years in Scotland, he returned to teach at Cambridge in 1958.[13] He was promoted to reader in 1965,[15] and in 1968 was offered a professorship in mathematical physics, a position he held until 1979,[13] his students including Brian Josephson and Martin Rees.[16] For 25 years, he worked on theories about elementary particles, played a role in the discovery of the quark,[12] and researched the analytic and high-energy properties of Feynman integrals and the foundations of S-matrix theory.[17] While employed by Cambridge, he also spent time at Princeton, Berkeley, Stanford, and at CERN in Geneva. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1974.[13][18]

Priesthood and Queens' College

Polkinghorne decided to train for the priesthood in 1977.[19] He said in an interview that he felt he had done his bit for science after 25 years, and that his best mathematical work was probably behind him; Christianity had always been central to his life, so ordination offered an attractive second career.[13] He resigned his chair in 1979 to study at Westcott House, Cambridge, an Anglican theological college, becoming an ordained priest on 6 June 1982 (Trinity Sunday).[citation needed] The ceremony was held at Trinity College, Cambridge, and presided over by Bishop John A. T. Robinson.[citation needed] He worked for five years as a curate in south Bristol, then as vicar in Blean, Kent, before returning to Cambridge in 1986 as dean of chapel at Trinity Hall.[12][20] He became the president of Queens' College that year, a position he held until his retirement in 1996.[20] He served as canon theologian of Liverpool Cathedral from 1994 to 2005.[21] Polkinghorne died on 9 March 2021 at the age of 90.[22]

Awards

In 1997 he was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE), although as an ordained priest in the Church of England, he was not styled as "Sir John Polkinghorne".[citation needed] He was an honorary fellow of St Chad's College, Durham, and was awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of Durham in 1998; and in 2002 was awarded the Templeton Prize for his contributions to research at the interface between science and religion.[23] He spoke on "The Universe as Creation" at the Trotter Prize ceremony in 2003.

He has been a member of the BMA Medical Ethics Committee, the General Synod of the Church of England, the Doctrine Commission, and the Human Genetics Commission. He served as chairman of the governors of The Perse School from 1972 to 1981. He was a fellow of Queens' College, Cambridge, and was for 10 years a canon theologian of Liverpool Cathedral.[citation needed] He was a founding member of the Society of Ordained Scientists and also of the International Society for Science and Religion, of which he was the first president.[24] He was selected to give the prestigious Gifford Lectures in 1993–1994, which he later published as The Faith of a Physicist.

In 2006 he was awarded an honorary doctorate by the Hong Kong Baptist University as part of their 50-year celebrations. This included giving a public lecture on "The Dialogue between Science and Religion and Its Significance for the Academy" and an "EastWest Dialogue" with Yang Chen-ning, a nobel laureate in physics.[25] He was a member of staff of the Psychology and Religion Research Group at Cambridge University.[26] He was an honorary fellow of St Edmund's College, Cambridge.[27]

Ideas

Polkinghorne said in an interview that he believes his move from science to religion has given him binocular vision, though he understands that it has aroused the kind of suspicion "that might follow the claim to be a vegetarian butcher."[20] He describes his position as critical realism and believes that science and religion address aspects of the same reality. It is a consistent theme of his work that when he "turned his collar around" he did not stop seeking truth.[28] He argues there are five points of comparison between the ways in which science and theology pursue truth: moments of enforced radical revision, a period of unresolved confusion, new synthesis and understanding, continued wrestling with unresolved problems, deeper implications.[29]

He suggests that the mechanistic explanations of the world that have continued from Laplace to Richard Dawkins should be replaced by an understanding that most of nature is cloud-like rather than clock-like. He regards the mind, soul and body as different aspects of the same underlying reality — "dual aspect monism" — writing that "there is only one stuff in the world (not two — the material and the mental), but it can occur in two contrasting states (material and mental phases, a physicist might say) which explain our perception of the difference between mind and matter."[30] He believes that standard physical causation cannot adequately describe the manifold ways in which things and people interact, and uses the phrase "active information" to describe how, when several outcomes are possible, there may be higher levels of causation that choose which one occurs.[31]

Sometimes Christianity seems to him to be just too good to be true, but when this sort of doubt arises he says to himself, "All right then, deny it", and writes that he knows this is something he could never do.[32]

On the existence of God

Polkinghorne considers that "the question of the existence of God is the single most important question we face about the nature of reality"[33] and quotes, with approval, Sir Anthony Kenny: "After all, if there is no God, then God is incalculably the greatest single creation of the human imagination." He addresses the questions of "Does the concept of God make sense? If so, do we have reason for believing in such a thing?" He is "cautious about our powers to assess coherence", pointing out that in 1900 a "competent… undergraduate could have demonstrated the 'incoherence'" of quantum ideas.[citation needed] He suggests that "the nearest analogy in the physical world [to God] would be… the Quantum Vacuum."[31]

He suggests that God is the ultimate answer to Leibniz's great question "why is there something rather than nothing?" The atheist's "plain assertion of the world's existence" is a "grossly impoverished view of reality… [arguing that] theism explains more than a reductionist atheism can ever address.".[citation needed]

He is very doubtful of St Anselm's Ontological Argument. Referring to Gödel's incompleteness theory, he said: "If we cannot prove the consistency of arithmetic it seems a bit much to hope that God's existence is easier to deal with," concluding that God is "ontologically necessary, but not logically necessary." He "does not assert that God's existence can be demonstrated in a logically coercive way (any more than God's non-existence can) but that theism makes more sense of the world, and of human experience, than does atheism."[34] He cites in particular:

  • The intelligibility of the universe: One would anticipate that evolutionary selection would produce hominid minds apt for coping with everyday experience, but that these minds should also be able to understand the subatomic world and general relativity goes far beyond anything of relevance to survival fitness. The mystery deepens when one recognises the proven fruitfulness of mathematical beauty as a guide to successful theory choice.[35]
  • The anthropic fine tuning of the universe: He quotes with approval Freeman Dyson, who said "the more I examine the universe and the details of its architecture, the more evidence I find that the universe in some sense must have known we were coming"[36] and suggests there is a wide consensus amongst physicists that either there are a very large number of other universes in the Multiverse or that "there is just one universe which is the way it is in its anthropic fruitfulness because it is the expression of the purposive design of a Creator, who has endowed it with the finely tuned potentialty for life."[37]
  • A wider humane reality: He considers that theism offers a more persuasive account of ethical and aesthetic perceptions. He argues that it is difficult to accommodate the idea that "we have real moral knowledge" and that statements such as 'torturing children is wrong' are more than "simply social conventions of the societies within which they are uttered" within an atheistic or naturalistic world view. He also believes such a world view finds it hard to explain how "Something of lasting significance is glimpsed in the beauty of the natural world and the beauty of the fruits of human creativity."[38]

