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Reveals biases within scientific PhD training programs against
emerging scientists who embrace a religious faith and the
ramifications for science Science is often viewed as antithetical
to religion, and it is true that scientists, particularly those who
work at universities, are generally much less religious than the
average American adult. So what is it like to be a religious
individual pursuing an advanced education and career in science?
Featuring engaging interviews and survey data from over 1,300 PhD
students in the natural and social sciences, The Faithful Scientist
shows that the core challenge is not contending with contradictions
between faith-based beliefs and scientific knowledge. Instead, it
is the bias budding scientific practitioners face from their
colleagues if they are religious. These dynamics are important for
science as a field, and ultimately for those who engage with or
benefit from the results of scientific research. There are real
benefits to fostering diversity in science, which may lead to more
useful discoveries for populations who have generally not been the
focus of research. And women, Black, and Latina/o people tend in
general to be more religious than their white male peers, meaning
that diversifying the gender, ethnic, and racial composition of the
scientific workforce likely requires diversifying the religious
composition too. This book offers vital empirical data that provide
insight into what it means to support and foster religious
diversity in science.
Lavishly illustrated with over 100 color photographs, Places of
Faith takes readers on a fascinating religious road trip.
Christopher Scheitle and Roger Finke have crisscrossed America,
visiting churches in small towns and rural areas, as well as the
mega-churches, storefronts, synagogues, Islamic centers, Eastern
temples, and other places of faith in major cities. Each stop on
their tour provides an opportunity to introduce a particular
current of American religion. Memphis serves as a window into the
Black Church, a visit to Colorado Springs provides insight into
evangelicalism, and a stop in Detroit sheds light on American
Muslims. Readers visit Hare Krishnas in San Francisco, the Amish in
central Pennsylvania, and a "cowboy church" in Amarillo, Texas. As
the authors journey across the country, they retell unique
religious histories and touch on local religious profiles and
trends. They draw from conversations they had with pastors, imams,
bishops, priests, and monks, along with ordinary believers of all
kinds. Most of all, they tell the reader what they saw and heard,
putting a human face on America's astounding religious diversity.
Christianity in the United States has long been organized around
congregations and denominations. However, a different type of
organization operating outside of these traditional structures is
claiming an increasingly important place in the religious market.
The growth of Christian nonprofits, popularly called "parachurch"
organizations, has been recognized by churchgoers and social
scientists alike as an important development that is transforming
the composition and dynamics of American Christianity. The size,
resources, and activities of this population have made it the
public face of American Christianity and altered the relationship
between individuals, churches and denominations. Beyond the
Congregation utilizes data on almost 2,000 of the largest and most
influential Christian nonprofits in the United States to answer
some of the key questions raised by these organizations. What
explains the growth of Christian nonprofits? What activities are
they pursuing? How are they funded and how do they use those funds?
Beyond the Congregation provides a much needed examination of these
issues that is accessible and informative for scholars, nonprofit
executives, religious leaders and the general public.
Christianity in the United States has long been organized around
congregations and denominations. However, a different type of
organization operating outside of these traditional structures is
claiming an increasingly important place in the religious market.
The growth of Christian nonprofits, popularly called "parachurch"
organizations, has been recognized by churchgoers and social
scientists alike as an important development that is transforming
the composition and dynamics of American Christianity. The size,
resources, and activities of this population have made it the
public face of American Christianity and altered the relationship
between individuals, churches and denominations. Beyond the
Congregation utilizes data on almost 2,000 of the largest and most
influential Christian nonprofits in the United States to answer
some of the key questions raised by these organizations. What
explains the growth of Christian nonprofits? What activities are
they pursuing? How are they funded and how do they use those funds?
Beyond the Congregation provides a much needed examination of these
issues that is accessible and informative for scholars, nonprofit
executives, religious leaders and the general public.
Based on a five year journey to find out what religious Americans
think about science, Ecklund and Scheitle tell the real story of
the relationship between science and religion in the lives of
ordinary citizens. It is a story that is more nuanced and complex
than the media and pundits would lead us to believe. As the title
of the book suggests, the way religious Americans approach science
is shaped by two fundamental questions: What does science mean for
the existence and activity of God? and what does science mean for
the sacredness of humanity? How these questions play out as
individual believers think about science both challenges
stereotypes and highlights the real tensions between religion and
science. As only good social science can, Religion Vs. Science adds
depth and personality to a debate that has remained largely
academic and abstract-and thus divorced from the lived experience
of real people in the pews.
Lavishly illustrated with over 100 color photographs, Places of
Faith takes readers on a fascinating religious road trip.
Christopher Scheitle and Roger Finke have crisscrossed America,
visiting churches in small towns and rural areas, as well as the
mega-churches, storefronts, synagogues, Islamic centers, Eastern
temples, and other places of faith in major cities. Each stop on
their tour provides an opportunity to introduce a particular
current of American religion. Memphis serves as a window into the
Black Church, a visit to Colorado Springs provides insight into
evangelicalism, and a stop in Detroit sheds light on American
Muslims. Readers visit Hare Krishnas in San Francisco, the Amish in
central Pennsylvania, and a "cowboy church" in Amarillo, Texas. As
the authors journey across the country, they retell unique
religious histories and touch on local religious profiles and
trends. They draw from conversations they had with pastors, imams,
bishops, priests, and monks, along with ordinary believers of all
kinds. Most of all, they tell the reader what they saw and heard,
putting a human face on America's astounding religious diversity.
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