"This accessible and well-researched study of those who are both scientists and people of faith will be a vital resource for specialists who study religion and science." - John H. Evans, Tata Chancellor's Chair of Social Science, University of California, San Diego "Compellingly illustrates how religion and science are sources of social identity that shape aspiring scientists' career paths in numerous ways. Scheitle deftly shows how graduate students reconcile religious belief with the supposed radical secularism of organized science." - Timothy O'Brien, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee "Scheitle's work offers an important contribution to the social scientific study of religion and critical analysis of religion's larger role in shaping contemporary scientific inquiry and academic institutions." (Reading Religion) "Tightly argued and well researched this book makes an excellent case for why scientists who really believe that a diversity of life experience can enrich our work should care about this kind of diversity, as well." (Social Forces)