Encyclopedia of Science and Religion, Volumen2Macmillan Reference, 2003 - 1050 páginas Publisher description: How do the latest medical developments affect our beliefs in faith's healing power? Can artificial intelligence compare with human consciousness? Are genetic engineers interfering with Nature's work? This reference work deals with these questions and others, examining the issues and the history associated with the complex relationship between science and religion. Articles by scientists of many fields, philosophers and thinkers from all the major world religions present a variety of perspectives on the major scientific discoveries of our time and their effects on our religious belief system. |
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Página 486
truth understood as " plural truth , " and it served to explain how specific events could be seen as mir- acles or a function of the events of the causative natural world . Science : the epistemic questions Scientific inquiry is based ...
truth understood as " plural truth , " and it served to explain how specific events could be seen as mir- acles or a function of the events of the causative natural world . Science : the epistemic questions Scientific inquiry is based ...
Página 515
... truth and scientific truth : South Asian approaches The possibility of radically severing religious truth from conventional truths that are the objects of sci- entific inquiry is far easier for Hindu nondualists than Buddhist ...
... truth and scientific truth : South Asian approaches The possibility of radically severing religious truth from conventional truths that are the objects of sci- entific inquiry is far easier for Hindu nondualists than Buddhist ...
Página 695
... truth could be excepted from a future process of revision . Since there is no unique method of finding truth , nor any universal language for finding the final conceptualization of the world , there is no way of talking about reality as ...
... truth could be excepted from a future process of revision . Since there is no unique method of finding truth , nor any universal language for finding the final conceptualization of the world , there is no way of talking about reality as ...
Contenido
Sección 1 | 477 |
Sección 2 | 497 |
Sección 3 | 503 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Encyclopedia of Science and Religion, Volumen2 Wentzel Van Huyssteen,Jacobus Wentzel Van Huyssteen Sin vista previa disponible - 2003 |
Encyclopedia of Science and Religion, Volumen2 Wentzel Van Huyssteen,Jacobus Wentzel Van Huyssteen Sin vista previa disponible - 2003 |
Términos y frases comunes
argues Aristotle Augustine of Hippo behavior beliefs Bibliography biology brain Cambridge University Press causal cause cells century Christian claims classical cognitive complex concept contemporary context cosmology creation critical realism culture Darwin divine action ence epistemology ethical evolution evolutionary example existence experience explanation genes genetic God's Halachah human Ian Barbour ical idea interpretation Islam issues Jewish Jews John Judaism knowledge laws logical London Maimonides mathematical means ment mental metaphor metaphysical mind modern moral mystical natural theology nature neuroscience neurotheology Newton notion object organisms panentheism pantheism philosophical philosophy of science physical possible postmodern practice prayer principle psychology question rational reality relation religious René Descartes science and religion scientific scientism scientists scripture Shinto social sociobiology soul space spiritual supervenience theologians theology things Thomas Thomas Aquinas thought tion tradition trans truth ture understanding York