Skip to main content

Mark Vernon

Mark Vernon is a writer and journalist whose books include After Atheism: Science, Religion and the Meaning of Life (Palgrave Macmillan, 2008) and Plato’s Podcasts: The Ancients’ Guide to Modern Living (Oneworld, 2010).

Articles

Religion Dispatches
The ancients were wise to life’s tragedies too. Some things do, apparently, go badly. (They could hardly think otherwise, living during that long period of history in which death was associated with the young, not the old.) So, their instruction was to ‘go with the flow’ even when that is hard to stomach. Theirs is not a relentless optimism, expecting everything, like Byrne’s. Rather, the Stoics advocated expecting nothing, but working at everything.
Article
Religion Dispatches
The department of physics in the University of Oxford is a hodgepodge of buildings, old and new. In a warren of rooms, its scientists pursue interests from quantum computing to theoretical cosmology. The diversity says much. As a tree of knowledge, modern physics has branches that shoot off in…
Article
Religion Dispatches
David Sloan Wilson is a biologist who claims that the so-called “selfish” gene is a myth. What if we have evolved to do what’s best not for ourselves, but for the groups we live in? The implications for religion, the ultimate social organism, are huge.
Article