Trotter Prize (Texas A&M)
The Trotter Prize is awarded at Texas A&M and is part of an endowed lecture series. It is awarded "for pioneering contributions to the understanding of the role of information, complexity and inference in illuminating the mechanisms and wonder of nature" and includes The Trotter Lecture which "seeks to reveal connections between science and religion, often viewed in academia as non-overlapping, if not rival, worldviews.
Robert L. Park criticized the award for being given William A. Dembski for inappropriately attempting to force science and religion together.
Previous winners
Nobel Prize winners Charles Hard Townes and Francis Crick received the inaugural award at A&M's Rudder Theater in 2002. Townes spoke about connections between science and faith.[1] Promoter of the pseudoscientific notion of intelligent design William A. Dembski[2] shared the award in 2005 with theoretical biologist Stuart Kauffman.[3] Simon Conway Morris received the award and spoke in 2007.[4][5] Francis Collins, the director of the human genome project, and Stephen Weinberg, a Nobel Prize recipient for physics, shared the Trotter Prize in 2008 and discussed the interplay between science and religion.[6] Astronomer and historian of science Owen Gingerich also won the prize.[7]
Robert L. Park has criticized the award for being given to William A. Dembski, proponent of the pseudoscientific concept of intelligent design, saying it is given out for "overlapping the magisteria" (a comment based on Stephen Jay Gould's concept of non-overlapping magisteria, NOMA, the idea that science and religion inherently do not overlap). .[8]
Honorees/ speakers
- 2010 Francis Everitt, Research Professor W.W. Hansen Experimental Physics Laboratory at Stanford University gave a talk titled Mystery in Science, Reason in Religion: How the Two Intersect and Overlap and Sir Roger Penrose, Emeritus Rouse Ball Professor of Mathematics at the University of Oxford gave a talk titled Did the Universe Have a Beginning?
- 2009 Owen Gingerich, Professor Emeritus of Astronomy and History of Science at Harvard University spoke on the Mystery in Science, Reason in Religion: How the Two Intersect and Overlap and Charles Townes, professor emeritus at University of California Berkeley and 1964 winner of the Nobel Prize in physics, spoke on The Parallelism and Likely Eventual Convergence of Science and Religion
- 2008 Francis S. Collins, Director of the National Human Genome Research Institute at the National Institutes of Health gave a talk titled The Language of God and Steven Weinberg, 1979 Nobel Prize in Physics recipient and professor of Physics & Astronomy at the University of Texas gave a talk titled Without God
- 2007 Simon Conway Morris, professor of Earth Sciences and holder of the Chair in Evolutionary Paleobiology at the University of Cambridge spoke on Darwin's Compass: How Evolution Discovers the Song of Creation
- 2006 Freeman J. Dyson, winner of the 2000 Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion Winner and Professor Emeritus of physics at Princeton University's Institute for Advanced Study spoke on Heretical Thoughts about Science and Society
- 2005 William D. Phillips, 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics Winner and Research Group Leader at the Physics Laboratory at the National Institute of Standards and Technology gave a talk titled Ordinary Faith, Ordinary Science
- 2005 William Dembski Associate Research Professor at Baylor University gave a talk titled Intelligent Design's Place in the Natural Sciences and Stuart Kauffman, Director of the Institute for Biocomplexity and Informatics at the University of Calgary, gave a talk titled Toward a Physical Definition of Life
- 2004 Paul Davies, Professor of Natural Philosophy in the Australian Centre for Astrobiology at Macquarie University gave a talk titled Did Life Come From Mars? and Robert Shapiro, Professor Emeritus and Senior Lecturer of Chemistry at New York University spoke on Science & Myth in the Origin of Life
- 2003 Alan Guth, Father of the "inflationary universe" theory and Professor of Physics at The Massachusetts Institute of Technology gave a talk titled Cosmic Inflation and the Origin of the Universe and John Polkinghorne an Anglican Priest and Former Professor of Mathematical Physics and President of Queens' College, Cambridge spoke on The Universe as Creation
- 2002 Francis Crick, 1962 Nobel Prize Winner in Medicine and Physiology who works at The Salk Institute gave a talk titled The Astonishing Hypothesis and Charles Townes, 1964 Nobel Prize in Physics at the University of California-Berkeley gave a talk titled The Convergence of Science and Religion
References
External links