Faraday AssociatesFaraday Associates comprise an informalnetwork of academics, mainly in Europe,lecturing and/or writing in the arena of scienceand religion. Themajority of Associates work full-time within thescientific community.Faraday Associates are deliberately chosen torepresent a wide range of disciplines and stagesin career development, ranging from doctoralstudents to Professorial status.Please note that Associates are listed in alphabetical order. The cohort of Associates is growing and this list is therefore not yet complete.
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Nicholas Beale is a Social Philosopher and Director of. He read Maths at Cambridge University and then worked in computer communications, chairing working groups of the IEEE (The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) Project 802 which established industry standards. After a spell at McKinsey he established Sciteb in 1998.
Much of his work has been on the interaction between investors and companies, culminating in his book Constructive Engagement. He also organised the first Colloquium on the Ethical and Spiritual Implications of the Internet, at the House of Lords in 1997.
He collaborates with Martin Nowak, Robert May and others on certain applications of mathematical biology and evolutionary dynamics. His 10-year collaboration with John Polkinghorne on Polkinghorne.net resulted in their joint book Questions of Truth published in 2009. Recent Selected publications. God and Science (with Colin Howson) Prospect May 1998. Cybernauts Awake (co-author) Church House Publishing (1999).
Constructive Engagement: Directors and Investors in Action Gower (2005). Oil and Troubled Waters'. Harvard Business Review: Nov 2005. Questions of Truth (with John Polkinghorne) Westminster John Knox (2009). The Selfish Gene Delusion Trinity Forum Provocations Feb 2009. Stephen Blundell is currently Professor of Physics in the Department of Physics at Oxford University and Tutor at Mansfield College. He was an undergraduate at Cambridge University and studied for his Ph.D.
At the Cavendish Laboratories before moving to Oxford in 1993, first as an EPSRC research fellow, then as a Merton College Junior Research Fellow, before taking up a university lectureship in 1997. He was a co-recipient of the Daiwa-Adrian prize in 1999. Blundells current research interests include the properties of correlated electrons in the solid state, particularly magnetism and superconductivity in organic systems and complex oxides, the use of high magnetic fields to probe Fermi surfaces, and muon-spin rotation to measure internal magnetic field distributions and dynamics.Prof. Blundell is a member of Christians in Science and an occasional speaker on science/faith issues. Selected recent research papers.
Blundell, Stephen (2001) Magnetism in Condensed Matter Oxford University Press. Hayward, M. A., Cussen, E.
J., Claridge, J. B., Bieringer, M., Rosseinsky, M. J., Kiely, C. J., Blundell, S.
J., Marshall, I. And Pratt, F. (2002) The hydride anion in an extended transition metal oxide array - LaSrCoO3H0.7 Science 295, 1882. Coldea, I., Blundell, S. J., Steer, C. A., Mitchell, J.
And Pratt, F. (2002) Spin freezing and magnetic inhomogeneities in bilayer manganites Phys. 89, 277601. Blundell, S.
J., Steer, C. A., Pratt, F. L., Marshall, I.
M., Hayes W., and Ward, R. (2003) Detection of magnetic order in the S=1 chain LiVGe2O6 using implanted spin-polarized muons Phys. B 67, 224411. Blundell, S. (2004) Muon-spin rotation studies of electronic properties of molecular conductors and superconductors Chem. 104, 5717.
Blundell, S. And Pratt, F. (2004) Organic and molecular magnets J. Phys.: Condens. Matter 16, R771. Goddard, P.
A., Blundell, S. J., Singleton, J., McDonald, R. D., Ardavan, A., Narduzzo, A., Schleuter, J. And Sasaki, T. (2004) Angle-dependent magnetoresistance of the layered organic superconductor kappa-(ET)2Cu(NCS)2: Simulation and experiment Phys. B 69, 174509. Analytis, J.
G., Blundell S. And Ardavan, A. (2004) Landau levels, molecular orbitals, and the Hofstadter butterfly in finite systems Am.
