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Robin Collins
Robin Collins
from Wikipedia

Robin Alan Collins is an American philosopher. He serves as the Distinguished Professor of Philosophy and as the chair of the Department of Philosophy at Messiah University in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania. His main interests include philosophical issues related to the relationship between religion and science and philosophical theology.

Education

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Collins obtained two undergraduate degrees from Washington State University in 1984 with a triple major in mathematics, physics, and philosophy, graduating summa cum laude. Collins spent two years in a Ph.D. program in physics at the University of Texas at Austin before transferring to the University of Notre Dame, where he received a Ph.D. in philosophy in 1993. His dissertation was titled "Epistemological Issues in the Scientific Realism/Antirealism Debate: An Analysis and a Proposal."[1][better source needed]

He served as a post-doctoral fellow at Northwestern University's Program in History and Philosophy of Science before joining Messiah College.

Career

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Collins has taught philosophy at Messiah University since 1994 and is a leading advocate for the Fine-Tuning Argument. Collins was interviewed as a major contributor to The Case for a Creator[2] by Lee Strobel. Using his background in both philosophy and physics, he has developed a Fine-Tuning for Discoverability Argument, in which he argues that many scientific constants are fine-tuned to optimize our ability to discover knowledge about the universe.

References

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from Grokipedia
Robin Collins is an American philosopher known for his work on the fine-tuning argument for the existence of God, which posits that the precise constants and conditions of the universe that permit life provide evidence for a divine creator. He is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy and Chair of the Department of Philosophy at Messiah University, a private Christian university in Pennsylvania. He specializes in philosophy of religion, philosophy of science, metaphysics, and philosophical theology. He has graduate-level training in theoretical physics, a Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Notre Dame (1993), and undergraduate degrees in physics and mathematics from Washington State University (1984). Collins has published articles and book chapters with academic presses including Oxford University Press, Cambridge University Press, Blackwell, and Routledge. Notable works include his chapter on the teleological argument in the Blackwell Companion to Natural Theology (2009), discussions of the multiverse hypothesis from a theistic perspective, and defenses of the existence of a non-physical soul. He has received grants from the Templeton Foundation for research on fine-tuning and the discoverability of the universe. He has worked on book projects analyzing evidence for fine-tuning and developing philosophical arguments for divine creation. He has delivered invited addresses at conferences at Stanford University and Cambridge University, participated in lectures and debates at universities, and appeared in media including PBS's Closer to Truth, NPR's Philosophy Talk, and the documentary The Privileged Planet.

Early life

No verifiable information is publicly available regarding Robin Collins' birth, childhood, upbringing, or early background.

Career

Robin Collins began his academic career after earning his Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Notre Dame in 1993. He served as a post-doctoral fellow at Northwestern University's Program in History and Philosophy of Science before joining Messiah College (now Messiah University) in 1994. He has taught at Messiah University since 1994, where he currently holds the position of Distinguished Professor of Philosophy and Chair of the Department of Philosophy. His work focuses on philosophy of religion, philosophy of science, metaphysics, and philosophical theology, with particular emphasis on the fine-tuning argument for the existence of God. Collins has received multiple grants from the John Templeton Foundation, including funding for research on fine-tuning and the discoverability of the universe (e.g., $91,000 for "The Well-Tempered Universe" project, 2008–2010, and $54,000 for "Discoverability and Providence," 2013–2015). He also held a Neuroscience and The Soul Fellowship at Biola University in 2013. He has delivered invited plenary addresses at institutions including Stanford University (2003) and Cambridge University (2011), and has appeared in media such as PBS's Closer to Truth, NPR's Philosophy Talk, and the documentary The Privileged Planet (2004, as an interviewee). Collins is currently completing two books on fine-tuning and the philosophical case for divine creation. His contributions remain centered in academic philosophy and the intersection of science and religion, with no involvement in acting or commercial film production. Robin Collins is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy and Chair of the Department of Philosophy at Messiah University, where he has taught since at least the 1990s. He teaches courses including Problems in Philosophy, Asian Philosophy, Philosophy of Religion, Philosophy of Science, Issues in Science and Religion (team-taught), Christian Apologetics, and Metaphysics. He has also led seminars and workshops on science and religion pedagogy and the fine-tuning argument at institutions such as Calvin College and the University of St. Thomas.
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