Evolution and Theology of Cooperation

On 12 October 2006, The ETC Project Presents

Cooperation in Biological and Religious Contexts: Credible and Non-Credible Models for Bridging the Gap

by Philip Clayton, Ingraham Professor of Theology at Claremont School of Theology, Professor of Philosophy and Religion at Claremont Graduate University, and Visiting Professor at Harvard Divinity School for Academic Year 2006-2007

Philip Clayton holds a joint PhD in Philosophy of Science and Religious Studies from Yale University. He is the author or editor of fifteen books and some 120 articles in the philosophy of science, ethics and theology, including The Oxford Handbook of Religion and Science and In Quest of Freedom: Biological Spontaneity and the Emergence of Free Agency (both in press). His primary interest lies in exploring possible conceptual bridges between the methods and results of the natural sciences and religious belief.

This presentation is the seventh in a series of lectures sponsored by the Evolution and Theology of Cooperation Project at Harvard University, directed by Professors Sarah Coakley and Martin Nowak and supported by a grant from the John Templeton Foundation.

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