During a public “dialogue” at Oxford, “the world’s most famous atheist,” Richard Dawkins, told the Archbishop of Canterbury he couldn’t be sure God didn’t exist.
Several times over the years I’ve encountered worshippers in what I would call the “I Can’t Know” religion.
A Newsweek article on one of the most important physics projects of the new millennium asks, “Will it change our views of the universe and our place in it?”
The people who contribute to the AiG website are anything but foolish, and deserve praise from all intelligent people. Even agnostics like me.
Interestingly enough, the man who won this award for supposedly helping to bridge the gap between science and religion had the following to say in a 1978 interview with Monte Davis.
Dr Freeman Dyson, who works at Princeton University’s Institute for Advanced Study in New Jersey, is the recipient of this year’s Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion.
Answers in Genesis is an apologetics ministry, dedicated to helping Christians defend their faith and proclaim the good news of Jesus Christ.