Katherine Blundell is professor of Astrophysics at Oxford University, where she is also a University Research Fellow of the Royal Society and a Science Research Fellow of St John's College, Oxford. Previously she was a Research Fellow of the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851 and before that she was a Research Fellow at Balliol College, Oxford.In 2010 she won the Royal Society Rosalind Franklin Award. This is awarded annually and is funded by the government as part of its efforts to promote women in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM). Revd Dave Bookless is Director of Theology for A Rocha International (www.arocha.org). A Rocha is an international Christian organisation engaging in scientific research, environmental education and community-based conservation projects across six continents. He is also studying for a part-time PhD under Professor David Ford in the Divinity Faculty at Cambridge University, exploring a theological understanding of biodiversity conservation. Rev Bookless was born in India and his first degree was in Modern History (1983) at Jesus College Cambridge (specialising in Gandhian politics). He stayed in Cambridge to complete a Post-Graduate Certificate in Education, specialising in multifaith Religious Education, before teaching and then becoming Lecturer in Christianity as a World Religion for Bradford’s Interfaith Education Centre.
From 1988-1991 he trained for ordination at Trinity College, Bristol, where he completed a Dip. HE in Theology and an MA in Church, Religion and Society 1780-1914. He was ordained in 1991, serving as curate at St John's Southall before becoming Priest-in-Charge of St George's Southall, where he remained until 2000. In 2001 he left full-time parish ministry to set-up A Rocha UK. He was National Director until 2008 before focusing on writing and theological education, and in 2011 moved to his current role with A Rocha International. During his time with A Rocha UK, the Rev Bookless served on various bodies including the Church of England's Mission and Public Affairs Council and its 'Shrinking the Footprint' steering group, and as Moderator of the Environmental Issues Network of Churches Together in Britain and Ireland.
Rev Bookless has written and spoken widely, his books including ‘Planetwise: Dare to Care for God’s World’ (IVP 2008) and ‘God Doesn’t do Waste’ (IVP 2010). He is married to Anne and they have four daughters. His academic interests include a theology of place; the interface between theology, economics and ecological sustainability; and the implications of biblical environmentalism for missiology and ecclesiology. Selected Recent Science and Religion Publications:. Bookless, D. (2010), Environment and Leadership, in Ande, Titre (ed.) International Study Guide 43: A Guide to Leadership, London: SPCK. Bookless, Dave (2010), God Doesn't do Waste: Redeeming the Whole of Life, Nottingham: IVP.
Bookless, David (2009), A Famine of Hope: Christian Mission and the search for a Sustainable Future, in Raj, Paul Mohan (ed.) Mission Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow, Bangalore: Theological Book Trust. Bookless, Dave (2008), Planetwise: Dare to Care for God's World, Nottingham: IVP. Bookless, D. (2008), The Fifth Mark of Mission-Ecological Concern from a Praxis Perspective in Walls, Prof. A & Ross, Dr.
Mission in the Twenty-first Century, London: Darton Longman and Todd. Bookless, D. (2008), 'The Land is Mine' says the Lord-Practical ways Christian mission can address environmental justice, Mission Studies 25:1-16. Bookless, Dave (2008), Introduction for The Green Bible, London: Harper Collins. Bookless, D. (2007), Towards a Theology of Sustainability in Berry, Prof.
(ed.) When Enough is Enough-A Christian Framework for Environmental Sustainability, Nottingham: Apollos. Bookless, Dave & Larkin, Dr. Lucy (2006), Community and Environment, in ed. And Edmonson, C.
Created for Community, London: Darton, Longman and ToddRevd Dave Bookless is Director of Theology for A Rocha International (www.arocha.org). A Rocha is an international Christian organisation engaging in scientific research, environmental education and community-based conservation projects across six continents. He is also studying for a part-time PhD under Professor David Ford in the Divinity Faculty at Cambridge University, exploring a theological understanding of biodiversity conservation.
Rev Bookless was born in India and his first degree was in Modern History (1983) at Jesus College Cambridge (specialising in Gandhian politics). He stayed in Cambridge to complete a Post-Graduate Certificate in Education, specialising in multifaith Religious Education, before teaching and then becoming Lecturer in Christianity as a World Religion for Bradford’s Interfaith Education Centre. From 1988-1991 he trained for ordination at Trinity College, Bristol, where he completed a Dip.
