The dialogue between science and religion is among humanity’s oldest and most controversial, drawing each era’s greatest thinkers into some of history’s most heated debates. We’ve previously looked at a BBC documentary on the complex relationship between the two and 7 essential books on the psychology of faith. Today, we turn to a fantastic mashup of 50 famous academics — including Brain Pickings favorites Carl Sagan, Stephen Hawking, Oliver Sacks, Steven Pinker and Daniel Dennett — talking about spirituality and science, created by Jonathan Pararajasingham.

I can’t believe the special stories that have been made up about our relationship to the universe at large, because they seem to be too simple, to connected, too local, too provincial. The Earth! He came to the Earth! One of the aspects of God came to the Earth, mind you. And look at what’s out there! How can… It isn’t in proportion.” ~ Richard Feynman

My favorite has to be Brian Cox, at around 18:30, who echoes my own belief that curiosity is more important than knowledge — an alternative route to intellectual inquiry that offers an antidote to the fundamental human discomfort with the unknown.

The speakers, in order of appearance:

1. Lawrence Krauss, World-Renowned Physicist

2. Robert Coleman Richardson, Nobel Laureate in Physics

3. Richard Feynman, World-Renowned Physicist, Nobel Laureate in Physics

4. Simon Blackburn, Cambridge Professor of Philosophy

5. Colin Blakemore, World-Renowned Oxford Professor of Neuroscience

6. Steven Pinker, World-Renowned Harvard Professor of Psychology

7. Alan Guth, World-Renowned MIT Professor of Physics

8. Noam Chomsky, World-Renowned MIT Professor of Linguistics

9. Nicolaas Bloembergen, Nobel Laureate in Physics

10. Peter Atkins, World-Renowned Oxford Professor of Chemistry

11. Oliver Sacks, World-Renowned Neurologist, Columbia University

12. Lord Martin Rees, Astronomer Royal

13. Sir John Gurdon, Pioneering Developmental Biologist, Cambridge

14. Sir Bertrand Russell, World-Renowned Philosopher, Nobel Laureate

15. Stephen Hawking, World-Renowned Cambridge Theoretical Physicist

16. Riccardo Giacconi, Nobel Laureate in Physics

17. Ned Block, NYU Professor of Philosophy

18. Gerard ‘t Hooft, Nobel Laureate in Physics

19. Marcus du Sautoy, Oxford Professor of Mathematics

20. James Watson, Co-discoverer of DNA, Nobel Laureate

21. Colin McGinn, Professor of Philosophy, Miami University

22. Sir Patrick Bateson, Cambridge Professor of Ethology

23. Sir David Attenborough, World-Renowned Broadcaster and Naturalist

24. Martinus Veltman, Nobel Laureate in Physics

25. Pascal Boyer, Professor of Anthropology

26. Partha Dasgupta, Cambridge Professor of Economics

27. AC Grayling, Birkbeck Professor of Philosophy

28. Ivar Giaever, Nobel Laureate in Physics

29. John Searle, Berkeley Professor of Philosophy

30. Brian Cox, Particle Physicist (Large Hadron Collider, CERN)

31. Herbert Kroemer, Nobel Laureate in Physics

32. Rebecca Goldstein, Professor of Philosophy

33. Michael Tooley, Professor of Philosophy, Colorado

34. Sir Harold Kroto, Nobel Laureate in Chemistry

35. Leonard Susskind, Stanford Professor of Theoretical Physics

36. Quentin Skinner, Professor of History (Cambridge)

37. Theodor W. Hänsch, Nobel Laureate in Physics

38. Mark Balaguer, CSU Professor of Philosophy

39. Richard Ernst, Nobel Laureate in Chemistry

40. Alan Macfarlane, Cambridge Professor of Anthropology

41. Professor Neil deGrasse Tyson, Princeton Research Scientist

42. Douglas Osheroff, Nobel Laureate in Physics

43. Hubert Dreyfus, Berkeley Professor of Philosophy

44. Lord Colin Renfrew, World-Renowned Archaeologist, Cambridge

45. Carl Sagan, World-Renowned Astronomer

46. Peter Singer, World-Renowned Bioethicist, Princeton

47. Rudolph Marcus, Nobel Laureate in Chemistry

48. Robert Foley, Cambridge Professor of Human Evolution

49. Daniel Dennett, Tufts Professor of Philosophy

50. Steven Weinberg, Nobel Laureate in Physics

(One also has to wonder why there’s only one woman on this list — are there really this few female voices in academia weighing in on the science vs. religion debate, or is this mashup simply reflective of whose opinions Pararajasingham has chosen to hear?)

via @kirstinbutler