excellent * Blake Victor Kent, Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith * The book does not assume any specialist knowledge and is very accessibly written, with helpful summaries offered throughout. This style coupled with an impressive amount of rigorously collected data means it should appeal to a very wide range of audiences. * Dr Amy Unsworth, University College London, Science & Christian Belief, Vol 33, No. 1 * The authors do an excellent job of describing the broad contours of science and religion in each region they study... * Amy Unsworth, Science & Christian Belief * This is undoubtedly the most comprehensive study of scientists' religiosity, and their beliefs about the relation between science and religion, ever conducted. The researchers are to be applauded for the scope of their study and the accessibility of its presentation. Secularity and Science will serve as a valuable resource to those interested in how religion features in the lives of scientists around the world, and a useful jumping-off point for future studies in a similar vein. It is yet another large-scale social study of science and religion which demonstrates the complex, culturally and geographically specific nature of their multiple relationships in contemporary societies. * James Riley, University of Birmingham, Modern Believing * This fascinating and uniquely informative study is thus likely to have a major influence on the field of the sociology of science and religion, thanks both to its findings and what it leaves out. It will no doubt inspire many new studies on individual cases as well as comparative works, and in this respect, marks the beginning of a new stage in the scholarship on science and religion in contemporary societies. * M. Alper Yalcinkaya, Review of Religious Research * the survey gives a rich picture of the field in a variety of cultural contexts, and is well worth close study. * David Lorimer, Journal of the Scientific and Medical Network * This well-written and highly readable book is based on the most comprehensive study of scientists in very different social and cultural contexts, including Western countries and Chinese societies. The survey findings provide an overview of the contrast between scientists and the general population in regard to religion in each society, and the in-depth interviews with scientists provide nuanced understanding of their views and their distinct social and cultural contexts. Among many takeaways, it is interesting to see that from the West to the East, most contemporary scientists do not perceive religion and science in conflict. * Fenggang Yang, Professor of Sociology and Director of Center on Religion and Chinese Society, Purdue University *