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Vatican Observatory Foundation Faith and Science

Articles, videos, audio, and resources supporting Faith and Science

Vatican Observatory Foundation Faith and Science
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Category Archives: Personal accounts

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Adventures of a Vatican Astronomer – Br. Guy Consolmagno SJ

Vatican Observatory Foundation Faith and Science

Video One hour Level: all audiences Br. Guy Consolmagno, S. J., an astronomer at the Vatican Observatory, gave this talk at the SETI Institute on February 22, 2013 No scientist is a Spock-like android; a scientist’s work is as intuitive, and just as full of human foibles, as a painting, a symphony, or a prayer. But most of us don’t have the opportunity (or training) to reflect on the human dimensions of our work. Br. Guy Consolmagno does; he is both a Jesuit brother and a planetary scientist at the Vatican Observatory, splitting his time between the meteorite collection in Rome (which he curates) and the Vatican telescope in Arizona. Thanks to his Vatican connections, his work has sent him around the world several times to dozens of countries and every continent (including a meteorite hunting expedition to Antarctica). In this talk he will share some of those adventures, and reflect on the larger meaning of our common experience as … Continue reading →

Posted in Astronomy and the Church, Church and Science Today, Personal accounts, Personal reflections, Vatican Observatory | Tagged Br. Guy Consolmagno, Extraterrestrial Life, SETI

From MIT to Specola Vaticana: Guy Consolmagno at TEDx via Della Conciliazione

Vatican Observatory Foundation Faith and Science

Video 17 minutes Level: all audiences Brother Guy Consolmagno weaves stories about science and seeing things in new ways. From TEDx YouTube: Brother Guy Consolmagno is a Planetary Scientist at the Vatican Observatory. He is the curator of the Vatican meteorite collection, which is one of the largest in the world. He earned a degree from MIT and did post-doctorate work at MIT and the Harvard College Observatory. When he was 29, he joined the Peace Corps in Kenya. There, he taught suffering people about astronomy. He discovered that the desire for scientific knowledge is not limited to educated westerners, but is original and alive in the poor and uneducated. In this way, he discovered that astronomy belongs to us all. In 1992, he became a Jesuit Brother. In 2000, he was honored by the International Astronomical Union for his contributions to the study of meteorites and asteroids with the naming of “Asteroid 4597 Consolmagno”.  

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Posted in Astronomy and the Church, Church and Science Today, Personal accounts, Personal reflections | Tagged Astronomy, Br. Guy Consolmagno, Deduction, Education, TEDx

On Being with Krista Tippett: Asteroids, Stars, and the Love of God

Vatican Observatory Foundation Faith and Science

Audio One hour Level: all audiences An interview with two Vatican Observatory astronomers from the radio show On Being with Krista Tippett: “Guy Consolmagno and George Coyne—Asteroids, Stars, and the Love of God”. More than 30 objects on the moon are named after the Jesuits who mapped it. A Jesuit was one of the founders of modern astrophysics. And four Jesuits in history, including Ignatius of Loyola, have had asteroids named after them – Brother Guy Consolmagno and Father George Coyne being the two living men with this distinction. In a conversation filled with friendship and laughter, and in honor of the visit of Pope Francis to the U.S., we experience the spacious way they think about science, the universe, and the love of God. Click here for the audio and a transcript of the interview from “On Being”.  

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Posted in Astronomy and the Church, Church and Science Today, Personal accounts, Personal reflections, Vatican Observatory | Tagged Biography, Br. Guy Consolmagno, Fr. George Coyne, Interview

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