On free will

Polkinghorne believes that

The well-known free will defence in relation to moral evil asserts that a world with a possibility of sinful people is better than one with perfectly programmed machines. The tale of human evil is such that one cannot make that assertion without a quiver, but I believe that it is true nevertheless. I have added to it the free-process defence, that a world allowed to make itself is better than a puppet theatre with a Cosmic Tyrant. I think that these two defences are opposite sides of the same coin, that our nature is inextricably linked with that of the physical world which has given us birth.[39]

On creationism

Following the resignation of Michael Reiss, the director of education at the Royal Society—who had controversially argued that school pupils who believed in creationism should be used by science teachers to start discussions, rather than be rejected per se[40] — Polkinghorne argued in The Times that "As a Christian believer I am, of course, a creationist in the proper sense of the term, for I believe that the mind and the purpose of a divine Creator lie behind the fruitful history and remarkable order of the universe which science explores. But I am certainly not a creationist in that curious North American sense, which implies interpreting Genesis 1 in a flat-footed literal way and supposing that evolution is wrong."[41]

Critical reception

Nancy Frankenberry, Professor of Religion at Dartmouth College, has described Polkinghorne as the finest British theologian/scientist of our time, citing his work on the possible relationship between chaos theory and natural theology.[42] Owen Gingerich, an astronomer and former Harvard professor, has called him a leading voice on the relationship between science and religion.[43]

The British philosopher Simon Blackburn has criticized Polkinghorne for using primitive thinking and rhetorical devices instead of engaging in philosophy. When Polkinghorne argues that the minute adjustments of cosmological constants for life points towards an explanation beyond the scientific realm, Blackburn argues that this relies on a natural preference for explanation in terms of agency.[citation needed] Blackburn writes that he finished Polkinghorne's books in "despair at humanity's capacity for self-deception."[44] Against this, Freeman Dyson called Polkinghorne's arguments on theology and natural science "polished and logically coherent."[45] The novelist Simon Ings, writing in the New Scientist, said Polkinghorne's argument for the proposition that God is real is cogent and his evidence elegant.[46]

Richard Dawkins, formerly Professor for Public Understanding of Science at Oxford, writes that the same three names of British scientists who are also sincerely religious crop up with the "likable familiarity of senior partners in a firm of Dickensian lawyers": Arthur Peacocke, Russell Stannard, and John Polkinghorne, all of whom have either won the Templeton Prize or are on its board of trustees. Dawkins writes that he is not so much bewildered by their belief in a cosmic lawgiver, but by their beliefs in the minutiae of Christianity, such as the resurrection and forgiveness of sins, and that such scientists, in Britain and in the US, are the subject of bemused bafflement among their peers.[47] Polkinghorne responded that "debating with Dawkins is hopeless, because there's no give and take. He doesn't give you an inch. He just says no when you say yes."[20] Nicholas Beale writes in Questions of Truth, which he co-authored with Polkinghorne, that he hopes Dawkins will be a bit less baffled once he reads it.[48]

A. C. Grayling criticized the Royal Society for allowing its premises to be used in connection with the launch of Questions of Truth, describing it as a scandal, and suggesting that Polkinghorne had exploited his fellowship there to publicize a "weak, casuistical and tendentious pamphlet." After implying that the book's publisher, Westminster John Knox, was a self-publisher, Grayling went on to write that Polkinghorne and others were eager to see the credibility accorded to scientific research extended to religious perspectives through association.[49]

In contrast to Grayling, science historian Edward B. Davis praises Questions of Truth, saying the book provides "the kind of technical information… that scientifically trained readers will appreciate—yet they can be read profitably by anyone interested in science and Christianity." Davis concludes, "It hasn't been easy to steer a middle course between fundamentalism and modernism, particularly on issues involving science. Polkinghorne has done that very successfully for a generation, and for this he ought to be both appreciated and emulated."[50]

Published works

Polkinghorne has written 34 books, translated into 18 languages; 26 concern science and religion, often for a popular audience.

