illustrations by Mark Saunders

The Glad Scientist

A Vatican astronomer explains why science and religion are a match made in heaven

by Dan Falk

illustrations by Mark Saunders

From the October 2009 issue of The Walrus


Bookmark and Share
Consolmagno has little patience for intelligent design. “Science cannot prove God, or disprove Him. He has to be assumed. If people have no other reason to believe in God than that they can’t imagine how the human eye could have evolved by itself, then their faith is very weak.” Rather than seeking affirmation of his own faith in the heavens, he explains that religion is what gives him the courage and desire to be a scientist. “Seeing the universe as God’s creation means that getting to play in the universe - which is really what a scientist does — is a way of playing with the Creator,” he says. “It’s a religious act. And it’s a very joyous act.”
 

    Cancel

You can subscribe to The Walrus for less than $2.98 an issue — click on the button below to learn more. Click here to find out about our Support The Walrus campaign, or buy a print of the new cover

Article Tools

»  RSS Feeds  RSS Feeds

»  Printer-friendly page

»  Email this article

»  More in this issue

»  More in Profile

»  All articles by Dan Falk

»  BUY THIS ISSUE



Cross-Border Shopping
Cross-Border Shopping
by Blake Gopnik | JULY 2004
Western curators are travelling the globe to find great art. Are they celebrating other visual cultures, or just hoping to enrich their own?

The Walrus Presents...
The Walrus Presents...
by Jason Sherman and David Parkins | APRIL 2009
Conrad Black pardoned? Read our new monthly comic strip