The Faith of Scientists is an anthology of writings by twenty-one  legendary scientists, from the dawn of the Scientific Revolution to the  frontiers of science today, about their faith, their views about God,  and the place religion holds--or doesn't--in their lives in light of  their commitment to science. This is the first book to bring together so  many world-renowned figures of Western science and present them in  their own words, offering an intimate window into their private and  public reflections on science and faith. 
Leading religion scholar Nancy  Frankenberry draws from diaries, personal letters, speeches, essays, and  interviews, and reveals that the faith of scientists can take many  different forms, whether religious or secular, supernatural or  naturalistic, conventional or unorthodox. These eloquent writings  reflect a spectrum of views from diverse areas of scientific inquiry. 
Represented here are some of the most influential and colossal  personalities in the history of science, from the founders of science  such as Galileo, Johannes Kepler, Francis Bacon, Isaac Newton, Charles  Darwin, and Albert Einstein, to modern-day scientists like Carl Sagan,  Stephen Jay Gould, Jane Goodall, Freeman Dyson, Stephen Hawking, Edward  O. Wilson, and Ursula Goodenough. Frankenberry provides a general  introduction as well as concise introductions to each chapter that place  these writings in context and suggest further reading from the latest  scholarship. As surprising as it is illuminating and inspiring, The  Faith of Scientists is indispensable for students, scholars, and anyone  seeking to immerse themselves in important questions about God, the  universe, and science.
