The event was conceived to challenge the efforts of the
Templeton Foundation to reconcile science with religion, according to its underwriter Robert Zeps, who told an interviewer:I am not anti-Templeton in the sense of funding scientists to say mean things about religion. I simply believe that all study should be free of any particular agenda besides learning... Most take the position that the religious right are just nuts who are loud but frankly undeserving of a response... I believe that Bill Gates and Steve Jobs and pretty much all of the tech age wealth is firmly on the side of science and they need to step up and say so in a way that is heard by the anti-science lobby.Many conference participants leveled strong criticism at the activities of the Templeton Foundation, charging that it attempted to blur the line between science and religion, and that it funded "garbage research" aimed at showing a healing effect of prayer. • Can
science help us create a new rational narrative as poetic and powerful as those that have traditionally sustained societies? • Can we treat
religion as a natural phenomenon? • Can we be good without
God? And if not God, then what? The conference devoted its final session to "the negative effects of introducing religion into medicine". ==Speakers==