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spacer from Wisconsin Public Radio  

SCIENCE AND MEANING: FIVE QUESTIONS
WEB EXTRAS
(for all excerpts: right-click on PC or control-click on Mac and choose "save link as" to download")

Individual Interview from the Series
Craig Venter (from What is Life)
Kevin Kelly  
Ruth Padell (from What Does Evolution Want)
John Haught  
Marilynne Robinson (from Does the Soul Still Matter)
Parker Palmer  
Nidhal Guessoum (from Can Islam and Science Coexist)
Coleman Barks  
Steve's round-up on sacred science (from Can Science Be Sacred)

Arthur Zajonc

 

 

ELECTRONS TO ENLIGHTENMENT
A Five Part Series on Science and Religion that aired in 2006

 

LIFE AND EVOLUTION

James Watson, one of the discoverers of DNA's double-helix structure, talks with Steve Paulson about making the discovery and what sort of environment produces scientific breakthroughs. Watson's new memoir is called "Genes, Girls and Gamow."

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Sean Carroll is the author of "The Making of the Fittest: DNA and the Ultimate Forensic Record of Evolution." He tells Steve Paulson about new discoveries in evolutionary history, including the existence and purpose of fossil genes. Carroll is an evolutionary biologist at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and at the University of Wisconsin.

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Henrietta Lacks was a poor, African American woman who died of cervical cancer at the age of 31. One of her doctors at Johns Hopkins University Hospital harvested cells from her which became the basis for an immortal line of cells used in medical research labs. Rebecca Skloot has tracked down the story of these so-called HeLa cells and told it in a book called "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks." Skloot talks with Jim Fleming.

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SOUL AND CONSCIOUSNESS

 

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Steve Paulson prepared this report on the state of thinking about consciousness. We hear from Artificial Intelligence pioneer Marvin Minsky, physicist Roger Penrose, philosopher Daniel Dennett, New Age guru Deepak Chopra, and many more.
Alan Wallace is an ex-Buddhist monk who runs the Santa Barbara Institute for Consciousness Studies, and is the author of "Contemplative Science." He tells Steve Paulson that the long tradition of rigorous investigation of the mind undertaken by Buddhism has a lot to teach Western science.

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Daniel Tammet is an autistic savant and the author of "Born on a Blue Day." He loves numbers, can do calculations in his head into the millions, and can recite pi to more than 22,000 digits. But he has trouble telling right from left and looking people in the eye. Tennet talks with Anne Strainchamps about life on the autistic spectrum and how he sees numbers.

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Harvard trained brain scientist Jill Bolte Taylor found an unusual path to growth. She describes her stroke, the weird euphoria it caused and her long process of recovery in her book, "My Stroke of Insight," and in this conversation with Anne Strainchamps.

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We re-visit an old interview with the late Francis Crick where he lays out his "astonishing hypothesis," which is now the standard scientific view of consciousness. Then, Steve Paulson talks with philosopher Alva Noe, author of "Out of Our Heads: Why You Are Not Your Brain, and Other Lessons from the Biology of Consciousness." And we wind up stuck in "Bladerunner."

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ISLAM AND MODERNITY

 

Hollywood screenwriter Kamran Pasha has written a novel called "Mother of Believers." It's the story of Muhammad's third wife, Aisha, whom he married when she was very young. Pasha tells Jim Fleming why he wanted to tell this story in novel form, despite the potential controversy. And we hear him read a passage from the book.

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Senegalese pop star Youssou N'Dour is the top-selling African musician of all time. His album "Egypt" moved away from the raucous sounds of pop and was devoted to his faith. N'Dour is a devout Sufi Muslim. Film-maker Chai Vasarhelyi followed Youssou N'Dour and his band after the album came out and produced a documentary called "I Bring What I Love." Anne Strainchamps talks with the film-maker and musician right after the film opened in New York. "Egypt" won a Grammy in 2005. We hear clips from "Egypt" and from the film.

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Salman Ahmad is a Pakistani rock star. His group is Junoon, and they're the most popular rock group in South Asia. Ahmad talks with Anne Strainchamps about being a Muslim rock star. His memoir is called "Rock & Roll Jihad." And we hear lots of his music.

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Tariq Ramadan is a Swiss-born philosopher who travels throughout the Islamic world trying to build bridges between European Muslim and conservative clerics. He's the author of "In the Footsteps of the Prophet" and tells Steve Paulson that Muhammed's life offers many lessons for today's Muslims.

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Azhar Usman is a Muslim stand-up comic and part of the "Allah Made Me Funny" Comedy Troupe. He tells Jim Fleming that he sees himself as belonging to a long tradition of socially conscious comedians. And we hear excerpts from his comedy routine.

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Ayaan Hirsi Ali is a famous critic of Islam. Born in Somalia, Hirsi Ali emigrated to the Netherlands where she served in the Dutch Parliament. She and Dutch film-maker Theo Van Gogh made a film called "Submission" which so offended some Muslims that a fanatic killed Van Gogh and called for the death of Hirsi Ali, who now lives in the United States. She talks with Steve Paulson about why she believes Islam is inherently incompatible with Western values.

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SACRED SCIENCE

 

Steve Paulson speaks with several scientists, religious scholars and atheists about Albert Einstein's religious beliefs. We hear from Richard Dawkins, Elaine Pagels, and Einstein biographer Walter Isaacson who debate what Einstein meant by "god."

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Jungian analyst David Lindorff is the author of "Pauli and Jung: The Meeting of Two Great Minds." He tells Anne Strainchamps about Pauli's therapy with Jung which focused on Pauli's dreams, and led the physicist to an interest in mysticism and alchemy.

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David Leavitt is the author of a novel called "The Indian Clerk" which tells the story of Srinivasa Ramanujan, the uneducated Indian who amazed Cambridge University with his mathematical discoveries. Leavitt tells Jim Fleming how Ramanujan became friends with mathematician G.H. Hardy.

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Renowned biologist E.O. Wilson talks with Steve Paulson about the difficulty of reconciling science and religion. Wilson calls himself a provisional deist but is a vocal critic of Intelligent Design. Wilson's books include "Sociobiology" and "Consilience" and he's just edited a collection of Charles Darwin's books called "From So Simple a Beginning."

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Rebecca Stott lives in Cambridge, England, and made it the setting of her novel, "Ghostwalk." The book is an intellectual thriller set partly in Isaac Newton's time and concerning his interest in alchemy. Stott reads an excerpt for Anne Strainchamps and talks with her about aspects of the quantum world and its possible effects on ours.

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