Christianity and the Tooth Fairy
Is belief in Christianity and God like believing in the tooth fairy? Or are there rational grounds that justify the beliefs of Christians?
Engage with the debate about whether there is a fundamental conflict between science and belief in God. Some scientists seem to make science their religion, but does science inevitably undermine belief in God?
Is belief in Christianity and God like believing in the tooth fairy? Or are there rational grounds that justify the beliefs of Christians?
The belief that science and religion are in fundamental conflict runs deep. But is it really as simple as that?
Are we nothing more than the result of neurons firing? Brain scientist Sharon Dirckx's concise book explores the issue from a Christian…
In 'Can Science Explain everything?' John Lennox shows that science sits more comfortably within the Christian worldview than in atheism.
Oxford professors John Lennox and Peter Atkins discuss whether we can answer all life's questions using the scientific method.
Alister McGrath's 'Inventing the Universe' argues that science and religion are not in opposition, they are complementary 'maps of reality'.
Science and religion have been locked in battle for centuries, maybe even millennia. Right? Or is there another story?
Does a Universe that ‘runs itself’ need God? Oddly, the answer to this question is ‘No’. And ‘Yes’.
Will science lead us to complete knowledge of everything, or are there areas science can't touch?