Bridging Science and ReligionGaymon Bennett, Ted Peters SCM, 2002 - 260 páginas Many books on science and religion tend to be dominated by Christian positions. This book is unique for its timely comparative dimension, and brings Islamic, Jewish and Hindu contributions to the debate. The essays emerge from the very prestigious Centre for Theology and the Natural Sciences in Berkeley. The book brings together a number of distinguished contributors from the sciences, comparative philosophy and religious studies to address some of the most important current themes in the interplay of science and religion. The book is divided into three sections: part 1 establishes a method for the proposed dialogue between science and religion; part 2 lays down the scientific challenge to religion from the perspective of neuroscience, genetics, evolutionary theory and natural law; and part 3 offers a religious response to modern science from various interfaith perspectives. An extensive bibliography points students towards further reading. |
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Página 29
... example , accommodating the Judeo - Christian doctrine that God created the world out of nothing ( creatio ex nihilo ) . ( 2 ) Philosophy can also serve a more limited goal . It can provide definitions of specific terms and concepts ...
... example , accommodating the Judeo - Christian doctrine that God created the world out of nothing ( creatio ex nihilo ) . ( 2 ) Philosophy can also serve a more limited goal . It can provide definitions of specific terms and concepts ...
Página 33
... example , a theology of divine action should not violate special relativity . ( 2 ) Physical theories can act as data to be incorpo- rated into theology . For example , the beginning of time , or , to in Big Bang cosmology may be ...
... example , a theology of divine action should not violate special relativity . ( 2 ) Physical theories can act as data to be incorpo- rated into theology . For example , the beginning of time , or , to in Big Bang cosmology may be ...
Página 222
... example , the view of nature as created ex nihilo implies that the universe is contingent and rational . These implications provide two of the fundamental philosophical assumptions on which modern science is based . See David C ...
... example , the view of nature as created ex nihilo implies that the universe is contingent and rational . These implications provide two of the fundamental philosophical assumptions on which modern science is based . See David C ...
Contenido
Introduction | 1 |
Mutual Interaction | 19 |
Bridging Theology and Science in a Postmodern | 35 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
anthropic principle argue argument Arthur Peacocke assumptions behavior belief Big Bang book of nature bridge Buddhism Buddhism and science Cambridge causal Center for Theology century challenge chapter Christian claims cloning concept concerns constructive contemporary context cosmology cosmos creation critical realism cultural Darwin's dialogue between science discourse Divine Action embryo emergentist ethical evolution evolutionary biology explain genes genetic global halachah Hindu Human Genome human nature human person hypothetical consonance Ian Barbour idea insights intellectual interaction interpretation Jewish knowledge language laws mental metaphor metaphysical modern science Muslim Nancey Murphy natural sciences natural world neuroscience Oxford philosophical physical postmodern processes quantum question Qur'an reality reductionism relation relationship Religion and Science religious traditions revelation scholars science and religion science and theology scientists scripture social special relativity specific stem cells supervenience Ted Peters theologians theological anthropology theology and science thought tion understanding University Press Vatican Observatory York