Science and religion
  • The Polkinghorne Reader : Science, Faith, and the Search for Meaning (Edited by Thomas Jay Oord) (SPCK and Templeton Foundation Press, 2010) ISBN 1-59947-315-1 and ISBN 978-0-281-06053-5
  • The Way the World Is: The Christian Perspective of a Scientist (1984 – revised 1992) ISBN 0-281-04597-6
  • One World (SPCK/Princeton University Press 1987; Templeton Foundation Press, 2007) ISBN 978-1-59947-111-2
  • Science and Creation (SPCK/New Science Library, 1989; Templeton Foundation Press, 2006) ISBN 978-1-59947-100-6
  • Science and Providence (SPCK/New Science Library, 1989; Templeton Foundation Press, 2006) ISBN 978-1-932031-92-8
  • Reason and Reality: Relationship Between Science and Theology (SPCK/Trinity Press International 1991) ISBN 978-0-281-04487-0
  • Quarks, Chaos and Christianity (1994; Second edition SPCK/Crossroad 2005) ISBN 0-281-04779-0
  • The Faith of a Physicist – published in the UK as Science and Christian Belief (1994) ISBN 0-691-03620-9
  • Serious Talk: Science and Religion in Dialogue (Trinity Press International/SCM Press, 1996) ISBN 978-1-56338-109-6
  • Scientists as Theologians (1996) ISBN 0-281-04945-9
  • Beyond Science: The wider human context (CUP 1996) ISBN 978-0-521-57212-5
  • Searching for Truth (Bible Reading Fellowship/Crossroad, 1996)
  • Belief in God in an Age of Science (Yale University Press, 1998) ISBN 0-300-08003-4
  • Science and Theology (SPCK/Fortress 1998) ISBN 0-8006-3153-6
  • The End of the World and the Ends of God (Trinity Press International, 2000) with Michael Welker
  • Traffic in Truth: Exchanges Between Sciences and Theology (Canterbury Press/Fortress, 2000) ISBN 978-0-8006-3579-4
  • Faith, Science and Understanding (2000) SPCK/Yale University Press ISBN 0-300-08372-6
  • The Work of Love: Creation as Kenosis editor, with contributors including Ian Barbour, Sarah Coakley, George Ellis, Jurgen Moltmann and Keith Ward (SPCK/Eerdmans 2001) ISBN 0-281-05372-3 / ISBN 0-8028-4885-0
  • The God of Hope and the End of the World (Yale University Press, 2002) ISBN 0-300-09211-3
  • The Archbishop's School of Christianity and Science (York Courses, 2003) ISBN 0954054385
  • 'Science and Christian Faith' (Conversation on CD with Canon John Young. York Courses)
  • Living with Hope (SPCK/Westminster John Knox Press, 2003)
  • Science and the Trinity: The Christian Encounter With Reality (2004) ISBN 0-300-10445-6 (a particularly accessible summary of his thought)
  • Exploring Reality: The Intertwining of Science & Religion (SPCK 2005) ISBN 0-300-11014-6
  • Quantum Physics & Theology: An Unexpected Kinship (SPCK 2007) ISBN 978-0-281-05767-2
  • From Physicist to Priest, an Autobiography SPCK 2007 ISBN 978-0-281-05915-7
  • Theology in the Context of Science SPCK 2008 ISBN 978-0-281-05916-4
  • Questions of Truth: Fiftyone Responses to Questions about God, Science and Belief, with Nicholas Beale; foreword by Antony Hewish (Westminster John Knox 2009) ISBN 978-0-664-23351-8
  • Reason and Reality: The Relationship Between Science and Theology (2011) SPCK ISBN 978-0-281-06400-7
  • Science and Religion in Quest of Truth (2011) SPCK ISBN 978-0-281-06412-0
  • 'Hawking, Dawkins and GOD' (2012) (Conversation on CD with Canon John Young. York Courses)
  • What Can We Hope For? (Sam&Sam, 2019) with Patrick Miles ISBN 978-1-9999676-1-1
Science
Chapters

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c Polkinghorne, John (15 December 1986). "Gell-Mann Opened My Eyes". The Scientist. Retrieved 5 January 2020.
  2. ^ Losch 2009, p. 91.
  3. ^ Losch 2018, p. 98.
  4. ^ Losch 2009, p. 103.
  5. ^ a b Williams, Stephen (2018). "John Polkinghorne on the Doctrine of Creation". Carl F. H. Henry Center for Theological Understanding. Deerfield, Illinois: Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. Retrieved 5 January 2020.
  6. ^ Losch 2009, p. 92; Polkinghorne 1994, p. 47.
  7. ^ Watkins 2012, p. 217.
  8. ^ Hefner 2001, p. 234.
  9. ^ a b c . Cambridge, England: University of Cambridge. Archived from the original on 4 January 2013. Retrieved 5 January 2020.
  10. ^ Daily Telegraph, Issue no 51,581 dated Friday 19 March 2021 p. 29 (Obituaries) "The Reverend Canon John Polkinghorne- Theoretical physicist who advanced the understanding of quantum theory before becoming a clergyman".
  11. ^ Metaxas 2011, p. 361.
  12. ^ a b c . The Humble Approach Initiative. West Conshohocken, Pennsylvania: John Templeton Foundation. 2005. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 17 June 2010.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F. (2008). "John Charlton Polkinghorne". MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive. St Andrews, Scotland: University of St Andrews. Retrieved 5 January 2020.
  14. ^ Polkinghorne 2007a, pp. 9–11, 23–29, 34.
  15. ^ Knight 2012, p. 622.
  16. ^ Polkinghorne 2007a, pp. 40–50.
  17. ^ Margenau & Varghese 1992, p. 86.
  18. ^ Taylor, J. C.; Wilkinson, D. A. (2022). "John Charlton Polkinghorne KBE. 16 October 1930—9 March 2021". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 72: 293–309. doi:10.1098/rsbm.2021.0044. S2CID 247599441.
  19. ^ Polkinghorne 2007a, p. 9.
  20. ^ a b c d Reisz, Matthew (19 February 2009). "On the Side of the Angels". Times Higher Education. London. Retrieved 5 January 2020.
  21. ^ Third Way. December 2005. p. 34.
  22. ^ "College Announcement". Queens' College, Cambridge. 10 March 2021. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  23. ^ For basic biodata see Who's Who 2006.
  24. ^ . Cambridge, England: International Society for Science & Religion. Archived from the original on 28 August 2008. Retrieved 5 January 2020.
  25. ^ (PDF). Hong Kong Baptist University. November 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 September 2007. Retrieved 2 April 2007.
  26. ^ . Cambridge, England: Psychology and Religion Research Group. Archived from the original on 26 December 2011. Retrieved 25 March 2010.
  27. ^ "Revd Dr John Polkinghorne KBE FRS". St Edmund's College. Cambridge, England: University of Cambridge. Retrieved 10 September 2018.
  28. ^ For example, Polkinhorne, John. Exploring Reality: the Intertwining of Science and Religion. p. ix.
  29. ^ Polkinghorne 2007b, pp. 15–22.
  30. ^ Polkinghorne 1994, p. 21.
  31. ^ a b Sharpe 2003.
  32. ^ Polkinghorne 2007a, p. 107.
  33. ^ This and (unless noted otherwise) all subsequent quotations are from Polkinghorne 1994, ch. 3
  34. ^ Polkinghorne 1998, pp. 71–83.
  35. ^ Polkinghorne 1998, p. 72.
  36. ^ Polkinghorne 1994, p. 76.
  37. ^ Polkinghorne 1998, p. 75.
  38. ^ Polkinghorne 1998, pp. 81–82.
  39. ^ Polkinghorne 2003, p. 14.
  40. ^ "'Creationism' Biologist Quits Job". BBC News. 16 September 2008. Retrieved 5 January 2020.
  41. ^ Polkinghorne, John (19 September 2008). . The Times. London. Archived from the original on 1 September 2011. Retrieved 5 January 2020.
  42. ^ Frankenberry 2008, p. 340.
  43. ^ . New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. Archived from the original on 10 October 2012. Retrieved 5 January 2020.
  44. ^ Blackburn, Simon (1 August 2002). . The New Republic. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 5 January 2020.
  45. ^ Dyson, Freeman (1998). "Is God in the Lab?". The New York Review of Books. Vol. 45, no. 9. Retrieved 5 January 2020.
  46. ^ Ings, Simon (1998). . New Scientist. Vol. 159, no. 2141. Archived from the original on 12 March 2008. Retrieved 5 January 2020.
  47. ^ Dawkins 2006, p. 99.
  48. ^ Polkinghorne & Beale 2009, p. 29.
  49. ^ Grayling, A. C. (2009). "Review of Questions of Truth: God, Science and Belief, by John Polkinghorne and Nicholas Beale". New Humanist. Vol. 124, no. 2. London: Rationalist Association. Retrieved 5 January 2020.
  50. ^ Davis, Edward B. (17 July 2009). "The Motivated Belief of John Polkinghorne". First Things. New York: Institute on Religion and Public Life. Retrieved 5 January 2020.