HE in Theology and an MA in Church, Religion and Society 1780-1914. He was ordained in 1991, serving as curate at St John's Southall before becoming Priest-in-Charge of St George's Southall, where he remained until 2000. In 2001 he left full-time parish ministry to set-up A Rocha UK. He was National Director until 2008 before focusing on writing and theological education, and in 2011 moved to his current role with A Rocha International. During his time with A Rocha UK, the Rev Bookless served on various bodies including the Church of England's Mission and Public Affairs Council and its 'Shrinking the Footprint' steering group, and as Moderator of the Environmental Issues Network of Churches Together in Britain and Ireland. Rev Bookless has written and spoken widely, his books including ‘Planetwise: Dare to Care for God’s World’ (IVP 2008) and ‘God Doesn’t do Waste’ (IVP 2010). He is married to Anne and they have four daughters.
His academic interests include a theology of place; the interface between theology, economics and ecological sustainability; and the implications of biblical environmentalism for missiology and ecclesiology. Multimedia resources. Derek Burke was previously Vice-Chancellor of the, a post he held with distinction from 1987-1995. Burke is currently Honorary President of the, Honorary Fellow of St Edmunds College, Cambridge and of and Honorary Member of the. He holds a BSc and PhD in Chemistry from Birmingham University and honorary doctorates from the University of Aberdeen and UEA. After research fellowships at Yale and then at the he lectured at the University of Aberdeen for ten years before appointment as Founding Professor of Biological Sciences, University of Warwick in 1969. From 1982 to 1986 he was Scientific Director of Allelix Incorporated, Toronto, Canada, before returning to the UK in 1987 to become Vice-Chancellor of the.Prof.
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Burke was previously Chairman of the 2004-2009, President of the 1987-1990, a member of the Advisory Committee on Genetic Modification 1987-1995, Chairman of the Advisory Committee on Novel Foods and Processes 1988-1997, a member of the 1987-1997, and Chairman of the Council of the 1992-1997. He was Chairman of the Governing Council of the 1987-1995, and a member of the Science & Engineering Board and the Technology Interaction Board of the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council 1994-1997. He was a member of the Office of Science and Technologys Technology Foresight Steering Group 1993-1995.
Since retiring in 1995 he has continued as a Governor of the in Norwich and Reading 1994-2002, and was Chairman of Genome Research Limited, the body responsible for the governance of the in Cambridge, from 1997-98. He was a member of the Governing Bodies of the in Cambridge 1995-1999.
He also carried out a number of tasks for Government Departments including the Prior Options Review for MAFF in 1995-1996 and a review of their scientific advisory system the (2009).As Chairman of the Advisory Committee on Novel Foods and Processes (1988 1997), Prof. Burke was responsible for advising the Government on the safety of genetically modified foods and he has been very active in the subsequent debate about the safety, efficacy, and ethics of the use of genetically modified foods, and the crops from which they are derived.
This has involved a very large number of speaking engagements, interviews for television and radio, and the writing of many articles. He was a member of the Societal Issues Panel of the and is currently a member of the Bioscience for Science Panel of the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council which continues to address such issues on a wider horizon, for example the safety and ethical issues associated with synthetic biology. He is also currently a member of Newton's Apple, a science think tank. Burke was a Specialist Adviser to the 1995-2001 and a member of the Nuffield Council on Bioethics Working Party on the Genetic Modification of plants, which produced a Report titled Genetically Modified Crops: the Ethical and Social Issues (1999) and The use of genetically modified crops in developing countries (2004).
He has also worked at the European level as one of the ten representatives from the EU in an EU-US Biotechnology Consultative Forum, which reported to Presidents Clinton and Prodi in 2000. He was, from 2000-2004, one of the two UK members of the High Level Life Sciences Group in Brussels, reporting directly to Commissioner Busquin, head of DG XII giving general advice to the Commissioner, especially on issues arising from novel science and technology that raise social and ethical implications for the wider public, including stem cells, and the regulation of genetically modified crops and their use in developing countries.As a member of the, Prof.
Burke chaired a Working Party on the social and ethical issues of cyberspace and was a member of the Archbishops Medical Ethics Advisory Group. Burke is also a former president of.
Recent publications in science and religion. Robin Gill & Derek Burke Strategic Church Leadership, SPCK (1996). Derek Burke (ed.) Cybernauts awake!, Church Press (1999).
Derek Burke Evolution and creation, in Science Meets Faith. Theology and science in conversation, SPC K (1998). Derek Burke Genetic engineering of food, in Christians and bioethics, SPCK (2000).
