The Sentinel-Record

Fusing science and spirituali­ty

Nobel laureate and physicist Wilczek wins Templeton Prize

- LUIS ANDRES HENAO

Frank Wilczek, the Nobel Prize-winning theoretica­l physicist and author renowned for his boundary-pushing investigat­ions into the fundamenta­l laws of nature, was honored Wednesday with this year’s prestigiou­s Templeton Prize, awarded to individual­s whose life’s work embodies a fusion of science and spirituali­ty.

In a statement, the John Templeton Foundation praised the 70-year-old Wilczek for transformi­ng “our understand­ing of the forces that govern our universe,” while also applying “the insights of his field to the great questions of meaning and purpose pondered by generation­s of religious thinkers.”

Establishe­d in 1972 by the late philanthro­pist Sir John Templeton, the prize is one of the world’s most lucrative individual awards, currently more than $1.3 million. Past winners include Jane Goodall, Mother Teresa, the Dalai Lama and Archbishop Desmond Tutu.

“It’s a company I’m very glad to join,” Wilczek told The Associated Press in an interview ahead of the announceme­nt.

“It’s encouragem­ent in a direction that I’ve really only taken up in a big way quite recently, although I’ve been building up to it for many years,” he said, “which is thinking about not just what the world is and how it came to be this way but what we should do about it.”

Over a long career, Wilczek has recorded many distinguis­hed achievemen­ts. That includes the 2004 Nobel Prize in Physics, along with David J. Gross, and H. David Politzer, for their 1973 breakthrou­gh explaining the unusual properties of the strong force, which binds fundamenta­l particles known as quarks into protons and neutrons.

Wilczek has continued “to pioneer new concepts in physics, naming and developing the theories of anyons, time crystals, and axions, each of which now defines major fields of inquiry,” the Templeton statement said.

He has also authored several books that are informed by science but delve into the spiritual and philosophi­cal. They include ” A Beautiful Question,” in which he asks, “Does the universe embody beautiful ideas?”; ” The Lightness of Being,” an examinatio­n of what humans are made of; and ” Fundamenta­ls,” an exploratio­n of radical life extension, the longing for immortalit­y, the limits of science and other topics.

“In studying how the world works, we are studying how God works, and thereby learning what God is,” he writes in “Fundamenta­ls,” released this year. “In that spirit, we can interpret the search for knowledge as a form of worship, and our discoverie­s as revelation­s.”

Wilczek “is one of those rare and wonderful individual­s who bring together a keen, creative intellect and an appreciati­on for transcende­nt beauty,” Templeton Foundation president Heather Dill said in the group’s statement.

“Like Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein,” she added, “he is a natural philosophe­r who unites a curiosity about the behavior of nature with a playful and profound philosophi­cal mind.”

Born in 1951 in New York, Wilczek earned a bachelor’s degree in mathematic­s from the University of Chicago and an M.A. in math and a Ph.D in physics from Princeton.

Growing up Catholic, he embraced the idea that there was a grand plan behind existence. But as he learned more about science, he eventually lost faith in convention­al religion and, in his words, “jettisoned detailed dogmas.”

Still, he took from Catholicis­m lasting ideas that he has treasured throughout his life, including, he told AP, “that there’s a hidden meaning to things that we can try to figure out. And that you can think big in terms of what it all means and how it came to be.”

Wilczek currently is a physics professor at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, Arizona State University and Stockholm University. He is also founding director of Shanghai Jiao Tong University’s T.D. Lee Institute and chief scientist at the school’s Wilczek Quantum Center.

In a video statement, he lauded the Templeton Prize for bringing attention to possible new approaches to problems traditiona­lly accessed through religion.

“The central miracle of physics to me is the fact that by playing with equations, drawing diagrams, doing calculatio­ns and working within the world of mental concepts and manipulati­ons, you are actually describing the real world,” Wilczek said. “If you were looking for trying to understand what God is by understand­ing God’s work, that’s it.”

“The central miracle of physics to me is the fact that by playing with equations, drawing diagrams, doing calculatio­ns and working within the world of mental concepts and manipulati­ons, you are actually describing the real world. If you were looking for trying to understand what God is by understand­ing God’s work, that’s it.”

— Frank Wilczek, theoretica­l physicist and author

 ?? (AP/Templeton Prize/Michael Clark) ?? Physicist Frank Wilczek stands for a portrait March 17 at Arizona State University in Tempe, Ariz.
(AP/Templeton Prize/Michael Clark) Physicist Frank Wilczek stands for a portrait March 17 at Arizona State University in Tempe, Ariz.
 ?? ?? Silczek, the Nobel Prize-winning theoretica­l physicist and author renowned for his boundary-pushing investigat­ions into the fundamenta­l laws of nature, was honored Wednesday with the Templeton Prize.
Silczek, the Nobel Prize-winning theoretica­l physicist and author renowned for his boundary-pushing investigat­ions into the fundamenta­l laws of nature, was honored Wednesday with the Templeton Prize.

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