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Google Scholar – List of papers by John Polkinghorne
  • , accessed 9 July 2012.
  • Video interview with Polkinghorne, accessed 25 March 2010.
  • Interview by Alan Macfarlane 10 November 2008 (video)
  • Pannenberg, Wolfhart (2001). "Response to John Polkinghorne". Zygon. 36 (4): 799–800. doi:10.1111/0591-2385.00398.
  • Polkinghorne, John. "Reductionism", Interdisciplinary Encyclopedia of Religion and Science, accessed 25 March 2010.
  • Semple, Ian (2009). From physicist to priest: A quantum leap of faith, The Guardian, 9 April 2009; interview with Polkinghorne.
  • Smedes, Taede A. Chaos, Complexity, and God: Divine Action and Scientism .Louvain: Peeters 2004, a theological investigation of Polkinghorne's (and Arthur Peacocke's) model of divine action.
  • Runehov, Anne L.C. , Ars Disputandi, Volume 6, 2006.
  • Southgate, Christopher, ed. (1999) God, Humanity and the Cosmos: A Textbook in Science and Religion T&T Clark. Relevant extracts.
  • Steinke, Johannes Maria (2006) John Polkinghorne – Konsonanz von Naturwissenschaft und Theologie Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. Investigates Polkinghorne's theory of consonance, and analyses its philosophical background.
  • Wright, Robert. Video interview, Slate, accessed 25 March 2010.

External links

Academic offices
Preceded by President of Queens' College, Cambridge
1988–1996
Succeeded by
Preceded by Gifford Lecturer at the University of Edinburgh
1993–1994
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Terry Lecturer
1996–1997
Succeeded by
Professional and academic associations
New office President of the International
Society for Science and Religion

