Special Announcement: Sir John Templeton dies at age 95
John Marks Templeton, the pioneer global investor who founded the Templeton Mutual Funds and for the past three decades devoted his fortune to his Foundation's work on the "Big Questions" of science, religion, and human purpose, passed away on July 8, 2008, at Doctors Hospital in Nassau, Bahamas, of pneumonia. more
Sir John Templeton
As
a pioneer in both financial investments and spiritual endeavors,
John Marks
Templeton
has spent
a lifetime encouraging
open-mindedness. If he hadn't sought new paths, the native Tennesseean — a
fulltime philanthropist at 92 — says "he would have been
unable to attain so many goals".
This site, sponsored by Templeton Foundation Press, is a celebration of the life, inspiration, and achievements of Sir John Templeton as both a success in the financial world and forward thinking leader in the field of science and religion.
We invite you to read online the full text of Possibilities
for Over One Hundredfold More Spiritual Information: The Humble
Approach
in Science and Theology. This book, written by Sir John, challenges
the reader to apply the same energy that has been devoted to scientific
inquiry to the pursuit of spiritual information.
Also featured online is the full text for Sir
John Templeton: Supporting Scientific Research for Spiritual Discoveries by Robert Herrmann.
This book
provides biographical details of Sir John’s
life, and, offers a wealth of information about
the John Templeton Foundation.
Biography
Beginning a Wall Street career in 1937, John
Templeton created some of the world’s largest and most successful international investment
funds. Termed "arguably the greatest global stock picker of
the century" by Money Magazine (Jan. 1999), he sold his various
Templeton funds in 1992 to the Franklin Group for $440 million. Now
a naturalized British citizen living in Nassau, The Bahamas, Templeton
was knighted Sir John by Queen Elizabeth II in 1987 for his many
accomplishments. One of those was creating the world's richest award,
the $1 million-plus Templeton Prize for Progress Toward Research
or Discoveries about Spiritual Realities, presented annually in London
since 1972. Through the John Templeton Foundation, based in West
Conshohocken, Pa., he gives away approximately $40 million a year — especially
to projects, college courses, books, and essays on the benefits of
cooperation between science and religion.
Sir John Templeton, a student of benefits from
free competition and disciplined work habits, is not the first
wealthy investor to
increase his giving to religion-related causes late in life. However,
his progressive ideas on finance and faith make him a distinctive
figure in both fields, perhaps something of an iconoclast. Not that
the soft-spoken Southerner worries about that. "Rarely does
a conservative become a hero of history," Templeton wrote in
The Humble Approach, one of a dozen books he has authored or edited.
"Rather, it is the far-reaching thinker who breaks out of the traditional
mold . . . one who, according to the accepted customs of his
time, might be branded a heretic." Taking a less-traveled route
in investing, Templeton sold advice on how to invest worldwide when
Americans rarely considered foreign investment. more |