HDS Names Ahmed Ragab as the Watson Assistant Professor of Science and Religion

February 14, 2011
HDS Names Ahmed Ragab as the Watson Assistant Professor of Science and Religion
Ahmed Ragab

Ahmed Ragab, physician, historian, and scholar of the medieval and modern Middle East, has been named the Richard T. Watson Assistant Professor of Science and Religion at Harvard Divinity School, effective July 1, 2011.

Ragab was a visiting lecturer at Harvard Divinity School for the 2009 fall semester, and since 2008 he has been a postdoctoral fellow then lecturer in the Department of the History of Science at Harvard. He holds a medical degree from Cairo University and a doctorate in the history of science from the Ecole Pratiques des Hautes Etudes in Paris.

"It is a pleasure and honor to join Harvard Divinity School and to be part of a long tradition of scholarship and a flourishing, ever-growing intellectual community," Ragab said. "HDS has cultivated a solid tradition of diversity and serious critical scholarship, relying on a group of the most prominent scholars in their fields and a community of promising, dedicated students."

Ragab's work includes the history and development of medieval Islamic sciences, the relationship between science and religion in the medieval and modern Middle East, the history of medieval Islamic hospitals, and the intellectual and cultural history of women in the region.

His research and teaching show a combination of critical engagement with contemporary debates and a technically accomplished comparative range and historical depth. He has completed monographic studies of institutionalization and modernization in medieval and early modern science or medicine within Islamic cultures and he writes on contemporary questions at the foundations of science and religion.

"Before we undertook the Watson search, a group of faculty spent a year reflecting on current debates about science and religion," said Mark D. Jordan, chair of the search committee and Richard Reinhold Niebuhr Professor of Divinity at HDS. "We wanted to compare the state of the field to our curriculum for preparing students, but we also wanted to see how HDS might help to advance some of those debates. We imagined that the ideal candidate would be creatively engaged with contemporary questions, but would also bring cross-cultural fluency, a commitment to religious comparison, and much historical depth. In Ahmed Ragab, we were delighted to find a candidate who answered all of our hopes."

At the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique in Cairo, Ragab was a researcher and directed the organization's Science and Religion and the History of Science programs. In 2008, he was a researcher for the project "Public Policies, Professional Practices and Agents' Conduct Regarding the Risk of Avian Flu (Egypt, France, India, Niger, UK, Vietnam)." From 2003 to 2007, he served as a physician at the Kasr al-Aini Cairo University Teaching Hospital.

A prolific speaker, he is the author of numerous articles and papers. He has two book projects underway: "Science and Religion in Medieval Egypt" and "Anatomy, Medicine, and Religion in the Ottoman Middle East," both of which are set for publication in 2011. He is also a member of the Commission on History of Science and Technology in Islamic Societies.

"I would like to thank the faculty and the deans of the Divinity School for inviting me to join this flourishing community. I look forward to contributing to the School, to its scholarly community, and to helping HDS students satisfy their intellectual curiosity and to learning from them new and fresh views and ideas."

The professorship is funded by Richard T. Watson, AB '54, JD '60, and is intended to advance research and thinking on the interrelations of science and religion via multidisciplinary and cross-faculty initiatives.

A former member of the University Visiting Committee to HDS and a longtime member of the Committee on University Resources, Watson is managing partner of the Cleveland law firm Spieth, Bell, McCurdy & Newell Co., LPA, and he serves as chancellor of the Episcopal Diocese of Ohio.

—by Jonathan Beasley