Study and Research Program on
«Science,
Theology and the Ontological Quest»

PROGRAM DIRECTORS
Gianfranco Basti,
Faculty of Philosophy & IRAFS*
Piero Coda, Faculty of Theology
Program Secretary
Antonio Luigi Perrone,
IRAFS*
(*IRAFS- International Research Area On Foundations
of the Sciences) 
1. PROGRAM OVERVIEW
The Program strengthens the existing specialization (license)
curricula of:
- «Logic and Epistemology» in the Faculty of Philosophy,
devoted to deepening the relationship between scientific
and philosophical knowledge
of reality;
- «Science of Religions» in the Faculty of Theology, devoted
to developing dialogue between Religions.
This strengthening mainly consists in inviting several distinguished
scholars of science, philosophy and theology to give special
courses and public lectures.
The Program aims at developing and applying the new emerging discipline
of Formal Ontology as a powerful means for an adequate
formalization of the Humanistic
Disciplines, different from but related to the mathematical formalism
of Science.
By such formalization it is possible to delimit what is
common to
different approaches to reality, without hiding what is
different. This
allows a fruitful dialogue,
on a transparent basis, both between Science and Religion,
and among
Different Religions.
The main research field of the Program will be the development of a new
anthropology, open to the contributions of genetics and
cognitive neuroscience, but respecting
the human spiritual wealth of which Philosophy and Theology are the
guardians.
Two student grants for the doctorate in Philosophy and
Theology are available
for this type of research.
2. ANNUAL PROGRAMS
- 2003/4: Formal Ontology and the Epistemological
Basis of Philosophy and Theology
- 2004/5: Physics, Cosmology
and the Ontology of Creation
- 2005/6: Biology, Neurobiology and the Ontology
of Life and Intelligence
3. INVITED PROFESSORS
Sergio Galvan (Milan), Nino
B. Cocchiarella (Bloomington), Wolfhart Pannenberg (München),
Georges Cottier (Vatican), Gorge Coyne (Tucson), Bernard
d’Espagnat (Paris),
Philip Clayton (Boston), Roger Penrose (Oxford), John
Polkinghorne (Cambridge), Walter Freeman (Berkeley), Freeman
Dyson (Princeton), Stuart Kauffman (Santa Fé), Kenneth
R. Miller (Providence), William Carroll (Oxford).

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