2002–2004
Succeeded by
Awards
Preceded by Templeton Prize
2002
Succeeded by

john, polkinghorne, john, charlton, polkinghorne, october, 1930, march, 2021, english, theoretical, physicist, theologian, anglican, priest, prominent, leading, voice, explaining, relationship, between, science, religion, professor, mathematical, physics, univ. John Charlton Polkinghorne KBE FRS 16 October 1930 9 March 2021 was an English theoretical physicist theologian and Anglican priest 10 A prominent and leading voice explaining the relationship between science and religion he was professor of mathematical physics at the University of Cambridge from 1968 to 1979 when he resigned his chair to study for the priesthood becoming an ordained Anglican priest in 1982 He served as the president of Queens College Cambridge from 1988 until 1996 The Reverend CanonJohn PolkinghorneKBE FRSPolkinghorne in 2007President of Queens College CambridgeIn office 1988 1996Preceded byRonald OxburghSucceeded byLord EatwellPersonal detailsBornJohn Charlton Polkinghorne 1930 10 16 16 October 1930Weston super Mare Somerset EnglandDied9 March 2021 2021 03 09 aged 90 Cambridge EnglandCitizenshipUnited KingdomSpouseRuth Polkinghorne m 1955 wbr AwardsFellow of the Royal Society 1974 KBE 1997 Templeton Prize 2002 Ecclesiastical careerReligionChristianity Anglican ChurchChurch of EnglandOrdained1981 deacon 1982 priest Offices heldVicar of Blean 1984 1986 Dean of Chapel at Trinity Hall Cambridge 1986 1989 Canon Theologian of Liverpool Cathedral 1994 2005 Academic backgroundAlma materTrinity College CambridgeThesisContributions to Quantum Field Theory 1955 Doctoral advisorNicholas Kemmer 1 Abdus Salam 1 InfluencesIan Barbour 2 Paul Dirac 3 Murray Gell Mann 1 Bernard Lonergan 4 Jurgen Moltmann 5 Michael Polanyi 6 W H Vanstone 5 7 Academic workDisciplinePhysicstheologySub disciplineMathematical physicsparticle physicsSchool or traditionEvangelical Anglicanism 8 theological critical realismInstitutionsUniversity of EdinburghTrinity Hall CambridgeQueens College CambridgeDoctoral studentsDavid Fairlie Peter Goddard 9 Peter Landshoff de 9 Sir Tom Kibble James Stirling 9 Main interestsQuantum field theoryrelationship between science and religionNotable worksThe Way the World Is 1983 Faith Science and Understanding 2000 Polkinghorne was the author of five books on physics and twenty six on the relationship between science and religion 11 his publications include The Quantum World 1989 Quantum Physics and Theology An Unexpected Kinship 2005 Exploring Reality The Intertwining of Science and Religion 2007 and Questions of Truth 2009 The Polkinghorne Reader edited by Thomas Jay Oord provides key excerpts from Polkinghorne s most influential books He was knighted in 1997 and in 2002 received the 1 million Templeton Prize awarded for exceptional contributions to affirming life s spiritual dimension 12 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Physics 2 2 Priesthood and Queens College 2 3 Awards 3 Ideas 3 1 On the existence of God 3 2 On free will 3 3 On creationism 3 4 Critical reception 4 Published works 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Footnotes 6 2 Bibliography 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life and education EditPolkinghorne was born in Weston super Mare on 16 October 1930 to Dorothy Charlton the daughter of a groom and George Polkinghorne who worked for the post office John was the couple s third child There was a brother Peter and a sister Ann who died when she was six one month before John s birth Peter died in 1942 while flying for the Royal Air Force during the Second World War 13 He was educated at the local primary school in Street Somerset then was taught by a friend of the family at home and later at a Quaker school When he was 11 he went to Elmhurst Grammar School in Street and when his father was promoted to head postmaster in Ely in 1945 Polkinghorne was transferred to The Perse School Cambridge 13 Following National Service in the Royal Army Educational Corps from 1948 to 1949 he read mathematics at Trinity College Cambridge graduating in 1952 as Senior Wrangler then earned his PhD in physics in 1955 supervised by the Nobel laureate Abdus Salam in the group led by Paul Dirac 14 Career EditPhysics Edit He joined the Christian Union of UCCF while at Cambridge and met his future wife Ruth Martin another member of the union and also a mathematics student 13 They married on 26 March 1955 and at the end of that year sailed from Liverpool to New York 13 Polkinghorne accepted a postdoctoral Harkness Fellowship with the California Institute of Technology where he worked with Murray Gell Mann 13 Toward the end of the fellowship he was offered a position as lecturer at the University of Edinburgh which he took up in 1956 13 After two years in Scotland he returned to teach at Cambridge in 1958 13 He was promoted to reader in 1965 15 and in 1968 was offered a professorship in mathematical physics a position he held until 1979 13 his students including Brian Josephson and Martin Rees 16 For 25 years he worked on theories about elementary particles played a role in the discovery of the quark 12 and researched the analytic and high energy properties of Feynman integrals and the foundations of S matrix theory 17 While employed by Cambridge he also spent time at Princeton Berkeley Stanford and at CERN in Geneva He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1974 13 18 Priesthood and Queens College Edit Polkinghorne decided to train for the priesthood in 1977 19 He said in an interview that he felt he had done his bit for science after 25 years and that his best mathematical work was probably behind him Christianity had always been central to his life so ordination offered an attractive second career 13 He resigned his chair in 1979 to study at Westcott House Cambridge an Anglican theological college becoming an ordained priest on 6 June 1982 Trinity Sunday citation needed The ceremony was held at Trinity College Cambridge and presided over by Bishop John A T Robinson citation needed He worked for five years as a curate in south Bristol then as vicar in Blean Kent before returning to Cambridge in 1986 as dean of chapel at Trinity Hall 12 20 He became the president of Queens College that year a position he held until his retirement in 1996 20 He served as canon theologian of Liverpool Cathedral from 1994 to 2005 21 Polkinghorne died on 9 March 2021 at the age of 90 22 Awards Edit In 1997 he was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire KBE although as an ordained priest in the Church of England he was not styled as Sir John Polkinghorne citation needed He was an honorary fellow of St Chad s College Durham and was awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of Durham in 1998 and in 2002 was awarded the Templeton Prize for his contributions to research at the interface between science and religion 23 He spoke on The Universe as Creation at the Trotter Prize ceremony in 2003 He has been a member of the BMA Medical Ethics Committee the General Synod of the Church of England the Doctrine Commission and the Human Genetics Commission He served as chairman of the governors of The Perse School from 1972 to 1981 He was a fellow of Queens College Cambridge and was for 10 years a canon theologian of Liverpool Cathedral citation needed He was a founding member of the Society of Ordained Scientists and also of the International Society for Science and Religion of which he was the first president 24 He was selected to give the prestigious Gifford Lectures in 1993 1994 which he later published as The Faith of a Physicist In 2006 he was awarded an honorary doctorate by the Hong Kong Baptist University as part of their 50 year celebrations This included giving a public lecture on The Dialogue between Science and Religion and