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Home » Origins of Everything w/ Stephen Meyer, John Lennox, and James Tour @Uncommon Knowledge 2026

Origins of Everything w/ Stephen Meyer, John Lennox, and James Tour @Uncommon Knowledge 2026

Editor’s Notes: This episode of Uncommon Knowledge features an extraordinary panel of scientific minds: mathematician John Lennox, historian of science Stephen Meyer, and chemist James Tour. Together, they challenge the purely materialist view of the universe, arguing that recent breakthroughs in the Big Bang, fine-tuning, and the digital information within DNA point toward a transcendent creator. From the mathematical “singularity” that suggests an absolute beginning to the “gratuitous beauty” of the natural world, these scientists explain why a purely accidental universe is increasingly implausible. It is a profound exploration of how modern science is reopening the door to the “God hypothesis”. (April 20, 2026)

TRANSCRIPT:

Introduction

PETER ROBINSON: Did the universe come into existence by accident? Or did something intend it? Or intend us? A mathematician, John Lennox, a historian of science, Stephen Meyer, and a scientist, James Tour. Uncommon Knowledge, now.

Welcome to Uncommon Knowledge, recording today in Salzburg, Austria. I’m Peter Robinson. The director of the Discovery Institute Center for Science and Culture, Stephen Meyer, started his professional life as a geophysicist. Then he went back to school and earned a doctorate from Cambridge in the history and philosophy of science. Stephen Meyer’s most recent book, The Return of the God Hypothesis. John Lennox is the Professor of Mathematics at the University of Oxford Emeritus. He serves as president of the Oxford Center for Christian Apologetics. John Lennox’s most recent book, God, AI, and the End of History. James Tour is the W.F. Chau Professor of Chemistry at Rice University, where he also teaches materials science and nanoengineering. Professor Tour holds more than 130 patents. Patents. His most recent book, The Mystery of Life’s Origin.

Steve, John, Jim, thanks for joining me.

Dawkins vs. the Psalmist

PETER ROBINSON: Two quotations. Here’s the Oxford biologist Richard Dawkins in 1995: “The universe that we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is at bottom no design, no purpose, no evil, no good, nothing but pitiless indifference.”

Here’s the second quotation. This is a poem that dates back 3,000 years. Psalm 19: “The heavens declare the glory of God, the skies proclaim the work of his hands. Day after day they pour forth speech, night after night they reveal knowledge.”

Which of those two better reflects— not perfectly perhaps, but better reflects— the most recent developments in science? Steve?

STEPHEN MEYER: I think the psalmist has got it right, and the good Professor Dawkins, who has a talent for framing issues beautifully, nevertheless gets it wrong. The new developments in science, especially having to do with biological and cosmological origins, are pointing to the reality of a transcendent designing creator.

PETER ROBINSON: Jim?

JAMES TOUR: I would think the psalmist has it much, much closer.

PETER ROBINSON: Much closer. John, are you going to please stick up for rationalism and which of those two?

JOHN LENNOX: I stick up for rationalism and say the psalmist has it exactly right, that this is a word-based universe. The fact that we can describe it in mathematics, the fact that biology uses language to describe its central features of DNA. And Richard Dawkins’ statement is contradicted by his own life because he does believe actually in good and evil, apparently.

The Big Bang

PETER ROBINSON: The Big Bang. Let’s begin everything with an excerpt. There’s a forthcoming documentary in which all three of you appear. It’s called The Story of Everything. I believe it will be in theaters in the United States in April.

STEPHEN MEYER: Is that right? The film will open in theaters across the country on April 30th.

PETER ROBINSON: All right, so it’s based on your book, The Return of the God Hypothesis. And the documentary, as we will hear ourselves today, describes 3 of the most important recent-ish innovations in science. And we’ll begin with the Big Bang.

JOHN LENNOX: If the universe was always here, if the universe was infinitely old, then there’s nothing for a creator to do.

PETER ROBINSON: Steve, if the universe was always here, there’s nothing for a creator to do, says Carl Sagan. During a scientific conference in 1927, a Belgian priest and astronomer named Georges Lemaître shared a taxi with Albert Einstein. What happened during that taxi ride?

STEPHEN MEYER: Yeah, a fascinating story. Einstein’s own theory of general relativity implied a dynamic expanding universe outward from the beginning. He was unhappy with that conclusion.

PETER ROBINSON: Einstein himself.

STEPHEN MEYER: Einstein himself. So he fiddled with his own equations to make sure that the term in the equation that described the outward push perfectly balanced with the gravitational pull so he could depict the universe as static. Lemaître worked with his equations and showed that even on his own terms, the universe was not static and that it was a dynamic universe.

But he also was well aware of the astronomical data coming from Mount Wilson in California showing what is called redshift, that the galaxies are moving away from us. And we can tell that because of the way in which the light has shifted in the red direction of the electromagnetic spectrum.

And so in the taxicab on the way to this famous conference in Belgium in 1927, Lemaître confronts Einstein with this astronomical evidence and with his own depiction, or relays his own work on his famous field equations. And Einstein is reported to have responded, he said, “Well, your mathematics is impeccable, but your physical intuition is abominable.” And so he rejects out of hand the idea that the universe is dynamic and expanding.

But 2 years later, Arthur Eddington at Cambridge urges him, again, to go out to Mount Wilson to see what Hubble has been seeing through the telescope. And there’s some famous news.

PETER ROBINSON: News that can explain the redshift.

STEPHEN MEYER: Yeah, exactly. So the light coming from distant galaxies is, as the physicists say, shifted in the red direction of electromagnetic spectrum. If you shine light through a prism, the light will separate into different colors, red to violet. The red light corresponds to longer wavelengths. So if an object is moving away and is emitting any kind of a wavelength, that wavelength will be stretched out.