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Arts & CultureBooks
Patrick Gilger, S.J.
Jason Blakely show that the very tools we human beings use to try to understand the world in fact end up constructing it, for better or for worse.
FaithExplainer
James T. Keane
Catholic moral theology can offer some answers.
Arts & CultureBooks
Christiana Zenner
Thomas Berry's legacy for a rising generation of eco-theologians and ethicists is pervasive.
Engraving from 1894 showing Galileo Galilei at the Inquisition in 1633 (iStock)
Arts & CultureIdeas
Guy ConsolmagnoChristopher M. Graney
The Galileo story is presented as a narrative of the church denying science. But that implies that science is a single, monolithic worldview. Part history, part science fiction, the Galileo story is less a legend than a myth.
FaithThe Good Word
Terrance Klein
When we speak of minds, can someone who would reduce consciousness to biology offer an adequate picture of what it means for us to know something?
Politics & SocietyNews
Carol Glatz - Catholic News Service
It’s a long-standing puzzle: If there is such a high probability of life existing elsewhere in the universe, then, as Enrico Fermi was alleged to have said, “Where is everybody?