Its Significance for the Academy and an East West Dialogue with Yang Chen ning a nobel laureate in physics 25 He was a member of staff of the Psychology and Religion Research Group at Cambridge University 26 He was an honorary fellow of St Edmund s College Cambridge 27 Ideas EditPolkinghorne said in an interview that he believes his move from science to religion has given him binocular vision though he understands that it has aroused the kind of suspicion that might follow the claim to be a vegetarian butcher 20 He describes his position as critical realism and believes that science and religion address aspects of the same reality It is a consistent theme of his work that when he turned his collar around he did not stop seeking truth 28 He argues there are five points of comparison between the ways in which science and theology pursue truth moments of enforced radical revision a period of unresolved confusion new synthesis and understanding continued wrestling with unresolved problems deeper implications 29 He suggests that the mechanistic explanations of the world that have continued from Laplace to Richard Dawkins should be replaced by an understanding that most of nature is cloud like rather than clock like He regards the mind soul and body as different aspects of the same underlying reality dual aspect monism writing that there is only one stuff in the world not two the material and the mental but it can occur in two contrasting states material and mental phases a physicist might say which explain our perception of the difference between mind and matter 30 He believes that standard physical causation cannot adequately describe the manifold ways in which things and people interact and uses the phrase active information to describe how when several outcomes are possible there may be higher levels of causation that choose which one occurs 31 Sometimes Christianity seems to him to be just too good to be true but when this sort of doubt arises he says to himself All right then deny it and writes that he knows this is something he could never do 32 On the existence of God Edit Polkinghorne considers that the question of the existence of God is the single most important question we face about the nature of reality 33 and quotes with approval Sir Anthony Kenny After all if there is no God then God is incalculably the greatest single creation of the human imagination He addresses the questions of Does the concept of God make sense If so do we have reason for believing in such a thing He is cautious about our powers to assess coherence pointing out that in 1900 a competent undergraduate could have demonstrated the incoherence of quantum ideas citation needed He suggests that the nearest analogy in the physical world to God would be the Quantum Vacuum 31 He suggests that God is the ultimate answer to Leibniz s great question why is there something rather than nothing The atheist s plain assertion of the world s existence is a grossly impoverished view of reality arguing that theism explains more than a reductionist atheism can ever address citation needed He is very doubtful of St Anselm s Ontological Argument Referring to Godel s incompleteness theory he said If we cannot prove the consistency of arithmetic it seems a bit much to hope that God s existence is easier to deal with concluding that God is ontologically necessary but not logically necessary He does not assert that God s existence can be demonstrated in a logically coercive way any more than God s non existence can but that theism makes more sense of the world and of human experience than does atheism 34 He cites in particular The intelligibility of the universe One would anticipate that evolutionary selection would produce hominid minds apt for coping with everyday experience but that these minds should also be able to understand the subatomic world and general relativity goes far beyond anything of relevance to survival fitness The mystery deepens when one recognises the proven fruitfulness of mathematical beauty as a guide to successful theory choice 35 The anthropic fine tuning of the universe He quotes with approval Freeman Dyson who said the more I examine the universe and the details of its architecture the more evidence I find that the universe in some sense must have known we were coming 36 and suggests there is a wide consensus amongst physicists that either there are a very large number of other universes in the Multiverse or that there is just one universe which is the way it is in its anthropic fruitfulness because it is the expression of the purposive design of a Creator who has endowed it with the finely tuned potentialty for life 37 A wider humane reality He considers that theism offers a more persuasive account of ethical and aesthetic perceptions He argues that it is difficult to accommodate the idea that we have real moral knowledge and that statements such as torturing children is wrong are more than simply social conventions of the societies within which they are uttered within an atheistic or naturalistic world view He also believes such a world view finds it hard to explain how Something of lasting significance is glimpsed in the beauty of the natural world and the beauty of the fruits of human creativity 38 On free will Edit Polkinghorne believes that The well known free will defence in relation to moral evil asserts that a world with a possibility of sinful people is better than one with perfectly programmed machines The tale of human evil is such that one cannot make that assertion without a quiver but I believe that it is true nevertheless I have added to it the free process defence that a world allowed to make itself is better than a puppet theatre with a Cosmic Tyrant I think that these two defences are opposite sides of the same coin that our nature is inextricably linked with that of the physical world which has given us birth 39 On creationism Edit Following the resignation of Michael Reiss the director of education at the Royal Society who had controversially argued that school pupils who believed in creationism should be used by science teachers to start discussions rather than be rejected per se 40 Polkinghorne argued in The Times that As a Christian believer I am of course a creationist in the proper sense of the term for I believe that the mind and the purpose of a divine Creator lie behind the fruitful history and remarkable order of the universe which science explores But I am certainly not a creationist in that curious North American sense which implies interpreting Genesis 1 in a flat footed literal way and supposing that evolution is wrong 41 Critical reception Edit Nancy Frankenberry Professor of Religion at Dartmouth College has described Polkinghorne as the finest British theologian scientist of our time citing his work on the possible relationship between chaos theory and natural theology 42 Owen Gingerich an astronomer and former Harvard professor has called him a leading voice on the relationship between science and religion 43 The British philosopher Simon Blackburn has criticized Polkinghorne for using primitive thinking and rhetorical devices instead of engaging in philosophy When Polkinghorne argues that the minute adjustments of cosmological constants for life points towards an explanation beyond the scientific realm Blackburn argues that this relies on a natural preference for explanation in terms of agency citation needed Blackburn writes that he finished Polkinghorne s books in despair at humanity s capacity for self deception 44 Against this Freeman Dyson called Polkinghorne s arguments on theology and natural science polished and logically coherent 45 The novelist Simon Ings writing in the New Scientist said Polkinghorne s argument for the proposition that God is real is cogent and his evidence elegant 46 Richard