Does Judaism have anything specific to add to this? One important insight is that almost from the beginning the rabbis sensed that science is one thing and religion another, and they do not clash. They are just different things. This is beautifully epitomised in the blessing that rabbis coined 2,000 years ago on seeing a great non-Jewish scientist: "Blessed is God...who gave of His wisdom to flesh and blood."
Which scientists were the rabbis thinking about? They were Greeks or Romans. From the rabbis' point of view they were pagans who opposed everything that Judaism stood for. Yet the rabbis themselves coined this blessing thanking God for such scientists, saying, in effect, "We think differently from you, we have fought battles with you, but nonetheless we respect your scientific prowess and so we make a blessing thanking God for you." To recognise the independent integrity and religious dignity of science is an important thing for a religion to do.
Jews too are used to arguments. All the canonical texts of Judaism are anthologies of arguments. Therefore, if we are confident in our faith, we have nothing to fear from the findings of science and the challenges of atheism. In 2010 I made a television programme in which I had a series of conversations with four non-believers, three of whom were Jews: Howard Jacobson, Alain de Botton and Lisa Jardine, (the fourth was Oxford neuroscientist Professor Colin Blakemore). There was something enlarging about those encounters: honest, open, serious and civil.
Likewise I cherished my friendship with the late Sir Isaiah Berlin, a secular Jew. The first time he came to our house he said, "Chief Rabbi, whatever you do, don't talk to me about religion: when it comes to God, I'm tone deaf." Then he said, "What I don't understand is how you who studied philosophy at Cambridge and Oxford can believe." And I said, "Isaiah, if it helps, think of me as a lapsed heretic." And he said, "Quite understand, dear boy, quite understand."
- An Open Letter to Günter Grass
- Pauline Maria 1965-2008
- The New Intolerance
- Democracy in Danger: The Origins of European Technocracy
- New Poetry
- Spain and the Conquest of China
- New Poetry — Fred Agonistes
- New Poetry
- Second-Family Man
- Five New Poems
- The Mythology of Decline
- An Exchange: Toepfer and the Holocaust
- Manhattan Elegy
- Iliad!
- Old Man Failing
- Dad's Gay
- Benedict XVI and the Future of the West
- New Poems
- The End of the Dance
- History Lesson


















3:05 AM
4:04 PM
7:02 PM
2:01 PM
5:01 AM
5:01 PM
11:01 AM
11:01 AM
1:01 AM
4:01 PM