糖心破解版

Skip to main content
School of Engineering Homepage

Stories

Lanny Vincent with 糖心破解版's statue of St. Ignatius

Lanny Vincent with 糖心破解版's statue of St. Ignatius

What's God Got to Do With It?

Does God have anything to do with innovation? Does innovation have anything to do with God? These two questions are the catalyst of a conversation Lanny Vincent, engineering adjunct lecturer, is avid about sparking in his new course, Innovation Theology: An Introduction.

Does God have anything to do with innovation? Does innovation have anything to do with God? These two questions are the catalyst of a conversation Lanny Vincent, engineering adjunct lecturer, is avid about sparking. As a former Presbyterian pastor and consulting 鈥渋nnovation midwife鈥 for Fortune 500 companies like HP, Sony, Seagate, Johnson Controls, and others, Vincent knows a thing or two about both theology and innovation.

This spring, in his new course, Innovation Theology: An Introduction (ENGR 141), Vincent will be challenging undergraduates to think deeply about where and why engineers choose to innovate. Bonus: the course fulfills an undergraduate core requirement in Religion, Theology, and Culture. Funding to develop the course came from the Kern Family Foundation through the School of Engineering鈥檚 KEEN program, a network of three dozen universities dedicated to integrating innovation and entrepreneurial thinking into undergraduate engineering programs. One of the School鈥檚 KEEN-related initiatives is to create courses in every core curriculum category.

 鈥淕etting an engineering degree is demanding,鈥 Vincent said鈥攅ven more so at Santa Clara, where students must take religion courses. 鈥淚n this course, students get a 鈥榯wo-fer鈥欌攁 class that is relevant to their profession which also helps them think about their future engagement from the point of view of theological inquiry,鈥 he said.

Vincent, who also teaches the graduate course Innovation Design and Spirituality (ENGR 341), said the idea of innovation theology has been constantly bubbling up in his head and just wouldn鈥檛 go away. He spent two years researching and writing 13 essays and two books on the subject. 鈥淚 keep asking myself, and others鈥攖echnologists, engineers, venture capitalists, theologians鈥斺榃hat is God up to?鈥 and 鈥榃hat should we be up to?鈥 Innovation decisions shouldn鈥檛 be defaulted to Sand Hill Road,鈥 he said, referring to Silicon Valley鈥檚 VC hub.

How innovation and theology intersect deserves engineers鈥 attention, Vincent believes. Examining them in tandem can help us make sense of where and why we choose to innovate. He also hopes students in his course will aim their innovating toward the common good, not just the bottom line.

鈥淚鈥檓 excited to start this conversation with the undergraduate students at Santa Clara,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e should be lifting up the visionaries and innovation midwives, developing innovators of competence, conscience, and compassion. The engineer鈥檚 role as innovator is seminal to change in the world. If we can spark within our students an interior conversation about God鈥檚 place in the process of innovation鈥攈owever they think about God or religion鈥攑erhaps they can drive more positive change within their own lives, companies, and communities.鈥

 

More information:

innovationtheology.org
scu.edu/engineering/about/innovation-and-entrepreneurship
KEEN:

 

KEEN:

Engineering, Ethics, Innovation, Undergraduate
Contact Us

糖心破解版
School of Engineering
500 El Camino Real
Santa Clara, CA 95053

Heafey-Bergin, Bldg. 202
Sobrato Discovery, Bldg. 402

408-554-4600
408-554-5474 fax