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John Lennox

About

John is Chaplain and Speaker at OCCA. He is Professor of Mathematics at Oxford University (emeritus) and speaks on the interface of science, philosophy and religion. He has debated Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens and Peter Singer, and has lectured extensively in North America, Eastern and Western Europe and Australasia on mathematics, the philosophy of science and the intellectual defence of Christianity.

John is an Emeritus Fellow of Green Templeton College, Oxford University and a Visiting Fellow at the Said Business School.  In addition, he is a Senior Fellow with the Trinity Forum, and has written a number of books exploring the relationship between science and Christianity, among them God and Stephen Hawking, a response to The Grand Design (2011 revised 2021), Gunning for God, on the new atheism (2011), Can Science Explain Everything? (2019), Where is God in a Coronavirus World? (2020), 2084: Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Humanity (2021), and Cosmic Chemistry: Do God and Science Mix? (2021).

He took his MA, MMath and PhD at Emmanuel College, Cambridge University. He also holds an MA and DPhil from Oxford University (by incorporation), an MA in Bioethics from the University of Surrey and a DSc from the University of Wales.

John is married to Sally. They have three grown up children and ten grandchildren, and live near Oxford.

Resources

2084

You don't have to be a computer scientist to have discerning conversations about artificial intelligence and technology.

A Good Return: Biblical Principles for Work, Wealth and Wisdom

John C. Lennox has crafted a book with thoughtful, biblical and evangelical deliberation on our behaviour in, and towards, our work. With his trademark clarity, faithfulness and wisdom, Lennox curates room for a wider discussion on Christian approaches toward salaries, time management, motivation and attitudes amidst a workspace environment.

Cosmic Chemistry: Do God and Science Mix?

Prof John Lennox examines afresh the plausibility of a Christian theistic worldview in the light of some of the latest developments in scientific understanding.

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