Dr. Jaume Navarro is a historian of science, trained in Physics and in Philosophy, working at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science. He is also an affiliate researcher at the University of Cambridge. His current research evolves around the notions of matter in British science at the end of the nineteenth century and beginning of the twentieth, as well as the impact of the quantum revolution among British scientists. He has published three books and edited a fourth one. He is currently writing a book on the history of Physics, under contract with Cambridge University Press, and an edited volume (under review with MIT Press). He was a student and collaborator of Prof. Mariano Artigas, with whom he worked on Science and Religion Studies. Jaume Navarro, Rafael A. Martinez, Roger Trigg, Robert A. Delfino, William E. Carroll, Martinez J. Hewlett, Marie I. George, Jitse M. van der Meer, Santiago Collado, Steve Fuller, Karl Giberson.
'A splendid collection of stimulating essays that stress the remarkable contribution of Mariano Artigas to the global dialogue on science and religion.' William R. Shea, University of Padua, Italy 'A posthumous homage to Mariano Artigas (1938-2006) was the occasion of a reassessment of the philosophies of cosmology and evolution viewed mainly from within the precincts of Roman Catholic philosophy of science. At stake are the multiple meanings of reality (both cosmological and biological) as viewed from different historical, religious and philosophical perspectives. Such a rethinking questions commonly accepted notions of the definitions and boundary conditions of both science and metaphysics.' Thomas Glick, Boston University, USA ’...there is much here that is very worthwhile, and one cannot help but enjoy the overall tone of a symposium whose contributors are wont to quote the likes of Jimi Hendrix and Joni Mitchell.’ Modern Believing