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US Geneticist Wins $1.5 Million Religion Prize

Templeton Prize Bible

BRETT ZONGKER   03/25/10 12:25 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — A one-time priest who later became an evolutionary geneticist and molecular biologist and helped scientifically refute creationism with his research was honored Thursday with one of the world's top religion prizes.

Francisco J. Ayala, 76, a U.S. citizen originally from Spain, will receive the 2010 Templeton Prize, valued at $1.53 million, the John Templeton Foundation announced at the National Academy of Sciences.

It is the largest monetary award given each year to an individual and honors someone who made exceptional contributions to affirm spirituality. Officials increase the value each year to exceed the Nobel Prize.

"I see religion and science as two of the pillars on which American society rests," Ayala told The Associated Press, saying the United States is one of the world's most religious countries. "We have these two pillars not talking, not seeing they can reinforce each other."

Ayala is a notable choice because he opposes the entanglement of science and religion. The former Dominican priest is adamant that science and religion do not contradict each other.

"If they are properly understood, they cannot be in contradiction because science and religion concern different matters, and each is essential to human understanding," he said in remarks prepared for the acceptance ceremony.

Ayala is a top professor of biological sciences at the University of California, Irvine. His pioneering genetic research led to revelations that could help develop cures for malaria and other diseases.

In January, he co-authored a paper that established gorillas and chimps may serve as reservoirs for parasites that cause human malaria, showing that even if a vaccine is developed, humans will be vulnerable to re-infection.

Ayala has long worked to foster dialogue between religion and science and said tension between the fields has subsided over time.

In 1981, Ayala was an expert witness in a U.S. federal court challenge that helped overturn an Arkansas law mandating the teaching of creationism alongside evolution. Three years later, the National Academy of Sciences asked Ayala to serve as principal author of "Science, Evolution and Creationism," which categorically refuted creationism and intelligent design.

He has said efforts to block religious intrusion into science equate with "the survival of rationality in this country."

"The Bible is not a textbook about science," he said. "It's not introductory astronomy."

Ayala said religion brings hope and meaning to people, and they know God exists as a matter of faith. Such questions are beyond the realm of science, he said.

As for his personal religious beliefs, Ayala said they have evolved, but he prefers to keep them private.

The foundation has honored more traditional religious figures in the past, including Billy Graham, as well as scientists and philosophers.

Ayala is scheduled to receive the prize May 5 in a private ceremony at London's Buckingham Palace. He plans to give the prize money to charity, likely for education.

John M. Templeton, president of the Pennsylvania-based foundation named for his late father, said Ayala was selected for his breadth and depth of analysis focused on discovery.

"Ayala's clear voice in matters of science and faith," he said, "echoes the foundation's belief that evolution of the mind and truly open-minded inquiry can lead to real spiritual progress in the world."

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Associated Press Writer Steve Coleman contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

Templeton Foundation: http://www.templeton.org

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WASHINGTON — A one-time priest who later became an evolutionary geneticist and molecular biologist and helped scientifically refute creationism with his research was honored Thursday with one of...
WASHINGTON — A one-time priest who later became an evolutionary geneticist and molecular biologist and helped scientifically refute creationism with his research was honored Thursday with one of...
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Thinkster
I Think, therefore I POST!
07:09 PM on 05/18/2010
Also, the Templeton prize is not about science - make no mistake - it is an advertisement for religion - the last thing the Templeton foundation cares about is science - they are totally self-serving - this is just a deceptive attempt to give themselves the trappings of a science foundation, and it is disingenuous. They are promoting religion - plain and simple - not science.

Don't be fooled.
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Thinkster
I Think, therefore I POST!
07:00 PM on 05/18/2010
Science does not require reinforcement from religion - it is religion that desperately wants reinforcement from science - that's what ID is all about - religion trying to hide itself from the public perception that science has better answers about the natural world than religion ever could.

Science and religion are not only incompatible, but science will continue to trump religion until the human race finally grows up and stops worrying about the boogyman, at which point religion will slink into the past and be forgotten as it should be.
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swift goat pet for truth
The Life of the Land is preserved in Righteousness
02:08 AM on 03/26/2010
His contention seems similar to Stephen Jay Gould's, that Religion and Science occupy separate realms that best remain mutually exclusive.

I wonder if one of these guys influenced the other.
Or did their thinking evolve convergently?
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KrautMan
Carpe jugulum
09:53 AM on 03/26/2010
It's kind of obvious, no? Science deals with the observable, religion with the unobservable.
01:39 AM on 03/26/2010
Religion has a place in society... like stamp collecting or train spotting.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
General Public
liberal, progressive, atheist, Democrat, SubGenius
06:03 PM on 03/25/2010
Oh great... our nation has a religion prize that pays more than the actual Nobel Prizes for science. And we wonder why we lag behind other nations in math and science, why so many Americans reject evolution in favor of creationism, why so many Americans don't believe global warming exists, and so on. This is pathetic, a disgrace. No wonder the Chinese economy has already recovered from the global recession and ours is still in the dumps... most Americans are poorly educated and we have people who think religion ought to play a bigger role than science and have a prize that pays more. This man was not rewarded for his scientific work, however great it may be, but for his views on religion being compatible with science, and for being a former priest. Yes it is good the prize went to a non-Creationist who actually believes in science this time around, but in the past it has gone to Creationists. The true "evolution of the mind", as put by John Templeton, is when the mind evolves beyond the need for religion. After all, science has brought us out of the Dark Ages and given us all our modern technology, and it is based on logic and reason, not on blind faith in the same supernatural irrational beliefs held by ancient people. So it seems foreigners have evolved their minds past those of the majority of Americans.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blakej19
D.F.A.
07:33 PM on 05/12/2010
to say you know there is or isn't a GOD is quite sad considering not one person can know the answer until you die, so the 2 billion that believe will either see GOD or won't it's that simple. But to say you know without a doubt is quite ignorant. no one knows. there 2 different boats like the doctor said and thats what I have argued for years.
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HeevenSteven
20 Minutes into the future.
02:49 PM on 03/25/2010
"As for his personal religious beliefs, Ayala said they have evolved, but he prefers to keep them private."

Another "stealth atheist" who's afraid the masses will be lost without their faith.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
General Public
liberal, progressive, atheist, Democrat, SubGenius
06:10 PM on 03/25/2010
Yeah right, an atheist accepting a prize for promoting religion, who also happens to be a former Dominican priest. He is quite clear about his beliefs that science and religion do not contradict each other, so obviously he believes in both. An actual atheist would not publicly promote such views. We atheists do have morals after all, and most of us think that religion is a bad thing that should not be promoted. He is a former priest for crying out loud! It is quite obvious that he believes in God. They would never give this prize to an atheist, because this prize goes to people who promote religion and believe in God. If you want to know how atheistic scientists view religion and God, consult Richard Dawkins, as he is fairly representative of their views, albeit more outspoken than most.
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HeevenSteven
20 Minutes into the future.
09:41 PM on 03/25/2010
Speaking of the masses... Read carefully now. Notice that I wrote "stealth atheist". Just for a recent reference, see D. Dennett here. He calls them secret nonbelievers.

http://newsweek.washingtonpost.com/onfaith/Non-Believing-Clergy.pdf

There are many in the clergy who don't believe in the supernatural. There are many regular church going Christians who don't either, but still call themselves Christians. You're apparently unaware of it, but it's pretty common.
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JohnFromCensornati
The End is near
07:15 PM on 03/25/2010
I also recommend Christopher Hitchens and Sam Harris.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lakeview Greg
01:17 PM on 03/25/2010
Congrats!