Boyle Lecture 2025—Science, Technology, Theology, and Spirituality: A Necessary Partnership?

About Boyle Lecture 2025—Science, Technology, Theology, and Spirituality: A Necessary Partnership?

Authors Jackelu00e9n, Antje
Date 2025
Publication Zygon: Journal of Religion & Science
Publisher Open Library of Humanities
Vol / Pages Vol. 60 No. 3 pp. 972-986
DOI 10.16995/zygon.23415
URL https://research.ebsco.com/linkprocessor/plink?id=9a994058-54e4-343d-8e4a-57d957675101
Language eng

Type: Journal Article

Tags: Applied sciences, Artificial intelligence, Climate change, Crises, Interdisciplinary research, Learned institutions & societies, Professional Organizations, Spirituality, Theology

Abstract

The 2025 Boyle Lecture explores the partnership between science, technology, theology, and spirituality in addressing contemporary challenges. Reflecting on historical and modern dynamics, it emphasizes the need for transdisciplinary collaboration to avoid cultural poverty and handle the current polycrisis in a world prone to polarization, populism, protectionism, post-truth, and patriarchy. The lecture offers a brief sketch of the development of the science-and-religion field and underlines the importance of including spiritual perspectives in the discourse. Drawing on Sigmund Freud, the author describes the impact of artificial intelligence on humanity as a fourth narcissistic insult and discusses four alternative approaches to this new existential threat. Two examples of the added value of including spirituality in science and religion are provided: healing the injustices of colonialism by bringing together neuroscience and theology with religious symbols, rituals, and narratives; and dealing with the climate crisis more holistically by including spiritual sustainability alongside ecological, economic, and social dimensions. The lecture concludes by describing a spirituality of hope.

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