
Calling it “an introduction to the intersection of science and religion that is addressed to the thoughtful but nonspecialist reader,” CHOICE, the premier review magazine for academic libraries, examines several of the book’s strengths, noting how even-handed the author is in addressing several different world religions and how thorough she is in exploring new technologies. If you are reading this blog (or any blog, for that matter), chances are that you are fairly technology-savvy, which further means that you might find it quite interesting to think about how things like virtual environments, social networking, gentic engineering, or nanotechnology might carry positive and/or negative implications for religious experience.
