Dr. John
Lennox — “Does Science Point to
God?”
Visiting King's September
10 to 14, 2012
Dr.
John Lennox is Professor of
Mathematics in the University of
Oxford, Fellow in Mathematics
and the Philosophy of Science,
and Pastoral Advisor at Green
Templeton College, Oxford. He is
also an adjunct Lecturer at
Wycliffe Hall, Oxford University
and at the Oxford Centre for
Christian Apologetics and is a
Senior Fellow of the Trinity
Forum. In addition, he teaches
for the Oxford Strategic
Leadership Programme at the
Executive Education Centre, Said
Business School, Oxford
University.
He studied at the Royal
School Armagh, Northern Ireland
and was Exhibitioner and Senior
Scholar at Emmanuel College,
Cambridge University from which
he took his MA and PhD. He
worked for many years in the
Mathematics Institute at the
University of Wales in Cardiff
which awarded him a DSc for his
research. He also holds a DPhil
from Oxford University and an MA
in Bioethics from the University
of Surrey. He was a Senior
Alexander Von Humboldt Fellow at
the Universities of Wuerzburg
and Freiburg in Germany. In
addition to over seventy
published mathematical papers he
is the co-author of two research
level texts in algebra in the
Oxford Mathematical Monographs
series.
He has written a number of
books on the interface between
science, philosophy and
theology. These include "God's
Undertaker: Has Science Buried
God?" (2009), "God and Stephen
Hawking", a response to "The
Grand Design" (2011), "Gunning
for God", on the new atheism
(2011), and "Seven Days that
Divide the World", on Genesis 1
(2011). He has lectured
extensively in North America,
Eastern and Western Europe on
mathematics, the philosophy of
science and the intellectual
defense of Christianity.
He debated Richard Dawkins on
"The God Delusion" in the
University of Alabama (2007) and
on "Has Science buried God?" in
the Oxford Museum of Natural
History (2008). He has also
debated Christopher Hitchens on
the New Atheism (Edinburgh
Festival, 2008) and the question
of "Is God Great?" (Samford
University, 2010), as well as
Peter Singer on the topic of "Is
there a God?" (Melbourne, 2011).
His hobbies are languages,
amateur astronomy, amateur
bird-watching and some walking.
John is married to Sally, they
have three grown up children and
four grandchildren and live near
Oxford.