Peter Harrison

Harrison in 2010
Born (1955-04-30) 30 April 1955
NationalityAustralian
Academic background
Alma mater
Thesis"Religion" and the Religions in British Thought (1989)
Academic work
DisciplineHistory
Sub-discipline
Institutions
Main interestsHistory of the relationship between religion and science

Peter D. Harrison FAHA (born 1955) is an Australian Laureate Fellow and director of the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities at the University of Queensland.

Career

Peter Harrison holds a DLitt from the University of Oxford, a PhD from the University of Queensland, and master's degrees from Yale and Oxford. His academic career began at Bond University on Australia's Gold Coast, where for a number of years he was professor of history and philosophy. From 2007 to 2011 he was the Andreas Idreos Professor of Science and Religion at the University of Oxford.[1][2] During his time at Oxford, he was a fellow of Harris Manchester College and director of the Ian Ramsey Centre where he continues to hold a senior research fellowship. He became the inaugural director of the University of Queensland's Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities in July 2015. He is fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities, a corresponding member of the International Academy of the History of Science, and a member of the International Society for Science and Religion. In 2003 he was awarded a Centenary Medal. He delivered the 2011 Gifford Lectures at the University of Edinburgh[3] published as The Territories of Science and Religion and named winner of the 2015 Aldersgate Prize.[4] In 2014 he was awarded an Australian Laureate Fellowship to conduct a five-year research project exploring science and secularization.[5] He delivered the Bampton Lectures at the University of Oxford in February 2019.[6]

Writings

Harrison is best known for a number of influential writings on religion and the origins of modern science. He has argued that changing approaches to the interpretation of the Bible had a significant impact on the development of modern science. He has also suggested that the biblical story of the Fall played a key role in the development of experimental science. His earlier work traces changing conceptions of religion in the Western world. Harrison contends that the idea of religions as sets of beliefs and practices emerged for the first time in the 17th century. This earlier work on religion was revisited in his 2011 Gifford Lectures, where he argued that current conceptions of both "science" and "religion" are relatively recent Western inventions, and that contemporary relations between science and religion are to some extent already built into the categories themselves. Rethinking the relations between science and religion, on this account, is not a matter of considering relations between scientific and religious doctrines, but of rethinking the ways in which science and religion themselves are currently conceptualised.

Similarly, he also contends that the concept of Western values is a quite recent, 20th-century Western emergence, despite being traced back to classical antiquity and the New Testament.[7] In 2017, Harrison demonstrated that the Credo quia absurdum was a quote misattributed to Tertullian in the early modern period as a part of anti-religious and anti-Catholic polemics.[8]

Selected publications

References

  1. Who's Who entry
  2. "Career History". uq.academia.au. Retrieved 26 September 2018.
  3. 2010-2011 Gifford Lecture Archives from The University of Edinburgh
  4. "2015 Aldersgate Prize Awarded to Australian Laureate Fellow".
  5. "Historian and neuroscientist are UQ's new Australian Laureate Fellows". University of Queensland. 22 August 2014. Retrieved 24 January 2023.
  6. "Rethinking Relations Between Science and Religion". University of Oxford. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  7. Harrison, Peter (17 January 2018). "An Eccentric Tradition: The Paradox of "Western Values"". ABC Religion & Ethics. Retrieved 24 January 2023.
  8. Harrison, Peter. "'I Believe Because It Is Absurd': The Enlightenment Invention of Tertullian's Credo". Church History 86.2 (2017): 339-364.
  • Profile at the University of Queensland
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.