Dawkins formerly Professor for Public Understanding of Science at Oxford writes that the same three names of British scientists who are also sincerely religious crop up with the likable familiarity of senior partners in a firm of Dickensian lawyers Arthur Peacocke Russell Stannard and John Polkinghorne all of whom have either won the Templeton Prize or are on its board of trustees Dawkins writes that he is not so much bewildered by their belief in a cosmic lawgiver but by their beliefs in the minutiae of Christianity such as the resurrection and forgiveness of sins and that such scientists in Britain and in the US are the subject of bemused bafflement among their peers 47 Polkinghorne responded that debating with Dawkins is hopeless because there s no give and take He doesn t give you an inch He just says no when you say yes 20 Nicholas Beale writes in Questions of Truth which he co authored with Polkinghorne that he hopes Dawkins will be a bit less baffled once he reads it 48 A C Grayling criticized the Royal Society for allowing its premises to be used in connection with the launch of Questions of Truth describing it as a scandal and suggesting that Polkinghorne had exploited his fellowship there to publicize a weak casuistical and tendentious pamphlet After implying that the book s publisher Westminster John Knox was a self publisher Grayling went on to write that Polkinghorne and others were eager to see the credibility accorded to scientific research extended to religious perspectives through association 49 In contrast to Grayling science historian Edward B Davis praises Questions of Truth saying the book provides the kind of technical information that scientifically trained readers will appreciate yet they can be read profitably by anyone interested in science and Christianity Davis concludes It hasn t been easy to steer a middle course between fundamentalism and modernism particularly on issues involving science Polkinghorne has done that very successfully for a generation and for this he ought to be both appreciated and emulated 50 Published works EditPolkinghorne has written 34 books translated into 18 languages 26 concern science and religion often for a popular audience Science and religionThe Polkinghorne Reader Science Faith and the Search for Meaning Edited by Thomas Jay Oord SPCK and Templeton Foundation Press 2010 ISBN 1 59947 315 1 and ISBN 978 0 281 06053 5 The Way the World Is The Christian Perspective of a Scientist 1984 revised 1992 ISBN 0 281 04597 6 One World SPCK Princeton University Press 1987 Templeton Foundation Press 2007 ISBN 978 1 59947 111 2 Science and Creation SPCK New Science Library 1989 Templeton Foundation Press 2006 ISBN 978 1 59947 100 6 Science and Providence SPCK New Science Library 1989 Templeton Foundation Press 2006 ISBN 978 1 932031 92 8 Reason and Reality Relationship Between Science and Theology SPCK Trinity Press International 1991 ISBN 978 0 281 04487 0 Quarks Chaos and Christianity 1994 Second edition SPCK Crossroad 2005 ISBN 0 281 04779 0 The Faith of a Physicist published in the UK as Science and Christian Belief 1994 ISBN 0 691 03620 9 Serious Talk Science and Religion in Dialogue Trinity Press International SCM Press 1996 ISBN 978 1 56338 109 6 Scientists as Theologians 1996 ISBN 0 281 04945 9 Beyond Science The wider human context CUP 1996 ISBN 978 0 521 57212 5 Searching for Truth Bible Reading Fellowship Crossroad 1996 Belief in God in an Age of Science Yale University Press 1998 ISBN 0 300 08003 4 Science and Theology SPCK Fortress 1998 ISBN 0 8006 3153 6 The End of the World and the Ends of God Trinity Press International 2000 with Michael Welker Traffic in Truth Exchanges Between Sciences and Theology Canterbury Press Fortress 2000 ISBN 978 0 8006 3579 4 Faith Science and Understanding 2000 SPCK Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 08372 6 The Work of Love Creation as Kenosis editor with contributors including Ian Barbour Sarah Coakley George Ellis Jurgen Moltmann and Keith Ward SPCK Eerdmans 2001 ISBN 0 281 05372 3 ISBN 0 8028 4885 0 The God of Hope and the End of the World Yale University Press 2002 ISBN 0 300 09211 3 The Archbishop s School of Christianity and Science York Courses 2003 ISBN 0954054385 Science and Christian Faith Conversation on CD with Canon John Young York Courses Living with Hope SPCK Westminster John Knox Press 2003 Science and the Trinity The Christian Encounter With Reality 2004 ISBN 0 300 10445 6 a particularly accessible summary of his thought Exploring Reality The Intertwining of Science amp Religion SPCK 2005 ISBN 0 300 11014 6 Quantum Physics amp Theology An Unexpected Kinship SPCK 2007 ISBN 978 0 281 05767 2 From Physicist to Priest an Autobiography SPCK 2007 ISBN 978 0 281 05915 7 Theology in the Context of Science SPCK 2008 ISBN 978 0 281 05916 4 Questions of Truth Fiftyone Responses to Questions about God Science and Belief with Nicholas Beale foreword by Antony Hewish Westminster John Knox 2009 ISBN 978 0 664 23351 8 Reason and Reality The Relationship Between Science and Theology 2011 SPCK ISBN 978 0 281 06400 7 Science and Religion in Quest of Truth 2011 SPCK ISBN 978 0 281 06412 0 Hawking Dawkins and GOD 2012 Conversation on CD with Canon John Young York Courses What Can We Hope For Sam amp Sam 2019 with Patrick Miles ISBN 978 1 9999676 1 1ScienceThe Analytic S Matrix CUP 1966 jointly with RJ Eden PV Landshoff and DI Olive The Particle Play W H Freeman 1979 Models of High Energy Processes CUP 1980 The Quantum World Longmans Princeton University Press 1985 Penguin 1986 Templeton Foundation Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 691 02388 5 Rochester Roundabout The Story of High Energy Physics New York Longman 1989 ISBN 978 0 582 05011 2 Quantum Theory A Very Short Introduction 2002 OUP ISBN 0 19 280252 6 Meaning in Mathematics 2011 OUP edited with contributions from Timothy Gowers Roger Penrose Marcus du Sautoy and others ISBN 978 0 19 960505 7Chapters The Trinity and Scientific Theology in The Blackwell Companion to Science and Christianity J B Stump and Alan G Padgett eds Wiley Blackwell 2012 On Space and Time CUP 2008 along with Andrew Taylor Shahn Majid Roger Penrose Alain Connes and Michael Heller ISBN 978 0 521 88926 1 Spiritual Information 100 Perspectives on Science and Religion Templeton Foundation Press 2005 ed Charles Harper ISBN 1 932031 73 1 Creation Law and Probability Fortress Press 2008 ed Fraser Watts with Peter Harrison George Ellis Philip Clayton Michael Ruse Nancey Murphy John Bowker amp others ISBN 978 0 8006 6278 3 Physical Processes Quantum Events and Divine Agency in Quantum Mechanics Scientific Perspectives on Divine Action Russell R J Clayton P Wegter McNelly K Polkinghorne J eds VATICAN Vatican Observatory 2001 See also EditDouble aspect theory List of Christians in science and technology List of scholars on the relationship between religion and scienceReferences EditFootnotes Edit a b c Polkinghorne John 15 December 1986 Gell Mann Opened My Eyes The Scientist Retrieved 5 January 2020 Losch 2009 p 91 Losch 2018 p 98 Losch 2009 p 103 a b Williams Stephen 2018 John Polkinghorne on the Doctrine of Creation Carl F H Henry Center for Theological Understanding Deerfield Illinois Trinity Evangelical Divinity School Retrieved 5 January 2020 Losch 2009 p 92 Polkinghorne 1994 p 47 Watkins 2012 p 217 Hefner 2001 p 234 a b c DAMTP Theses Cambridge England University of Cambridge Archived from the original on 4 January 2013 Retrieved 5 January 2020 Daily Telegraph Issue no 51 581 dated Friday 19 March 2021 p 29 Obituaries The Reverend Canon John Polkinghorne Theoretical physicist who advanced the understanding of quantum theory before becoming a clergyman Metaxas 2011 p 361 a b c Participants John Charlton Polkinghorne The Humble Approach Initiative West Conshohocken Pennsylvania John