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Michael Ruse

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  • 13 Feb 2013

    Happy Birthday, Charles Darwin!

    We remember Darwin for a lot of contributions to a seemingly infinite number of fields. But which discovery or advancement is the most important? Cambridge authors weigh in to commemorate 204 years of Darwin.

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  • 12 Feb 2013

    Into the Intro: The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Darwin and Evolutionary Thought

    Happy Darwin Day! Today marks the 204th birthday of the legendary evolutionary biologist Charles Darwin. So this week at Cambridge University Press, we're paying tribute to one of our most prolific and important authors. To commemorate International Darwin Day and Darwin's innumerable contributions, go Into the Intro of the new volume The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Darwin and Evolutionary Thought.

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  • 6 Apr 2010
    Michael Ruse

    Reconciling Science, Religion, and Awards Season

    Evolution, global warming, human cloning, abortion rights. The cultural and political debates playing out on today’s world stage invoke frenetically partisan passions, and yet they are symptomatic of a broader cultural rift: the division between Christianity and science. Michael Ruse, author of Science and Spirituality: Making Room for Faith in the Age of Science, is a persistent figure on the frontlines of this divide. Negotiating the fine line between scientist and skeptic, Ruse pushes to show how it is possible for a believer of any faith to engage in an open and informed intellectual dialogue—for science and religion to coexist. He’s not alone. Over the weekend, Ruse blogged about the Templeton Foundation for The Huffington Post. The Foundation’s stated mission is “to serve as a philanthropic catalyst for discovery in areas engaging life’s biggest questions. These questions range from explorations into the laws of nature and the universe to questions on the nature of love, gratitude, forgiveness, and creativity.” This year, the Foundation honored Francisco J. Ayala with its prize for “a living person who has made an exceptional contribution to affirming life's spiritual dimension, whether through insight, discovery, or practical works. It is the world's largest annual monetary award given to an individual, currently valued at 1,000,000 pounds sterling.” (Past winners included Mother Teresa and Chuck Colson, former Watergate burglar -turned- born-again Christian). Yet no worthy award presentation is without controversy! Read on as Ruse dissects the role of the Templeton Foundation in influencing debate today (“It is hardly too strong a term to say that it is an object of derision by many of today's scientists…”), and accusations against Ruse’s friend Francisco Ayala – called a “master of non-committal waffle” by Minnesota biologist P.Z. Myers.

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  • 8 Mar 2010

    Great Science Doesn’t Stand Still

    “Great science doesn’t stand still. It picks up and carries ideas and findings way beyond the wildest hopes of its founders.” — Michael Ruse, one of our favorite Darwin defenders and author of the forthcoming Science and Spirituality. Get a double dose of Ruse by checking out his take on What Darwin Got Wrong (Farrar, […]

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  • 28 Jan 2010
    Michael Ruse

    Michael Ruse’s Spelling Test

    Michael Ruse is a prominent philosopher and a bad speller. Should this puzzle the rest of us? via Brainstorm Health-care reform is set to become my King Charles's Head. I am going to find it difficult to write anything without it coming up in the middle. Fifty-seven million people in the United States of America without healthcare insurance and we -- at least those blocking reform -- call ourselves a Christian nation. Shame, shame, shame. But, spurred by a well-merited criticism of my last blog, I want to write about something else that has been on my mind and which I intended to raise at some point. So why not now? I have in my possession a school report from when I was about 10 years old. My mother was a schoolteacher and we took school reports very seriously in my family. They were not glanced at, signed, and then forgotten. They were returned, stored safely, and discussed on pertinent occasions in the future. The report, said he modestly, is pretty good. "Sports" is a bit off, but generally I was nicely on track. However, then we come to "Spelling." "B, Michael is improving." Well, there was room for improvement and I am afraid it did not go far. As my perceptive critic noted, I simply cannot spell. On this occasion, I got "miniscule" for "minuscule," but this is nothing. Some words I just blank out on. The other day, I could not for the life of me spell "cloathes," you know those things you put on. I can never spell "campaing," the thing that was the end of Napoleon in Russia. And you may ride in an automobile, but I ride in a "vehcule." And when it comes to, well you know what it is when you have had too many prunes and it begins with a d, I cannot get close enough to look it up in a dictionary.

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  • 14 Jan 2010
    Michael Ruse

    Science for Science Teachers

    Michael Ruse In 1981, the State of Arkansas passed into law a bill that demanded that if evolution was taught in state-supported schools, then something called "Creation Science" -- aka the book of Genesis read literally -- had also to be taught. This happened during the interregnum between Bill Clinton's first time in the governor's mansion and when he regained it two years later. The bill was debated for all of half an hour by the legislature and signed by the then-governor, a man as unqualified for the post as he was surprised at getting it. Obviously this law violated the First Amendment separation of church and state, and so the ACLU swung into action to get it declared unconstitutional. After a two-week trial, the federal judge ruled precisely that and so that was the end of the Arkansas "Balanced Treatment for Creation-Science and Evolution-Scient Act," as it was called. I was one of the witnesses for the plaintiff, called in to testify on the history and philosophy of science, showing that whereas evolutionary theory is science, creation science is not science but religion.

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  • 7 Jan 2010
    Michael Ruse

    The Chronicle Welcomes Michael Ruse

    Science and Religion expert Michael Ruse is one of our favorite Cambridge authors. He's nuanced, compelling, and unwilling to settle for simple, doctrinal arguments on either side of the creationism debate. The Chronicle of Higher Education's Brainstorm blog recently added him as a writer, where "[y]ou might see him writing about science and religion (especially creationism and evolution), college football, film, and other similarly uncontroversial matters." Ruse's latest post "Why I am Weeping for Florida State University" ties in neatly to Weisbrod and Asch's piece on college football coach bonuses. As we start the New Year, Florida State University is in the headlines for two reasons. The first is that on New Year's Day, in the Gator Bowl, FSU beat West Virginia. It was the final game of our coach, Bobby Bowden. The lead headline in the New York Times Sports Section is "Bowden Goes Out on Top of Shoulders." The magazine Science also has news about FSU. "Recession Hits Some Sciences Hard at Florida State University." We have just fired 20 tenured faculty and another 15 tenure-track faculty. And don't think that these were just second-raters or indeed presume that any of them were. Included wasDean Falk, one of today's leading paleoanthropologists and, among other things, the expert on the brain of Homo floresiensis (the hobbit). She got a pink slip on her 65th birthday. (Disclosure: Dean is a good friend. In this post I am absolutely not making a judgment about whether, given the firings, she was legitimately included or not. If you read the Science article, you will see that decisions were made on the judged vulnerability of departments, and she is a member of one such department, anthropology.) I don't know which item of news depresses me the more.

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  • 17 Aug 2009
    Michael Ruse

    Michael Ruse: New Atheism "A Bloody Disaster"

    Writing for BeliefNet, author and philosopher Michael Ruse writes on religion and science, and why New Atheism doesn't engage either end properly.

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