Exploring reality : the intertwining of science and religion / John Polkinghorne
Material type:
- 0300110146
- 9780300110142
- 9780300122671
- 0300122675
- ARCH YNDC 261.5 P769E 22
- BL240.3 .P63 2005
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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SAIACS Archives Room | Yandell Collection | ARCH YNDC 261.5 P769E (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not for loan | 063390 |
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ARCH YNDC 261.5 M478F A fine-tuned universe : the quest for God in science and theology / | ARCH YNDC 261.5 M791N A natural theology of the arts : imprint of the spirit / | ARCH YNDC 261.5 O999R Roman Catholicism and modern science : a history / | ARCH YNDC 261.5 P769E Exploring reality : the intertwining of science and religion / | ARCH YNDC 261.5 P769S Science and the Trinity : the Christian encounter with reality / | ARCH YNDC 261.5 P769S Serious talk : science and religion in dialogue / | ARCH YNDC 261.5 R961N Neuroscience and the person : scientific perspectives on divine action / |
Includes bibliographical references and index
Reality? -- The causal nexus of the world -- Human nature : the evolutionary context -- The historical Jesus -- Divine reality : the Trinity -- The nature of time : unfolding story -- The spirit and the faiths -- Evil -- Ethical exploration : genetics -- Imaginative postscript : some naive speculations
Reality is multi-layered, asserts John Polkinghorne, and in this insightful book he explores various dimensions of the human encounter with reality. Polkinghorne argues that reality consists of not only the scientific processes of the natural world but also the personal dimension of human nature and its significance. He offers an integrated view of reality, encompassing a range of insights deriving from physics' account of causal structure, evolutionary understanding of human nature, the unique significance of Jesus of Nazareth, and the human encounter with God. He devotes further chapters to specific problems and questions raised by the Christian account of divine reality. He discusses, for example, the nature of time and God's relation to it, the interrelationship of the world's faiths, the problem of evil, and practical ethical issues relating to genetic advances, including stem cell research. Continuing in his pursuit of a dialogue between science and theology that accords equal weight to the insights of each, Polkinghorne expands our understanding of the nature of reality and our appreciation of its complexity
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