Author Q and A: Everett L. Worthington Jr.

September 26, 2007

Each fall, Templeton Foundation Press publishes a small inspirational book extrapolating on a virtue that relates to Sir John Templeton’s vision. This season, Everett L. Worthington contributes a second volume to our inspirational series: Humility: The Quiet Virtue. In addition to this book, Worthington also contributes a chapter to Jesus and Psychology edited by Fraser Watts, which TFP will publish in November.

 

In fall 2005, TFP published Worthington’s other inspirational book: The Power of Forgiving. We’ve had tremendous international success with this title, having sold translation rights in five languages.

 

TFP Editor: Why should a person desire to be humble? Are there benefits to humility?

Worthington: Research on humility is just beginning. Social scientists are starting to unravel the mystery of how to measure humility. We cannot simply ask people if they are humble. What if they say “yes.” Would you trust that this was an indication of humility? So, one of the few benefits uncovered is that people want acquaintances to be humble, friends to be selectively humble (humble toward us, but not so much toward others, proving that we are special), mates to be humble (but not doormats), and political leaders to be humble unless their strength is challenged. I think that most people’s motivation to be humble, though, is that, as humans, we seem to have the capacity for both virtue and vice, and virtue attracts us.

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Author Q and A: Eric Middleton, part one

September 14, 2007

Templeton Foundation Press recently published Eric Middleton’s The New Flatlanders: The Seeker’s Guide to the Theory of Everything, which explores topics in science and religion in an accessible question and answer format. In this book, Middleton connects the discussion of science and religion to the parable Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions, written by Edward A. Abbott in the nineteenth century.

 

TFP Editor: When did you make the connection of the classic parable Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions with the topics you discover and discuss?

 

Middleton: In the 1970s, I came across the story of Flatland and knew immediately that this would be the key to understanding the nature of reality involving more than three space dimensions. At the time, the concept of many dimensions was only mathematical and theoretical. The development of the concept of supergravity and superstrings in ten or eleven dimensions in the “Superstring revolution of 1984” led me to work on an overarching “Theory of Everything” during my sabbatical as a Fellow at Durham University.

            It was there that I discovered that the origin of five dimensions was first opened up by Theodor Kaluza in 1919. My next stage was to visit his son (also Theodor) in Hanover. On a visit to Germany, Theodor Jr. generously gave me photocopies of the correspondence from Einstein to his father. (At the request of John Stachel of Boston University I sent further copies for inclusion in the Collected Papers of Albert Einstein and also via Paul Davies for display at his Royal Society lectures).

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