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![]() This title is no longer available from this publisher at this time. To let the publisher know you are interested in the title, please email bv-help@uchicago.edu. |
Mind Of The Universe: Understanding Science & Religion
by Mariano Artigas
Templeton Press, 2001 eISBN: 978-1-59947-217-1 | Paper: 978-1-890151-54-6 | Cloth: 978-1-890151-32-4 Library of Congress Classification BL240.2.A77 2000 Dewey Decimal Classification 215
TOC
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PART I. Science Transcends Itself Chapter 1. SCIENCE AND BEYOND 3 I. The Meeting of Science and Religion 3 II. The Methodological Gap between Science and Religion 7 1. The Scientific Outlook 7 2. Naturalism: Difference or Conflict? 10 3. The Mediation of Philosophy 12 III. Boundary Questions 13 1. Are There Genuine Boundary Questions? 14 2. Subjective Connections 16 3. Particular Overlaps 18 IV The Quest for Integration 20 1. General Presuppositions and Insights 21 2. Bridging the Gap 24 Chapter 2. THE PRESUPPOSITIONS AND IMPLICATIONS OF SCIENCE 27 I. Why Presuppositions? 27 1. The General Presuppositions of Science 27 2. Science without Presuppositions? 30 II. Scrutinizing Presuppositions 35 1. Ontological and Epistemological Realism as Presuppositions 35 2. Presuppositions and the Limits of Science 38 3. The Nonscientific Bases of Science 39 4. Can Science Explain Everything? 42 5. Retrojustification of the Presuppositions of Scientific Inquiry 44 6. Philosophical Hypotheses in Science 46 7. The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Science 47 III. What Presuppositions? 49 1. Presuppositions in the Three Dimensions of Science 49 2. The Characteristics of the Presuppositions 51 IV The Feedback of Scientific Progress 53 1. Implications for the Presuppositions 53 2. A Guide to the Bridges 57 PART II. Self-Organization and Divine Action Chapter 3. NATURAL CREATIVITY 61 I. The Scientific Quest for Order 61 1. Natural Order 62 2. The Scientific Knowledge of Order 66 3. Scientific Worldviews 70 II. Describing Worldviews 71 1. From Nature to History 71 2. A Purposeless World 76 3. The World as a Pattern of Numbers 78 4. The Evolutionary Universe 81 5. The Relative World of Process 82 III. A New Scientific Worldview 83 1. A Unified Picture of the World 83 2. Morphogenetic Theories 86 3. Natural Dynamism 89 4. Patterns in Nature 91 5. Self-Organization 94 6. Information 97 7. An Open Universe 101 Chapter 4. THE INTELLIGIBILIGY OF NATURE 107 I. A Self-Contained World? 108 1. Ontological Reductionism 108 2. A Self-Created Universe? 112 3. The Frontiers of Evolution 115 4. Naturalistic Fallacies 117 II. Unconscious Intelligence 118 1. Rationality in Nature 118 2. Teleological Bridges 125 2.1. UPDATING THE TELEOLOGICAL AGENDA 125 2.2. NATURAL TELEOLOGY: THE FACT 127 2.3. NATURAL TELEOLOGY: THE EXPLANATION 131 3. Teleological Puzzles 136 3.1. PHYSICS AND TELEOLOGY 137 3.2. BIOLOGY AND TELEOLOGY 141 3.3. SELF-ORGANIZATION AND TELEOLOGY 144 III. A Divine Art 145 1. The Ways of Divine Action 145 2. Contingency and a Divine Plan 150 3. Natural and Divine Creativity 153 PART III. Scientific Creativity and Human Singularity Chapter 5. READING THE BOOK OF NATURE 159 I. The Rationality of Science 160 1. The Scientific Conception of the World 160 2. The Critical Attitude of Karl Popper 164 3. Paradigms and Revolutions: Kuhn's Psychosociohistorical View 169 4. Programs of Scientific Research: Imre Lakatos 173 5. Paul Feyerabend's Critique of Scientific Reason 175 6. Problem Solving and Laudan 176 7. Rationality: An Overview 180 II. Three Dimensions