Science and religion : a historical introduction
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Bibliographic Information
Science and religion : a historical introduction
(Johns Hopkins paperbacks)
Johns Hopkins University Press, 2002
- : pbk
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Science & religion : a historical introduction
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Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Written by distinguished historians of science and religion, the thirty essays in this volume survey the relationship of Western religious traditions to science from the beginning of the Christian era to the late twentieth century. This wide-ranging collection also introduces a variety of approaches to understanding their intersection, suggesting a model not of inalterable conflict, but of complex interaction.
Tracing the rise of science from its birth in the medieval West through the scientific revolution, the contributors describe major shifts that were marked by discoveries such as those of Copernicus, Galileo, and Isaac Newton and the Catholic and Protestant reactions to them. They assess changes in scientific understanding brought about by eighteenth- and nineteenth-century transformations in geology, cosmology, and biology, together with the responses of both mainstream religious groups and such newer movements as evangelicalism and fundamentalism. The book also treats the theological implications of contemporary science and evaluates recent approaches such as environmentalism, gender studies, social construction, and postmodernism, which are at the center of current debates in the historiography, understanding, and application of science.
Contributors: Colin A. Russell, David B. Wilson, Edward Grant, David C. Lindberg, Alnoor Dhanani, Owen Gingerich, Richard J. Blackwell, Edward B. Davis, Michael P. Winship, John Henry, Margaret J. Osler, Richard S. Westfall, John Hedley Brooke, Nicolaas A. Rupke, Peter M. Hess, James Moore, Peter J. Bowler, Ronald L. Numbers, Steven J. Harris, Mark A. Noll, Edward J. Larson, Richard Olson, Craig Sean McConnell, Robin Collins, William A. Dembski, David N. Livingstone, Sara Miles, and Stephen P. Weldon.
Table of Contents
Contents:
Science and Religion
The Conflict of Science and Religion
The Historiography of Science and Religion
The Premodern PeriodAristotle and Aristotelianism
Early Christian Attitudes toward Nature
Medieval Science and Religion
Islam
The Scientific RevlutionThe Copernican Revolution
Galileo Galilei
Early Modern Protestantism
Causation
Mechanical Philosophy
Isaac Newton
Natural Theology
Transformations in Geology, Biology, and CosmologyGeology and Paleontology
Natural History
Charles Darwin
Evolution
Cosmogonies
The Response of Religious TraditionsRoman Catholic since Trent
Evangelicalism and Fundamentalism
Creation since 1859
The Scopes Trial
The Theological Implications of Modern SciencePhysics
Twentieth-Century Cosmologies
Scientific Naturalism
The Design Argument
Ecology and the Environment
Current Historiographical IssuesGender
The Social Construct of Science
Postmodernism
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