Ilia Delio, OSF, PhD

Josephine C. Connelly Endowed Chair in Theology| College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Villanova University

  • Villanova PA

Sister Ilia Delio, OSF, PhD, works to find a new unity and synthesis in science and religion.

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Areas of Expertise

Theology
Neuroscience
Artificial Intelligence and Becoming
Culture and Religion
Catholicity
Evolution and Culture
Integration of Science and Religion

Biography

Science and religion are often thought of as mutually exclusive; however, with areas of expertise grounded in both spheres, Sr. Ilia Delio can explain how it is possible to find a new unity and synthesis in science and religion. She can address compelling topics like how technology has changed human consciousness, spirit as a type of energy, the import of artificial intelligence on life as we know it and the potential for achieving wholeness of being. Her work seeks to move beyond the dialogue of science and religion toward a mutually enriched integration of these disciplines for wholeness of being.

Education

Fordham University

PhD

Rutgers University

PhD

Fordham University

MA

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Select Accomplishments

2017 Madeleva Lecturer at St. Mary's College (Notre Dame)

The invited speaker is recognized as a prominent woman theologian in the United States.

Honorary Degree, Doctor of Science, St. Francis University

Conferred in 2015.

Catholic Press Book Award (2014)

Conferred for "The Unbearable Wholeness of Being: God, Evolution and the Power of Love" (Third Place, Faith and Science).

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Affiliations

  • American Academy of Religion (AAR)
  • American Teilhard Association
  • Catholic Theological Society of America
  • The Maryknoll Institute of Theology, Lecturer
  • Rohr Living School of Theology, Guest Speaker
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Select Media Appearances

New Movement Looks to Reduce Exposure to Our Phones, Apps and Social Media

KYW Newsradio  

2019-05-19

A new term is floating in the ether, promoting a reduction in technology in our lives. It's called "digital minimalism." The theory is that less technology leads to more happiness, and reducing the number of apps on our phones will help... Ilia Delio, the Josephine C. Connelly endowed chair in theology at Villanova University, has a different take. "Technology actually emerged to try to help us transcend the boundaries that divide us," she said. "Because that's what technology does. It unites us actually."

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Can the Church Keep Up With Artificial Intelligence?

America Magazine  

2018-05-23

Some observers are concerned Catholic theology hasn't caught up with modern advancements to participate productively in the AI debate. "Pope Francis is absolutely right in raising the bar of our attention to technology," said Sister Ilia Delio, a Catholic nun and head of the science-and-theology-focused Omega Center. But first, she said, the church has to adapt its theology "to meet the needs of a world in evolution."

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How Your Smartphone May Be Making You Unhappy

U.S. News & World Report  

2018-02-12

A raft of research in recent years... suggests that for many people, the prodigious use of mobile devices is eroding their connections with family members, friends and romantic partners... This imbalance can have profound consequences for young people, says Sister Ilia Delio, who serves as the Josephine C. Connelly endowed chair in theology at Villanova University. Over-reliance on a smartphone can lead to "distraction, lack of attention, an increase in narcissism and... an increase in loneliness," she says.

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Research Grants

Public Theologies of Technology and Presence (2018)

The Institute of Buddhist Studies at UC Berkeley

Public Theologies of Technology and Presence gathered and funded a cohort of leading scholars of religion, theologians and journalists for their work addressing a pressing concern of contemporary life: the ways in which technologies reshape human relationships and alter how people are (or are not) "present" with each other. The initiative was developed and directed by psychoanalyst and religion scholar Steven Barrie-Anthony, PhD, PsyD, RP, and was funded by the Henry Luce Foundation.

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Select Academic Articles

Is Natural Law “Unnatural?” Exploring God and Nature Through Teilhard’s Organic Theology

Journal of Theology and Science

2017

Teilhard de Chardin turns revelation and nature into a complementarity of wholeness, expanding religion so that it better reflects God’s revelation. Truth comes in two books: the book of nature and the book of scripture. In the tradition of Thomas Aquinas, the truths of natural reason are discovered by using the natural light of reason, that is, the capacity for intelligent thought that all human beings have by virtue of being human. Similarly, the truths beyond reason are outside the aptitude of the natural light of reason to discover or verify. They are available only through faith. What Teilhard teaches us is that the Book of Nature can no longer be separated from the Book of Scripture without denying God. The two together constitute an organic theology.

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From Aquinas to Teilhard: Divine Action and the Metaphysics of Love.

The Heythrop Journal

Ilia Delio

Spring 2017

Transhumanism or Ultrahumanism? Teilhard de Chardin on Technology, Religion and Evolution

Theology and Science 10.2

Ilia Delio

2012: 153 – 66

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