in Empirical Science 181 1. The Goals of Science 181 2. Scientific Methods 187 3. Scientific Constructs 190 III. The Reach of Science 192 1. Conventional Factors in Science 193 2. Scientific Objectivity 196 3. Truth in Science 200 Chapter 6. MAN IN NATURE 207 I. Science, Epistemology, and Naturalism: Four Positions 207 1. Epistemology Naturalized 208 2. Evolutionary Epistemology 211 3. Methodological Naturalism 214 4. Anthropological Naturalism 216 II. The Value of Human Knowledge 221 1. Science and Fallibilism 222 1.1. TWO KINDS OF FALLIBILISM 222 1.2. FALLIBILISM AND RATIONALISM 224 1.3. SCIENTIFIC CREATIVITY AND FALLIBILISM 227 2. Four Features of the Reliability of Science 230 2.1. INTERSUBJECTIVITY 231 2.2. EMPIRICAL CONTROL 232 2.3. PREDICTIVE POWER 233 2.4. PROGRESS 234 2.5. RELIABLE KNOWLEDGE 236 3. An Open Epistemology 238 III. Human Singularity 241 1. Scientific Arguments for Human Singularity 241 2. Immanence and Transcendence 244 3. The Meaning of Science 247 PART IV. Science and Values Chapter 7. SCIENTIFIC VALUES 251 I. Why Values? 251 1. A Value-Free Science? 252 2. The Autonomy of Science 255 II. Evaluating Scientific Values 257 1. Reconnecting Science and Ethics 257 2. The Ethical Basis of Science 261 3. Science as a Social Institution 263 4. Epistemic Values 268 4.1. VALUE JUDGMENT AND THEORY CHOICE 268 4.2 THE VALIDATION OF SCIENTIFIC VALUES 269 4.3. PLURAL AIMS IN SCIENCE? 272 5. Empirical Science as a Moral Task 274 III. Which Values? 278 1. Constitutive Values 279 1.1. EPISTEMIC VALUES 280 1.2. PRAGMATIC VALUES 282 2. Institutional Values 284 3. Values in the Four Types of Scientific Activity 287 3.1. RESEARCH 287 3.2. SYSTEMATIZING 288 3.3. TRANSMISSION 288 3.4. APPLICATION 289 IV. Scientific Values and Scientific Progress 290 1. Epistemic Implications 290 2. Social Implications 295 Chapter 8. THE MEANING OF SCIENTIFIC PROGRESS 299 I. The Reenchantment of the World 300 1. The Disenchantment of the World 300 2. Reenchanting the World 306 2.1. THE REENCHANTMENT OF SCIENCE 306 2.2. POSTMODERN SCIENCE 309 2.3. A HOLISTIC APPROACH 311 2.4. SCIENCE AND MYTHICAL THINKING 312 3. Updating the Agenda 313 II. Building New Bridges 314 1. A Recapitulation of My Argument 314 2. Applying Scientific Criteria to My Conclusions 316 2.1. EXPLANATORY POWER 316 2.2. PREDICTIVE POWER 318 2.3. ACCURACY 320 2.4. VARIETY OF INDEPENDENT PROOFS 322 2.5. MUTUAL SUPPORT 323 III. Further Perspectives 324 1. God's Involvement with Creation 324 2. God's Purposeful Action 327 3. God's Transcendence 329 4. The Divine Pathways on Earth 331 5. Human Insignificance and Grandeur 334 6. Integral Naturalism 336 7. Creativity: Natural, Human, and Divine 340 See other books on: Mind | Religion | Religion and science | Universe See other titles from Templeton Press |
Nearby on shelf for Religions. Mythology. Rationalism / Natural theology / Religion and science:
9781890151935
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![]() This title is no longer available from this publisher at this time. To let the publisher know you are interested in the title, please email bv-help@uchicago.edu. |
Mind Of The Universe: Understanding Science & Religion
Templeton Press, 2001 eISBN: 978-1-59947-217-1 | Paper: 978-1-890151-54-6 | Cloth: 978-1-890151-32-4 Library of Congress Classification BL240.2.A77 2000 Dewey Decimal Classification 215
TOC
See other books on: Mind | Religion | Religion and science | Universe See other titles from Templeton Press |
Nearby on shelf for Religions. Mythology. Rationalism / Natural theology / Religion and science:
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