CTNS STARS Program Awards Grants to Five Research Teams

Fri Dec 14, 2007 8:17pm EST
 
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Interdisciplinary Teams Each Receive $100,000
BERKELEY, Calif.--(Business Wire)--STARS, the "Science and Transcendence Advanced Research Series"
sponsors ground-breaking interdisciplinary research on the ways
science, in light of philosophical and theological reflection, points
towards the nature, character and meaning of ultimate reality. STARS
research will be undertaken in a highly innovative way: through small
teams of scientists and humanities scholars. Today STARS awarded
$100,000 research grants to five interdisciplinary teams.

   "I am delighted with the extraordinary quality and ground-breaking
approaches to interdisciplinary research by these five winning teams,"
said Robert John Russell, STARS Principal Investigator and the Ian G.
Barbour Professor of Theology and Science in Residence at the Graduate
Theological Union. "Their proposed research is at the center of a wide
range of scientific research spanned by STARS: from fundamental
physics and evolutionary biology to the neurosciences and mathematics.
The implications for our understanding of human spirituality, ethics,
aesthetics and religion are very promising."

   In December 2008 two of these grants may be renewed at $200,000
each. The awarding of these grants is based on the recommendations of
a panel of distinguished judges.

   STARS is a program of the Center for Theology and Natural Sciences
(CTNS) in Berkeley, California. Since 1981, CTNS has worked to build
bridges between theology and science through research, teaching, and
public service. STARS is funded through a grant from the John
Templeton Foundation.

   For more information about CTNS, visit http://www.ctns.org/ or
call 510-848-8152.

   For more information about the STARS Program, visit
http://www.ctnsstars.org/.

   Recipients of $100,000 STARS Research Grants

   On the Reality of Top-Down Causation

   Gennaro Auletta, Director of the Specialization "Science and
Philosophy", Pontifical Gregorian University (Co-Principal
Investigator)

   Luc Jaeger, Assistant Professor, University of California at Santa
Barbara (Co-Principal Investigator)

   Paolo D'Ambrosio, Doctoral Student, Pontifical Gregorian
University

   George Ellis, Emeritus Professor, University of Cape Town

   William Stoeger, Staff Scientist, Vatican Observatory, Associate
Professor, University of Arizona

   The Rationality of Ultimate Value: Emotion, Awareness, and
Causality in Virtue Ethics and Decision Neuroscience

   Warren Brown, Professor of Psychology, Graduate School of
Psychology, Fuller Theological Seminary (Co-Principal Investigator)

   Gregory Peterson, Associate Professor, South Dakota State
University (Co-Principal Investigator)

   Kevin Reimer, Professor of Psychology, Azusa Pacific University

   Michael Spezio, Assistant Professor, Scripps College; Visiting
Scientist, California Institute of Technology

   James Van Slyke, Adjunct Professor, Azusa Pacific University

   Observation of the Gravitational-Wave Analog of the CMB and Its
Implications for the Origin of the Observable Universe

   Raymond Chiao, Professor of Natural Sciences and Engineering,
University of California, Merced (Co-Principal Investigator)

   Kirk Wegter-McNelly, Assistant Professor of Theology, Boston
University School of Theology (Co-Principal Investigator)

   Information and the Origin of Life

   Andrew Robinson, Honorary University Fellow, University of Exeter
(Co-Principal Investigator)

   Christopher Southgate, Research Fellow, University of Exeter
(Co-Principal Investigator)

   Subjective Experience as a Window on Foundational Physics

   Yakir Aharonov, Distinguished Professor of Theoretical Physics,
Center for Quantum Studies, George Mason University (Co-Principal
Investigator)

   Jeffrey Tollaksen, Assistant Professor, Founder and Director,
Center for Quantum Studies, George Mason University (Co-Principal
Investigator)

   David Albert, Professor, Department of Philosophy, Columbia
University

   Paul Davies, College Professor and Director of Beyond: Center for
Fundamental Concepts in Science, Arizona State University

   Brian Greene, Professor, Department of Mathematics and Department
of Physics, Columbia University

   Maulik Parikh, Assistant Professor, Inter-University Centre for
Astronomy and Astrophysics

   www.ctnsstars.org

Center for Theology and the Natural Sciences (CTNS)
Nathan Hallanger, 866-848-2350 (CTNS Program Director)
Dennis Hair, 866-848-2350 (STARS Program Director)
Fax: 510-848-2535
ctns-stars@ctns.org

Copyright Business Wire 2007

 

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