Derek Burke BSE, MMR and GM: whos telling the truth?, in Can we be sure about anything? Science, faith and postmodernism, Apollos (2005). Derek Burke, 'Spending a life in Science and Faith' in Real Scientists Real Faith Monarach (2009)Scientific publicationsProf. Burke has published over 120 scientific papers on the antiviral substance interferon and on the molecular biology of animal viruses. Multimedia resources.
Dr Peter Childs is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Chemical & Environmental Sciences at the. He is President of the and Chairman of the. Dr Childs was an Open Scholar at Oxford, where he studied Chemistry and gained his D.Phil.
He was a Fulbright Scholar and a post-doctoral research fellow at Northwestern University, Illinois before serving for a number of years as lecturer in Chemistry at Makerere, Kampala, Uganda. Upon returning to the UK he held research posts at the universities of York and Leeds, and was a part-time tutor with the Open University before moving to Ireland to take up a lectureship in Chemistry at Thomond College of Education and then at the University of Limerick. Dr Childs was BP Science Educator of the Year in 1985 and was Irish nominee for the UNESCO Science Prize in 1999. He has gained a number of awards, including the Boyle-Higgins Gold Medal of the (1992) and the Award for the Lucent Science teacher initiative (with George McClelland and Frank McGourty, 2000-2003). The University of Limerick gave him their Community Service Award in 2001 and the their Higher Education Teaching Award for 2002-2003.Dr Childs has been involved in various aspects of chemical education: curriculum development; role of practical work; language in science education; promotion of chemistry in schools; environmental science education; industry-education liaison; analysis of science performance; teaching of environmental chemistry; European liaison in chemical education; third level teaching of chemistry in Ireland; training of chemistry teachers. Amongst his other research interests are the history of chemistry, particularly in relation to Ireland he is currently researching the history of the early Irish chemical industry the history of chemical language and nomenclature and the role of serendipity in chemical discovery.Dr Childs is a frequent speaker on Science and Faith issues and gained the (with Dr Michael Culhane) in 2000. Recent publications.
Olga Aslibekian, Peter Childs and Richard Moles, Metal Concentrations in Surface Waters in the Vicinity of the Silvermines Abandoned Mine Site,Environmental Geochemistry and Health, 21, 347-352, 1999. Childs, P.E. Science education in the Republic of Ireland and the Celtic Tiger, Revista de Educacion en Ciencias, 2(1), 6-12, 2001.
Childs, P.E. Securing the future of chemistry: a case study of developments in chemical education in Ireland, CERAPIE, 3(3), 2002, 361-369. Childs, P.E. James Muspratt in Irish Innovators in science and technology, edited by Charles Mollan, William Davis and Brendan Finucane, Dublin: RIA, 2002, 68-69.
Childs, P.E. A woman of substance, Chemistry in Britain, 39(1), Jan. Alasdair Coles is an academic neurologist in Cambridge, UK, whose primary research interest is in the immunology and treatment of multiple sclerosis. He is employed by Cambridge University and has a small research team managing clinical trials and doing human immunological laboratory. He also does clinical work for two days a week as a consultant neurologist at Addenbrooke’s and Peterborough Hospitals.
He is a medical adviser to the Multiple Sclerosis Society of the UK, and advises several pharmaceutical companies. He was scientific adviser and contributor to ‘Here’s Johnny’ (a Wellcome-funded documentary about the effects of multiple sclerosis on graphic artist, Johnny Hicklenton), winner of two Grierson awards in November 2008.He was ordained priest in the Church of England in 2009 and is now a minister in secular employment at Addenbrooke's Hospital.Prof. Coles has also done some research on the neurological basis for religious experience, stemming from managing a small cohort of patients with spiritual experiences due to temporal lobe epilepsy and he has given invited lectures on this subject at the Department of Theology, Liverpool Hope University, in 2003, and the Department of Religious Studies, Calgary University. He is now engaged in a study, funded by the Templeton Foundation, of the spirituality of people with neurological disease in Cambridgeshire and is editing a book on religion in neurological disease for Cambridge Univesity Press. Science publications. Coles AJ, Compston DA, Selmaj KW, Lake SL, Moran S, Margolin DH, Norris K, Tandon PK (CAMMS223 Trial Investigators). Alemtuzumab vs.
