Does Science Support Belief In God? - CFIUK, London


Details
Organisers: Center for Inquiry UK (CFI UK) - a section of the BHA (https://www.humanism.org.uk/) and affiliate of Center For Inquiry (http://www.centerforinquiry.net/), Inc
facebook: http://www.facebook.com/?sk=messages&tid=1460408089729
website: http://www.cfilondon.org/2011/03/01/does-science-support-belief-in-god-swinburne-vs-philipse/
Tickets from BHA: http://www.humanism.org.uk/meet-up/events/view/140
CFI UK and South Place Ethical Society present:
Public Debate
Does Science Support Belief In God?
Prof. Herman Philipse vs Prof. Richard Swinburne
Chair: Stephen Law
Tuesday May 10th, 7-9pm.
Main Hall, Conway Hall, Red Lion Square. Holborn London WC1R 4RL
£3 on the door. £2 students. Free entry to CFI UK friends (i.e. season ticket holders).
An evening with two of the world’s most powerful and respected thinkers from either side of the theism/atheism divide. Topics likely to be addressed include: Does the orderliness of the universe point to a designer? Do discoveries in neuroscience, cosmology and other branches of empirical science reveal evidence of the hand of God?
Richard Swinburne is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy of Religion at the University of Oxford. Over the last 50 years, Prof. Swinburne has established himself as one of world’s foremost philosophers of religion. He is an influential proponent of natural theology, that is, philosophical arguments for the existence of God. Prof. Swinburne’s “Is There A God?” has been translated into 14 languages.
Herman Philipse Is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at the University of Utrecht, The Netherlands, and one of the world’s leading atheist thinkers. Philipse’s 1995 Atheist Manifesto was republished in an expanded edition in 2004 with a foreword by Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who partly credits the book for her shift from Islam to atheism. Philipse’s forthcoming book “God in the Age of Science? A Critique of Religious Reason” will be published by OUP in 2011/12.

Does Science Support Belief In God? - CFIUK, London