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InterVarsity's Emerging Scholars Network
Can 500 words expand community? That’s exactly what’s happened this year. ESN members have been praying with us for growth in community through Scholar’s Compass, an ESN devotional series by and for scholars. These short devotionals have shared great stories and ideas with our readers, and they’ve also expanded our community dramatically.
The Emerging Scholars Network (ESN) is delighted to announce a closer partnership with the American Scientific Affiliation (ASA), the largest professional organization of Christian scientists. ASA and InterVarsity have always been good friends, and now we’re partnering more closely to support students and early career academics and professionals who are Christians and scientists. [Read more…] about Connect with ESN: American Scientific Affiliation Annual Meeting
Over at Books & Culture, Karl W. Giberson reviews The Oxford Book of Modern Science Writing, edited by (in Gilberson’s phrase) “that arch-villain Richard Dawkins.” Gilberson is being cheeky, and he notes that, in this volume, Dawkins’ love for science and skill as a writer and editor shines through. Gilberson notes that Dawkins “is exceptional in being a member of Britain’s most élite scientific and literary societies, the Royal Society and the Royal Society of Literature.”
The review is worth reading. I, for one, love a good piece of science writing. But Gilberson raises a good question:
Literature—plays, essays, screenplays for movies, novels, nonfiction—has to be about something. “Literature” has no natural content any more than sentences have natural meaning. So why isn’t there more “science” in literature? Science transforms both our world and our worldview, and yet a solid work of literature is more likely to be about an alcoholic than a scientist.
‘Twas not always so. I still remember vividly being introduced – really introduced – to John Donne and his great poem, “A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning,” which was written to his pregnant wife as he was about to leave for an overseas journey. The time being 1611, and both travel and childbirth being much more dangerous then than now, Donne and his wife had little assurance of seeing each other again. (Indeed, their child was born stillborn while Donne was gone.) Donne’s imagery to comfort his wife was taken directly from science and engineering: metallurgy, draftsmanship, geometry.
Our two souls, therefore, which are one,
Though I must go, endure not yet
A breach, but an expansion,
Like gold to airy thinness beat.If they be two, they are two so
As stiff twin compasses are two;
Thy soul, the fixed foot, makes no show
To move, but doth, if th’ other do.And though it in the center sit,
Yet when the other far doth roam,
It leans and hearkens after it,
And grows erect, as that comes home.
Periodically, we’ll feature one of ESN’s partner organizations here on the blog. Mars Hill Audio is committed to assisting Christians who desire to move from thoughtless consumption of contemporary culture to a vantage point of thoughtful engagement. Mars Hill Audio primary resource is their bimonthly Journal, a ninety-minute audio program on CD or mp3, consisting of 10- to 15-minute interviews on a variety of topics. Click here for the contents of the current Journal. MHA also offers a free podcast, a series called Conversations that features longer interviews on special topics, a new series on the Supreme Court called Dialogues on Justice and Judges, and much more.
ESN members are eligible for discounted subscriptions to Mars Hill Audio. Visit our member benefits section for more details. If you’re not yet a member but want to take advantage of the discount, join for free today.
Note: This discounted subscription is under discussion. Check back in 2013. 11/30/2012. 3:25 PM