Templeton Foundation 2005 Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 17 June 2010 a b c d e f g h i j O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F 2008 John Charlton Polkinghorne MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive St Andrews Scotland University of St Andrews Retrieved 5 January 2020 Polkinghorne 2007a pp 9 11 23 29 34 Knight 2012 p 622 Polkinghorne 2007a pp 40 50 Margenau amp Varghese 1992 p 86 Taylor J C Wilkinson D A 2022 John Charlton Polkinghorne KBE 16 October 1930 9 March 2021 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 72 293 309 doi 10 1098 rsbm 2021 0044 S2CID 247599441 Polkinghorne 2007a p 9 a b c d Reisz Matthew 19 February 2009 On the Side of the Angels Times Higher Education London Retrieved 5 January 2020 Third Way December 2005 p 34 College Announcement Queens College Cambridge 10 March 2021 Retrieved 10 March 2021 For basic biodata see Who s Who 2006 Presidents Cambridge England International Society for Science amp Religion Archived from the original on 28 August 2008 Retrieved 5 January 2020 Diary of Events PDF Hong Kong Baptist University November 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 2 April 2007 Staff Cambridge England Psychology and Religion Research Group Archived from the original on 26 December 2011 Retrieved 25 March 2010 Revd Dr John Polkinghorne KBE FRS St Edmund s College Cambridge England University of Cambridge Retrieved 10 September 2018 For example Polkinhorne John Exploring Reality the Intertwining of Science and Religion p ix Polkinghorne 2007b pp 15 22 Polkinghorne 1994 p 21 a b Sharpe 2003 Polkinghorne 2007a p 107 This and unless noted otherwise all subsequent quotations are from Polkinghorne 1994 ch 3 Polkinghorne 1998 pp 71 83 Polkinghorne 1998 p 72 Polkinghorne 1994 p 76 Polkinghorne 1998 p 75 Polkinghorne 1998 pp 81 82 Polkinghorne 2003 p 14 Creationism Biologist Quits Job BBC News 16 September 2008 Retrieved 5 January 2020 Polkinghorne John 19 September 2008 Shining a Light Where Science and Theology Meet The Times London Archived from the original on 1 September 2011 Retrieved 5 January 2020 Frankenberry 2008 p 340 Science and the Trinity Reviews New Haven CT Yale University Press Archived from the original on 10 October 2012 Retrieved 5 January 2020 Blackburn Simon 1 August 2002 An Unbeautiful Mind The New Republic Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 Retrieved 5 January 2020 Dyson Freeman 1998 Is God in the Lab The New York Review of Books Vol 45 no 9 Retrieved 5 January 2020 Ings Simon 1998 God Only Knows New Scientist Vol 159 no 2141 Archived from the original on 12 March 2008 Retrieved 5 January 2020 Dawkins 2006 p 99 Polkinghorne amp Beale 2009 p 29 Grayling A C 2009 Review of Questions of Truth God Science and Belief by John Polkinghorne and Nicholas Beale New Humanist Vol 124 no 2 London Rationalist Association Retrieved 5 January 2020 Davis Edward B 17 July 2009 The Motivated Belief of John Polkinghorne First Things New York Institute on Religion and Public Life Retrieved 5 January 2020 Bibliography Edit Dawkins Richard 2006 The God Delusion Boston Houghton Mifflin Company Frankenberry Nancy K ed 2008 The Faith of Scientists in Their Own Words Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press Hefner Philip 2001 Evolution In Fahlbusch Erwin Lochman Jan Milic Mbiti John Pelikan Jaroslav Vischer Lukas eds The Encyclopedia of Christianity Vol 2 Grand Rapids Michigan Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Company pp 228 236 ISBN 978 0 8028 2414 1 Knight Christopher C 2012 John Polkinghorne In Stump J B Padgett Alan G eds The Blackwell Companion to Science and Christianity Chichester England Wiley Blackwell pp 622 631 ISBN 978 1 4443 3571 2 Losch Andreas 2009 On the Origins of Critical Realism Theology and Science 7 1 85 106 doi 10 1080 14746700802617105 ISSN 1474 6719 S2CID 145334914 2018 A Physicist s Belief John Polkinghorne s Consonance of Theology and Science The Ignatianum Philosophical Yearbook 24 1 97 116 doi 10 5281 zenodo 1321790 ISSN 2300 1402 Margenau Henry Varghese Roy Abraham eds 1992 Cosmos Bios Theos Scientists Reflect on Science God and the Origins of the Universe Life and Homo Sapiens Chicago Open Court Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 8126 9186 3 Metaxas Eric ed 2011 Life God and Other Small Topics Conversations from Socrates in the City New York Plume published 2012 ISBN 978 0 452 29865 1 Polkinghorne John 1994 The Faith of a Physicist Reflections of a Bottom Up Thinker Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 03620 5 1998 Science and Theology An Introduction London SPCK ISBN 978 0 8006 3153 6 2003 Belief in God in an Age of Science New Haven Connecticut Yale Nota Bene ISBN 978 0 300 09949 2 2007a From Physicist to Priest An Autobiography London SPCK ISBN 978 0 281 05915 7 2007b Quantum Physics and Theology An Unexpected Kinship London SPCK ISBN 978 0 281 05767 2 Polkinghorne John Beale Nicholas 2009 Questions of Truth Louisville Kentucky Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 23351 8 Sharpe Kevin 2003 Nudging John Polkinghore Quodlibet 5 2 3 ISSN 1526 6575 Archived from the original on 14 February 2005 Retrieved 5 January 2020 Watkins James M 2012 John Polkinghorne s Kenotic Theology of Creation and Its Implications for a Theory of Human Creativity In Watts Fraser Knight Christopher C eds God and the Scientist Exploring the Work of John Polkinghorne Abingdon England Routledge published 2016 pp 217 242 doi 10 4324 9781315585215 ISBN 978 1 315 58521 5 Further reading EditGoogle Scholar List of papers by John Polkinghorne John Polkinghorne on the consequences of quantum theory for theology accessed 9 July 2012 Video interview with Polkinghorne accessed 25 March 2010 Interview by Alan Macfarlane 10 November 2008 video Pannenberg Wolfhart 2001 Response to John Polkinghorne Zygon 36 4 799 800 doi 10 1111 0591 2385 00398 Polkinghorne John Reductionism Interdisciplinary Encyclopedia of Religion and Science accessed 25 March 2010 Semple Ian 2009 From physicist to priest A quantum leap of faith The Guardian 9 April 2009 interview with Polkinghorne Smedes Taede A Chaos Complexity and God Divine Action and Scientism Louvain Peeters 2004 a theological investigation of Polkinghorne s and Arthur Peacocke s model of divine action Runehov Anne L C Chaos Complexity and God Divine Action and Scientism by Taede A Smedes Ars Disputandi Volume 6 2006 Southgate Christopher ed 1999 God Humanity and the Cosmos A Textbook in Science and Religion T amp T Clark Relevant extracts Steinke Johannes Maria 2006 John Polkinghorne Konsonanz von Naturwissenschaft und Theologie Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht Investigates Polkinghorne s theory of consonance and analyses its philosophical background Wright Robert Video interview Slate accessed 25 March 2010 External links Edit Quotations related to John Polkinghorne at Wikiquote Website about Polkinghorne O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F John Polkinghorne MacTutor History of Mathematics archive University of St AndrewsAcademic officesPreceded byRonald Oxburgh President of Queens College Cambridge1988 1996 Succeeded byLord EatwellPreceded byAnnemarie Schimmel Gifford Lecturer at the University of Edinburgh1993 1994 Succeeded byG A CohenPreceded by Terry Lecturer1996 1997 Succeeded byDavid HartmanProfessional and academic associationsNew office President of the InternationalSociety for Science and Religion2002 2004 Succeeded byGeorge F R EllisAwardsPreceded byArthur Peacocke Templeton Prize2002 Succeeded byHolmes Rolston III Portals Biography Christianity Physics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Polkinghorne amp oldid 1132526713, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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