Science Meets Faith (@scimeetsfaith) 's Twitter Profile
Science Meets Faith

@scimeetsfaith

Science is about facts; if you want the truth, go next door to the Philosophy department. (Indiana Jones, slightly modified) - http://sciencemeetsfaith.wordpres

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linkhttps://www.facebook.com/ScienceMeetsFaith?fref=ts calendar_today13-12-2013 10:39:33

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Catholic Science Greats (@cathscigreats) 's Twitter Profile Photo

May Pope Francis (1936–2025) rest in the peace of Christ. In this picture, he is talking with Gabriele Gionti, a Jesuit scientist from the Vatican Observatory. The book he is holding is Foundations of Physics.

May Pope Francis (1936–2025) rest in the peace of Christ.

In this picture, he is talking with Gabriele Gionti, a Jesuit scientist from the Vatican Observatory. The book he is holding is Foundations of Physics.
Church and Science (@churchnscience) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This is Pope John XXIII during a visit to the astrophysical laboratory associated with the Vatican Observatory vaticanobservatory.bsky.social🇻🇦. The laboratory prepared the first atlas of spectral lines for elements and compounds of interest to astronomers 🔭. #Conclave2025 #Pope

This is Pope John XXIII during a visit to the astrophysical laboratory associated with the <a href="/VaticanObserv/">Vatican Observatory vaticanobservatory.bsky.social</a>🇻🇦. The laboratory prepared the first atlas of spectral lines for elements and compounds of interest to astronomers 🔭. #Conclave2025 #Pope
Science Meets Faith (@scimeetsfaith) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Our new pope, Pope Leo XIV – Robert Prevost, OSA – is a mathematician…. Okay, this never was his career path, but sciences change your way of seeing the world and everything in it. He also is a missionary, a gift for the Church and beyond.

Our new pope, Pope Leo XIV – Robert Prevost, OSA – is a mathematician…. Okay, this never was his career path, but sciences change your way of seeing the world and everything in it. He also is a missionary, a gift for the Church and beyond.
Church and Science (@churchnscience) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Italian 🇮🇹 Jesuit priest, #Scientist and a vibrant #missionary who brought his mathematical and #astronomical knowledge to #China 🇨🇳- Fr. Matteo Ricci SJ (1552–1610 Peking, China). Founding figure of #Jesuit China mission and translated many #mathematical work to #Chinese. #STEM

Italian 🇮🇹 Jesuit priest, #Scientist and a vibrant #missionary who brought his mathematical and #astronomical knowledge to #China 🇨🇳- Fr. Matteo Ricci SJ (1552–1610 Peking, China). Founding figure of #Jesuit China mission and translated many #mathematical work to #Chinese. #STEM
Physics In History (@physinhistory) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This is the most detailed model of a human cell ever created, using data from X-ray, NMR, and cryoelectron microscopy. ‘Cellular landscape cross-section through a eukaryotic cell.’ - Evan Ingersoll & Gael McGill.

This is the most detailed model of a human cell ever created, using data from X-ray, NMR, and cryoelectron microscopy.

‘Cellular landscape cross-section through a eukaryotic cell.’ - Evan Ingersoll &amp; Gael McGill.
Diana Briggs (@dianabr95650186) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Reading the Bible: John Calvin: ‘Nothing is here treated of but the visible form of the world. He who would learn astronomy and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere.’ Galileo (quoting Cardinal Baronius): ‘The Bible tells us how to go to heaven, not how the heavens go.’

Vatican News (@vaticannews) 's Twitter Profile Photo

At the end of the Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica as part of the Jubilee for Digital Missionaries and Catholic Influencers, Pope Leo greeted the pilgrims who had come from all across the globe for this event. More than simply creating content, Pope Leo urged these digital

Church and Science (@churchnscience) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The first hints of the existence of Cosmic Rays were found by a Jesuit in a famous experiment at the #Eiffel 🗼- Fr. Theodor Wulf. His studies helped Victor Hess to carry out the later studies which led to the discovery of cosmic rays and win the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1936.🌌

The first hints of the existence of Cosmic Rays were found by a Jesuit in a famous experiment at the #Eiffel 🗼- Fr. Theodor Wulf. His studies helped Victor Hess to carry out the later studies which led to the discovery of cosmic rays and win the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1936.🌌
Church and Science (@churchnscience) 's Twitter Profile Photo

She is a 🔥 Image: Sister Mary Kenneth Keller, the first person to earn a PhD in computer science 🖥️ at an August 2-3, 1967 conference at Clarke College on Hospital and Medical Applications of Computers. Photo credit: Clarke University Archives. #churchandscience 🇺🇸

She is a 🔥 Image: Sister Mary Kenneth Keller, the first person to earn a PhD in computer science 🖥️ at an August 2-3, 1967 conference at Clarke College on Hospital and Medical Applications of Computers. Photo credit: Clarke University Archives.
#churchandscience 🇺🇸
Bishop Robert Barron (@bishopbarron) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Friends, the new atheists told an entire generation of young people that we come from nothing and return to nothing. But the Bible speaks of a God who gives us meaning and sends us on mission. I invite you to watch my recent talk on this theme, which I shared with hundreds of

Catholic Science Greats (@cathscigreats) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The German astronomer Hermann Brück was born 8/15/1905. He researched the stellar medium and stellar evolution. A convert, he remained a faithful Catholic throughout his life. His wife, Mary, was also an accomplished astronomer.

The German astronomer Hermann Brück was born 8/15/1905. He researched the stellar medium and stellar evolution. A convert, he remained a faithful Catholic throughout his life. His wife, Mary, was also an accomplished astronomer.
St. Thomas Aquinas (@aquinas_quotes) 's Twitter Profile Photo

If a person answers someone who asks why wood is heated: “Because God willed it,” he is answering it appropriately, provided he intends to take the question back to a first cause; but not appropriately, if he means to exclude all other causes (ScG 3.97).

If a person answers someone who asks why wood is heated: “Because God willed it,” he is answering it appropriately, provided he intends to take the question back to a first cause; but not appropriately, if he means to exclude all other causes (ScG 3.97).
Catholic Science Greats (@cathscigreats) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The 9/1 podcast from CatholicScientists features a great overview of the history of the Church and science by Dr. Stephen Barr. Recommended! podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the…

Catholic Science Greats (@cathscigreats) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I am honored that the Vatican Observatory has published my article on Catholic Astronomers and the Discovery of Neptune. To write the article, I researched 19th-century French-language sources. vaticanobservatory.org/sacred-space-a…