Where is the Soul in Science? Critical Reflections on Science and Religion
Wed, 21 Feb 2024 • 05:00PM - 07:30PM
Nelson Mears Auditorium, Chau Chak Wing Museum
Free

Registration:
https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/where-is-the-soul-in-science-critical-reflections-on-science-and-religion-tickets-802065338017?aff=oddtdtcreator
Description

Science in the West did not emerge fully-formed like Athena from the head of 
Zeus: theoretical frameworks, methodologies and belief systems have been tested 
and contested, proven, disproven and abandoned. Yet since the 17th century 
science has profoundly recast our relationship to the world and ourselves. 
Science began to provide a logical, systemic framework with which to understand 
not only the world, but knowledge and values, shifting the axis away from a 
divinely ordained order bestowed by divine beings and religious authorities to 
one in which rational scientific thought, agency and objectivity began to hold 
sway.

Science today reminds us of our own agency in the building of new knowledge. 
But can it provide meaningful orientation in key aspects of human life? 
Traditionally, religion provided community, connection, certainty, salvation, 
and a strong cultural and moral framework in the face of chaos. Is science able 
to address these fundamental human needs? In recent years populism, politics 
and the pandemic – together with the rise of disinformation and ‘fake news’ 
made possible by unregulated social media – have decentred the trust in 
science, with conspiracy theories on the rise in the attempt to find answers 
and orientation in life

What has science failed to deliver? Where is the soul in science?


Speakers

Anik Waldow (Sydney), Charles Wolfe (Toulouse), Peter Harrison (UQ)



Hosted by Natasha Mitchell, ABC Big Ideas

________________________________
Contact

The School of Humanities Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, 
soh.eve...@sydney.edu.au<mailto:soh.eve...@sydney.edu.au>


ANIK WALDOW | Professor of Philosophy | FAHA
Department of Philosophy | School of Philosophical and Historical Inquiry
THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY
S404, Quadrangle Building A14 | The University of Sydney | NSW | 2006 | 
Australia
T +61 2 9114 1245<tel:+61291141245> | F +61 2 9351 3918<tel:+61293513918>
E anik.wal...@sydney.edu.au<mailto:anik.wal...@sydney.edu.au>

Experience Embodied: Early Modern Accounts of the Human Place in Nature, OUP, 
2020
https://global.oup.com/academic/product/experience-embodied-9780190086114?cc=au&lang=en&;

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