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One Religion that's Actually Embracing Science: Buddhism

Reality Base
By Melissa Lafsky
Jan 13, 2009 12:43 AMNov 5, 2019 1:29 AM

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Major sectors of Christianity and Islam have made it clear that they're not going to be best friends with science anytime soon. But at least one of the major religions is extending an olive branch. New Scientistreports that:

More than 30 Tibetan monks, plus a handful of nuns, will be collaborating with a team from San Francisco's Exploratorium ("the museum of art, science and human perception") to build exotic machines to create patterns from sunlight using cardboard, dowels, reflective sheets of mylar and electronic components. If all goes to plan, the monks will return to their monasteries and start spreading the joys of scientific exploration among other followers of their religion. The project is the latest reflection of the monks' spiritual leader's fascination with science. In the Dalai Lama's 2005 book The Universe in a Single Atom, the Nobel peace laureate argued that science and spiritual inquiry have much to learn from one other.

According to an Exploratorium press release, the Dalai Lama has been exploring how cosmology, neuroscience, and other fields interrelate with Buddhism since childhood (His Holiness does tend to be precocious). Now he's setting his monks on an "ambitious" mission to "share not only in the traditions of Buddhism, but...also in Western scientific inquiry and evidence on the physical plane" with a goal of "shap[ing] these already highly educated monks into science leaders." Now if we could just get the Pope to follow suit... Related: RB: Karl Giberson Wants God and Science to Just Get Along RB: This Week’s God-Science Face-Off: Rick Warren v. Sam Harris RB: God 0, Atheism 2: Hitchens Eats Another Religious Figure for Lunch RB: Annual Creationism Conference Takes “Scientific” Approach

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