During their honeymoon, Steven and his wife, Lori, were hit by a drunk driver in Oregon. They were badly injured, but survived. Steven and Lori have five children.
Views
Peck believes that God "only enters the universe through our consciousness." He compares scriptural interpretation to scientific interpretation, in that both nature and scriptures are unchanging, but our understanding of them changes over the course of generations. While the LDS church currently has no official position on evolution, Peck teaches evolution in the courses he teaches at BYU. On the subject of writing, Peck says that it is a way for him to explore the complexities in his life. He stated that anything we do to build our knowledge of the universe helps to build the kingdom of God.
Michael Austin at Dialogue's website wrote that Peck is "one of Mormonism's best living writers." Summarizing Peck's book Evolving Faith, he wrote: "Because all knowledge incorporates subjective assumptions, both religion and science require an element of faith." Literal interpretations of scripture cheat "both religion, by ignoring what the author of the text was really trying to tell us, and science, by setting up unnecessary oppositions between important religious principles and easily testable facts." At the Association for Mormon Letters, Heather Young wrote that Evolving Faith had "enlarged my appreciation for my time on earth and the part I can play in protecting its immeasurable gifts." At Common Consent, Steve Evans said the book was "not for beginners" and uses terminology that is difficult to understand, and that the two parts of the book were not well-connected. Of Wandering Realities, Evans said the stories were "wondrous and rich." In A Short Stay in Hell, a man must find the book of his life's story among every possible book. David Spaltro described the novella as "one of the most original and powerfully moving things I’ve ever read" and has acquired the rights to adapt it into a film. Doug Gibson at the Standard Examiner wrote that a hell that contains an "eternity of the mundane" was a "pretty effective hell." Derek Lee at Rational Faiths wrote that the novella encouraged reflection on the nature of the afterlife and what living forever would mean. BHoges at By Common Consent praised Rifts of Rime's narrative and setting, and said that its discussion of religious topics, while plentiful, were a bit overt. Peck is a 2016 finalist for best short fiction, Association for Mormon Letters.
2000 "A tutorial for understanding ecological modeling papers for the nonmodeler"
2001 "Ecological Modeling: A guide for the nonmodeler"
2001 "Antimicrobial and Insecticide Resistance Modeling: Is it time to start talking?"
2003 "Randomness, contingency, and faith: Is there a science of subjectivity?"
2004 "Simulation as experiment: a philosophical reassessment for biological modeling"
2008 "The Hermeneutics of Ecological Simulation"
2009 "Whose boundary? An individual species perspectival approach to borders"
2010 "Death and ecological crisis"
2012 "Agent-based models as fictive instantiations of ecological processes"
2012 "Networks of habitat patches in tsetse fly control: implications of metapopulation structure on assessing local extinction probabilities"
2013 "Digital ecologies as Tractarian systems"
2013 "Life as Emergent Agential Systems: Tendencies without Teleology in an Open Universe"
2014 "Perspectives on why digital ecologies matter: Combining population genetics and ecologically informed agent-based models with GIS for managing dipteran livestock pests"
2016
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Essays
Many of these essays appear in the 2015 Evolving Faith: Wanderings of a Mormon Biologist.
Fiction
Novels
Short stories
Some of these stories are collected in the 2015 Wandering Realities: Mormonish Short Fiction.
The Friend. 1995.
"The Flaw in the Lord Harrington Senario." HMS Beagle. 2002.
By Common Consent. 2008.
"Let the Monsters Tremble for the Adoniah Hath Fallen." Monsters and Mormons. 2011.
"Stratton Yellows."Warp and Weave. 2011.
Jabberwocky. 2012.
"A Classical Haunting." Lissette’s Tales of Imagination #5. 2012