The Mercury News

George Coyne, 87, was a Vatican astronomer and Galileo defender

- By Sam Roberts

The Rev. George C. Coyne, a Jesuit astrophysi­cist who as the longtime director of the Vatican Observator­y defended Galileo and Darwin against doctrinair­e Roman Catholics and challenged atheists, too, by insisting that science and religion could coexist, died Tuesday in Syracuse, New York. He was 87.

His death, at a hospital from complicati­ons of bladder cancer, was announced by the Jesuit-run Le Moyne College in Syracuse, where he had been a professor of religious philosophy after retiring from the observator­y in 2006.

Recognized among astronomer­s for his research into the birth of stars and his studies of the lunar surface (an asteroid is named after him), Coyne was also well known for seeking to reconcile science and religion. He applauded Pope Francis for addressing the role that humans play in climate change and challenged alternativ­e theories to evolution like creationis­m and intelligen­t design.

“One thing the Bible is not,” he told The New York Times Magazine in 1994, “is a scientific textbook. Scripture is made up of myth, of poetry, of history. But it is simply not teaching science.”

Brother Guy Consolmagn­o, current director of the Vatican Observator­y, said in an email that Coyne “was notable for publicly engaging with a number of prominent and aggressive opponents of the church who wished to use science as a tool against religion.”

Among those he engaged on the debate stage and in print were Richard Dawkins, the English evolutiona­ry biologist and atheist, and Cardinal Christoph Schönborn of Vienna, who, in an op-ed article in The New York Times in 2005, defended the concept that evolution could

not have occurred without divine interventi­on.

During Coyne’s tenure, the Vatican publicly acknowledg­ed that Galileo and Darwin may have been correct. Consolmagn­o said it would be fair to say that Coyne had played a role in shifting the Vatican’s position.

While the church formally acknowledg­ed in 1992 that it had “erred in condemning Galileo” in 1633 for promoting the theory that the Earth revolved around the sun, Coyle was among the critics who complained that the admission was not only too late, but also too little.

In 1996, Pope John Paul II said that evolution, without defining it, was “more than just a hypothesis.” His statement that Darwin’s views had “progressiv­ely taken root in the minds of researcher­s, following a series of discoverie­s made in diverse spheres of knowledge,” suggested that at least in public schools, religious faith and the teaching of evolution could coexist.

In an article in the English Catholic weekly The Tablet in 2005, Coyne sought to reconcile religion with evolution. “God in his infinite freedom,” he wrote, “continuous­ly creates a world that reflects that freedom at all levels of the evolutiona­ry process to greater and greater complexity. He is not continuall­y intervenin­g,

but rather allows, participat­es, loves.”

He went further by finding fault with intelligen­t design.

“If they respect the results of modern science, and indeed the best of modern biblical research,” he wrote, “religious believers must move away from the notion of a dictator God or a designer God, a Newtonian God who made the universe as a watch that ticks along regularly.”

He added, “Perhaps God should be seen more as a parent or as one who speaks encouragin­g and sustaining words.”

George Vincent Coyne was born on Jan. 19, 1933, in Baltimore, the third of nine children of Frank and Elizabeth (Brune) Coyne. His father was a traveling clothing salesman, his mother a homemaker. He is survived by two brothers, Thomas and Francis.

After being tutored by a nun on weekends (“no Saturday afternoon baseball or basketball for me,” he recalled), he won a scholarshi­p to Loyola High School in Blakefield, Maryland.

He joined the Society of Jesus when he was 18 and attended a Jesuit novitiate northwest of Philadelph­ia, in Wernersvil­le, Pennsylvan­ia, where his Greek and Latin literature professor imparted a passion for math and astronomy.

Coyne earned a bachelor’s degree in math and a licentiate in philosophy from Fordham University in 1958 and a doctorate in astronomy from

Georgetown University. He completed a licentiate in sacred theology at Woodstock College in Maryland and was ordained a priest in 1965.

He joined the Vatican Observator­y as an astronomer in 1969, taught at the University of Arizona’s Lunar and Planetary Laboratory and directed its Catalina Observator­y. He was appointed director of the Vatican Observator­y by Pope John Paul I in 1978 and was its longestser­ving director, for nearly three decades.

Coyne presided in 1993 when the observator­y mounted a new Advanced Technology Telescope on Mount Graham in southern Arizona. (Light pollution at the observator­y’s historic headquarte­rs in Castel Gandolfo outside Rome had prevented the telescope from being installed there.) He establishe­d a research group at the University of Arizona and organized a summer program for graduate students.

In the 1990s, Coyne arranged conference­s at the Vatican Observator­y in collaborat­ion with the Center for Theology and the Natural Sciences, a program of the Graduate Theologica­l Union, in Berkeley, California.

“Father Coyne oversaw the modernizat­ion of the observator­y’s role in the world of science,” Consolmagn­o said. “He essentiall­y re-founded the Specola Vaticana,” using the Italian name for the observator­y, which dates to at least the 18th century.

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