Interferon beta-1a in early multiple sclerosis. N Engl J Med. 2008 Oct 23;359(17):1786-801. Jones JL, Phuah CL, Cox AL, Thompson SA, Ban M, Shawcross J, Walton A, Sawcer SJ, Compston A, Coles AJ. IL-21 drives secondary autoimmunity in patients with multiple sclerosis, following therapeutic lymphocyte depletion with alemtuzumab (Campath-1H). J Clin Invest.
Doi: 10.1172/JCI37878. Coles AJ, Twyman CL, Arnold DL, Cohen JA, Confavreux C, Fox EJ, Hartung HP, Havrdova E, Selmaj KW, Weiner HL, Miller T, Fisher E, Sandbrink R, Lake SL, Margolin DH, Oyuela P, Panzara MA, Compston DA; for the CARE-MS II investigators. Alemtuzumab for patients with relapsing multiple sclerosis after disease-modifying therapy: a randomised controlled phase 3 trial. 2012 Nov 24;380(9856):1829-39. Jones JL, Thompson SA, Loh P, Davies JL, Tuohy OC, Curry AJ, Azzopardi L, Hill-Cawthorne G, Fahey MT, Compston A, Coles AJ.
Human autoimmunity after lymphocyte depletion is caused by homeostatic T-cell proliferation. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. Epub ahead of print. Science and Religion publications. Coles A. God, theologian and humble neurologist. Brain 2008.
Coles A, Contributor to 'Test of FAITH' documentary, 2008. DVD by Paternoster, Milton Keynes, 2009, 87 mins, £8.99 Multimedia resources. Brain Imaging and Religious ExperienceImaging the Religious Brain: What can brain imaging tell us about religionNeuronal Imaging of the Religious BrainGod and the BrainMind, brain and the search for GodParkinson's Disease and FaithNeurological disease and faithPastoral issues arising from neurological and psychiatric illnessNeuroscience, the Bible and the SoulWhat does neuroscience teach us which is helpful for those of faith?Brain science and the churchFaith and Neuroscience: Friend of Foe? Pranab Das is Professor and Chair of the department of Physics at and Executive Director of the Institute for Technology, Science and Culture (InTerSeCt). He was educated at and the, where he obtained his PhD in the Dynamics of Small Asymmetric Self-Connected Hopfield Neural Networks, lectured and engaged in post-doctoral research.
He moved to Elon in 1993 and, in 2004, was visiting scholar at.A regular conference speaker, especially on science and religion, Prof. Das is the recipient of a number of awards, notably a shared award to the ISSR and InTerSeCt from the in support of the creation and competitive distribution of a canonical library of texts in the field of science and religion.
As Principal Investigator and Program Director for the (GPSS) Major Awards Program he oversees the identification, support and development of scholars and programs in science and spirituality in Eastern/Central Europe and Asia. Selected recent publications on Science and Religion. 'The Intrusion of Unknowability: Chaos Theory and Free Action in Aesthetics and Chaos: Investigating a Creative Complicity, Grazia Marchiano ed. Traubin Press, Turin, 2002.
Chaos Theory, Human Freedom and the Transcendent in Science and Religion, Antagonism or Complementarity. Nicolescu and Stavinschi eds. 21 Eonul Dogmatic, Bucharest, 2002. (Also appears in translation in the volume Stiinta si Religie. De la Conflict la Dialog).
Void Space and Physical Motion: Philoponus, Islam and the European Middle Ages in Cosmology Through Time, S. Colafrancesco and G. Mimesis Edizioni, Milan, 2003.
'Emergence, Discovery and a Platonic Perspective on Complex Systems in Science and Orthodoxy: A Necessary Dialogue, Nicolescu and Stavinschi eds. Curtea Veche, Bucharest, 2006. Andrew Davison is the Starbridge Lecturer in Theology and Natural Sciences in the Faculty of Divinity, and Fellow in Theology at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. Previously, he was tutor in doctrine at Westcott House, Cambridge (2010-14) and before that tutor in doctrine at St Stephen's House, Oxford and junior chaplain of Merton College (2006-10). He read chemistry at Merton in the 1990s, followed by a DPhil in biochemistry.
He read theology and religious studies at Corpus Christi and subsequently completed a PhD in philosophical theology with Dr Catherine Pickstock in the faculty. He is a priest of the Church of England and served a curacy in South East London.ml.
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