Yearly summaries of SFN talks and articles relating to SFN are listed below with links to pdf files of the materials.
Previous SFN talks are listed here and include links to the original publicity pages outlining the content of each talk.
Previous SFN Annual Science and Faith Cathedral lectures are listed here.
Talks from the joint Faraday Institute - SFN Workshop 2016 are available on our Youtube Channel here.
How can science fit with miracles? (14th Annual Science-Faith Cathedral Lecture)
Professor Sir Colin Humphreys FRS
7th September 2022
Who controls our climate? God, Nature or people?
Professor Mike Hulme
Professor of Human Geography, University of Cambridge
Human gene editing: The ethical boundaries
Alexander Massmann
Cambridge University, Faculty of Divinity.
Engaging young people in Science-Faith discussions
Stephanie Bryant
Youth and Schools Programme, Faraday Institute for Science and Religion, Cambridge
The oceans, climate change and Christianity
Meric Srokosz
National Oceanography Centre, Southampton
Tribute to Professor Derek Burke, CBE (1930 – 2019)
Artificial Intelligence: Hopes and Fears for Humanity
Professor John Wyatt
Professor of Medical Ethics, University College, London
Science and Faith: Exploring the enigmas of life
Ruth Bancewicz
Faraday Institute for Science and Religion, Cambridge
Conservation and Hope for the Earth
Jeremy Lindsell
Director of Science & Conservation, A Rocha Organisation
Memory, Dementia and the Spiritual Self
Sarah Housden
Senior Lecturer in Health Sciences, UEA
Why God loves Science and Science needs God
Professor Tom McLeish, FRS
Department of Physics, Durham University
Can a Scientist Believe in Miracles?
Rodney Holder
Faraday Institute for Science and Religion, Cambridge
Selfish Genes and Altruistic Animals
Peter Woodford
Department of Zoology, Cambridge
Ethical challenges in managing sick and premature babies
Amanda Ogilvy-Stuart
Rosie Hospital, Cambridge
Evolution and Adam: Reality, Myth and Symbolism
Dr Denis Alexander
Faraday Institute for Science and Religion, Cambridge
Nanoscience: a New Aspect of God’s Creation
Russell Cowburn, FRS
Cavendish Laboratory, Cambridge
Have neuroscientists disproved freewill?
Daniel De Haan,
Cambridge Neuroscience and Theology Departments
Quantum Spirituality - is there such a thing?
Peter Bussey
Department of Physics, University of Glasgow
Does the Universe have space for God?
The Revd. Professor David Wilkinson, FRS
St John’s College, University of Durham.
Mystery and ignorance: the boundary of science
Peter Bussey
Department of Physics, University of Glasgow
Historical Perspectives on Science and Religion
Hilary Marlow,
Faraday Institute for Science and Religion, Cambridge
Are natural disasters acts of God?
Bob White, FRS
Faraday Institute for Science and Religion, Cambridge.
Can we, should we, play God with the world’s climate?
Mike Hulme
Professor of Environmental Sciences, King’s College, London
A Brief Review of Science and Faith in Norfolk
Nick Brewin and Ray Mathias, SFN
A Day in the Life of a Research Scientist
Oluwaseyi Shorinola
John Innes Centre, Norwich
God, Evolution and Cooperation: Saints from Selfish Genes?
Professor Sarah Coakley
Department of Divinity, Cambridge University
Mysticism and Reality
Dr Martin Drummond
Molecular Biologist, Norwich
Mysterious reality - God, the world and ourselves
Nick Brewin
John Innes Centre, Norwich
Is there a “God gene”?'- The genetics of religiosity
Nell Whiteway
Faraday Institute for Science and Religion, Cambridge
Broken Brains and Christ
Alasdair Coles
Clinical Neurologist, Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Cambridge
God, the Multiverse and Everything
The Revd Dr Rodney Holder, FRAS
Faraday Institute for Science and Religion, Cambridge
Beauty, Wonder, and the Human Experience of Science
Ruth Bancewicz
Faraday Institute for Science and Religion, Cambridge
God and the Big Bang Theory of Cosmology
Peter Bussey
Department of Physics, University of Glasgow
Stem Cells & Synthetic Biology: Playing God Again
Sir Brian Heap, FRS
Faraday Institute for Science and Religion, Cambridge
The Higgs Particle: The God Particle?
Peter Bussey
Department of Physics, University of Glasgow