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Let There Be Science: Why God loves science, and science needs God Paperback – 20 Jan. 2017
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- Print length208 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherLion Books
- Publication date20 Jan. 2017
- Dimensions15.6 x 1.19 x 23.39 cm
- ISBN-100745968635
- ISBN-13978-0745968636
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"Fascinating and highly original. . . . Lays out a myriad ways that Christianity offers rich resources for science." --Dr Andy Bannister, author, The Atheist Who Didn't Exist
"Highly thought-provoking . . . Recommended for non-scientists and scientists alike, it is a surprising and unexpected page-turner." --Angie Edwards, director, Arthur C. Clarke Foundation
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Lion Books; New edition (20 Jan. 2017)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 208 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0745968635
- ISBN-13 : 978-0745968636
- Dimensions : 15.6 x 1.19 x 23.39 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: 60,408 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- 93 in Science & Religion
- Customer reviews:
About the authors

I am a very badly behaved academic. I know that physics is my 'core discipline' - it's a good one and I love it - but I trespass into interdisciplinary territory all the time.
Brief bio: first degree and PhD ('84) at Cambridge topped off with a short fellowship at Emmanuel College, then lectureship at Sheffield ('89-'92). I started working seriously across the chemistry-physics fence there through polymer science (and visiting the marvellous Biblical Studies group which sparked my love of ancient wisdom literature).
As Professor of Physics in Leeds ('93-'08) including 5 years as an EPSRC Fellow, I began to work with biologists as well. Some theological training as part of an anglican lay reader's course in the Diocese of Ripon made me think more about how science and religion both encompass and draw on all of human culture. So it planted the seeds of the book 'Faith and Wisdom in Science'. Leeds also has a wonderful History and Philosophy of Science group, and as a regular seminar attender I heard James Ginter on the 13th century thinker Robert Grosseteste. My suspicions that 'science' is really a very old strand of human culture, not exclusively modern at all, continued to be confirmed.
The offer of a position as pro-vice-chancellor for research at a university like Durham was irresistible to a madly interdisciplinary fanatic so Durham is where I worked, and paid to trespass, from 2008-2014. The medieval science stuff appears in the Faith and Wisdom in Science but there will be more - we are reworking and re-illuminting all of the 12 or so science treatises of Grosseteste as editions and commentaries (and making a 3D movie of his 'big bang' medieval cosmology!).
Since 2018 I have a new post at the University of York - the first new chair in 'Natural Philosophy' we think in 200 years! It signifies my role to build links and collaborations between the sciences and the humanities, and has been a wonderful place to finish the book 'The Poetry and Music of Science' that seeks to tell the common story of creativity that ties to roots of both art and science together.
Outside university life, music is a very important activity (our whole family is very invovled), mountains (hiking) and oceans (scuba diving) very important places.

As a scientist (ok, a science teacher, but nearly a scientist) who believes in God, I've read a few times now - in best-selling books, no less - that I don't actually exist. The first time, this came as a bit of a shock, because up until then I had genuinely thought that I did. Others had made the same mistake: my parents, for instance, thought I was real for years. Having come to terms with my non-existence, I have decided to use (some of) it to write about science and Christianity. And now, for the sake of balance, here is a more grown-up biography:
David Hutchings was born in Oxford, England in 1981. He graduated with a First Class Physics degree from the University of York in 2003 and then qualified as a Physics teacher. He has worked at Pocklington School in the North of England since 2004 and lives in York with his wife Emma and two young daughters. He is a Fellow of the Institute of Physics, an Honorary Fellow at Durham University, and a regular speaker nationwide on the history, philosophy, and theology of science.
A committed Christian, David also preaches, leads Bible study groups for both adults and teenagers, and seeks to encourage people to think more about Christianity, whatever their current position.
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The content is made accessible through extensive use of stories, which are stimulating and thought-provoking. These show similarities in the experiences of faith and science, both in the highs and the lows. The tragic story of Ignaz Semmelweis, a Hungarian doctor specializing in childbirth and aftercare for new mothers and babies, illustrates the lows. His realization that something - there was no understanding at the time of bacteria - from doctors was responsible for patient deaths was not welcomed by the establishment, and he was opposed and marginalized, suffering an ignominious death. It is not only in the world of organized religion that unorthodox and challenging ideas come up against a conservative culture! For the highs of science, take the account of James Clerk Maxwell calculating the speed of electromagnetic radiation, and at the end of the calculation - “pen or pencil in hand” - finding that electromagnetic radiation travels at the speed of light. In doing so Maxwell discovers that light is a small part of a much bigger story. This breathtaking realization of a deeper, more profound truth parallels the highs of religious experience.
Love is also a shared characteristic of the life of faith and the life of science. The quote from V.S. Ramachandran “Science is like a love affair with nature…” is a challenge for the scientist and science educator. The importance of love in science leads on to considering the question “What is science for?”. For the authors, the Christian life is a ministry of reconciliation, and science has a part to play in this, in particular in the reconciliation between humanity and the rest of creation. In this way they indicate how a faith worldview allows science to be part of the wider fulfillment of purpose.
There is much stimulating in this book, but of course questions could be raised, not least concerning the idea of a “biblical view of science”. The argument places considerable weight on the book of Job, understanding God’s questions towards the end of Job as being an invitation to do some science. It is an interesting interpretation, but I can imagine many seeing this is no more than a hint of invitation at best. No book on this topic could be judged complete. The one major omission to my mind was addressing how science speaks to theology. There are vocal parts of the church essentially at war with science, declaring scientific understandings of cosmology, the age of Earth, and biological evolution as being in opposition to Christian faith. I am sure that is not a view the authors share, but I did wonder if sensitivity to some of the readership (and perhaps the publisher?) may have led them to avoid tackling this directly. It is slightly regrettable that a book aimed at a wider audience than many science / faith works could leave readers unaware that the great majority of working scientists who are also Christian believers do not regard biological evolution and faith as two alternatives between which we have to choose, and do not see young Earth creationism or so-called intelligent design as tenable from a scientific (or Christian) point of view. That, however, does not take away from my view that “Let there be Science” is a great read, and a valuable contribution to an essential conversation for the Christian church.
Helped me to have greater confidence in the fact that truly God inspires men toward science and not away from it.
We need believers to read this to dispel the unnecessary fear of Scientism, and unbelievers to read this to break the lie of secular supremacy within the science community regarding historical and modern science.
I particularly enjoyed the author's call for greater transparency and collaboration between professional scientists and non-scientists, and the need to humanise the various fields again.
This book doesn't just teach some brilliant science, it gives brilliant biblical insight and has fed my faith to no end.
Genuinely brilliant, can't recommend enough.
Been looking for this information for years.
Highly recommended.



