CCST Senior Fellow Francisco Ayala Awarded Templeton Prize
March 29, 2010
Francisco Ayala, UC Irvine professor of ecology and evolutionary biology
and a CCST senior fellow, has won the 2010 Templeton Prize, which is
awarded to a living person who has made an "exceptional contribution to
affirming life's spiritual dimension."
"Professor Ayala has earned a very distinctive honor that recognizes the
broader significance of science," said CCST Council Chair Charles
Kennel. "We are tremendously pleased for him."
The Templeton Prize was announced on March 25 at a news conference at
the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C., by the John
Templeton Foundation, which has awarded it since 1973. Valued at one
million pounds sterling (about $1.53 million), the Prize honors a living
person who has made exceptional contributions to affirming life's
spiritual dimension. HRH Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, will
award the Prize at a private ceremony at Buckingham Palace on May 5.
Ayala, one of the nation's leading biologists and one of the original
CCST senior fellows, is the Donald Bren professor of biological
sciences, professor of philosophy and director of the Bren Fellows
Program at the University of California, Irvine. He has pioneered the
use of molecular biology methods in the investigation of evolutionary
processes; his research has led to a new understanding of the origin of
species, the pervasiveness of genetic diversity, and rates of evolution,
among other concepts.
He has also devoted more than 30 years to speaking about issues
concerning science and society, ethics and religion, asserting that both
science and faith are damaged when either invades the proper domain of
the other. A former Dominican priest, Ayala has equated efforts to block
religious intrusions into science with "the survival of rationality in
this country." To that end, in 1981 he served as an expert witness in a
pivotal U.S. federal court challenge that led to the overturning of an
Arkansas law that mandated the teaching of creationism alongside
evolution.
However, Ayala has forcefully denied that science
contradicts religion. "If they are properly understood," he said, "they
cannot be in contradiction because science and religion concern
different matters, and each is essential to human understanding."
Besides holding professorships in biology, philosophy, logic, and
philosophy of biology (a field he helped establish), Ayala is also
University Professor, the highest rank within the California university
system and the only person with that title at UCI.
CCST Council member Susan Bryant, UCI's vice chancellor of research,
stated that Ayala, with his passion for science, his deeply religious
roots, and his profound understanding of evolution, has filled an
important niche at the intersection of science, philosophy and religion.
"The Templeton Prize is a great honor and a very fitting recognition of
Professor Ayala's multidimensional contributions to science and
society," said Bryant.
Updated 3/29/10