Episode Description
What happens when a physicist experiences a moment of transcendence that science cannot explain?
Alan Lightman has spent much of his life exploring the mysteries of the universe—from black holes and the nature of time to the fundamental laws that govern reality. A physicist, novelist and longtime professor at MIT, he's fascinated by the transformative power of awe and wonder.
In this live conversation recorded at New York's Morgan Library, Lightman reflects on extraordinary encounters in nature—from a startling moment with two ospreys to a solitary night beneath the stars—that shook him to the core and left him feeling as though he had somehow "fallen into infinity." Calling himself a "spiritual materialist," he seeks to bridge the divide between science and religion, between mathematics and art.
Can a scientific worldview make room for awe, transcendence, and mystical experience? Lightman says these fleeting moments reveal something essential about being human: our longing to connect with something larger than ourselves.
This event at the Morgan Library was co-sponsored by the Nour Foundation as part of our series “Spirituality in the Age of Science: Conversations on God, Transcendence and Mortality.”
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- Video of Steve’s complete conversation with Alan Lightman at Morgan Library:
- MIT website
- Books
- PBS series: "Searching: Our Quest For Meaning in the Age of Science"
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0:00 Introduction
2:40 The Osprey Encounter
9:40 Science And Religion
13:30 Scientist And Novelist
28:50 The Religious Impulse
36:50 Evolution And Consciousness