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Index
Cover
Contents
Title
Copyright
Preface
How To Use This Book
Chapter 1: Introducing the Dialogue Between Science and Religion
For Further Reading
PART I: History: Three Landmark Debates
Chapter 2: Why Study History?
The Historical Origins of the “Warfare” Model of Science and Religion
There Is No “Master Narrative” for Science and Religion
The Essentialist Fallacy About Science and Religion
Dispelling Myths About Science and Religion
The Importance of Biblical Interpretation
For Further Reading
Chapter 3: Debate 1: Copernicus, Galileo, and the Solar System
For Further Reading
Chapter 4: Debate 2: Newton, the Mechanical Universe, and Deism
For Further Reading
Chapter 5: Debate 3: Darwin and the Biological Origins of Humanity
For Further Reading
PART II: Science and Religion: General Themes
Chapter 6: Models of Interaction Between Science and Religion
Conflict
Independence
Dialogue
Integration
For Further Reading
Chapter 7: Science, Religion, and the Explanation of Things
For Further Reading
Chapter 8: Science, Religion, and Proofs for God’s Existence
The Cosmological Argument
The Kalam Argument
The Teleological Argument
For Further Reading
Chapter 9: Verification and Falsification in Science and Religion
The Verification Principle
Falsification: Karl Popper
For Further Reading
Chapter 10: Realism and its Alternatives in Science and Religion
Realism
Idealism
Instrumentalism
Theology and Realism
For Further Reading
Chapter 11: The Doctrine of Creation and the Natural Sciences
Three Views of God’s Creative Activity
Creation and the Laws of Nature
For Further Reading
Chapter 12: How Does God Act in the World?
Deism: God Acts Through the Laws of Nature
Thomas Aquinas: God Acts Through Secondary Causes
Process Theology: God Acts Through Persuasion
Other Approaches: Indeterminacy, Downward Causation, and Information
For Further Reading
Chapter 13: The Use of Models in Science and Religion
For Further Reading
Chapter 14: Natural Science and Natural Theology
The Appeal to Reason
The Appeal to the Ordering of the World
The Appeal to the Beauty of Nature
Objections to Natural Theology
Philosophical Objections
For Further Reading
Chapter 15: Theoretical Anomalies in Science and Religion
For Further Reading
Chapter 16: The Development of Theory in Science and Religion
For Further Reading
Chapter 17: The Interaction of Science and Religion in Other Faiths
Judaism
Islam
Hinduism
Buddhism
For Further Reading
PART III: Science and Religion: Contemporary Debates
Chapter 18: Richard Dawkins and Scientific Atheism: Does Science Deny God?
For Further Reading
Chapter 19: Cosmology: Does the Anthropic Principle Mean Anything?
The “Big Bang”
The Anthropic Principle
For Further Reading
Chapter 20: Quantum Theory: Complementarity in Science and Religion
For Further Reading
Chapter 21: Evolutionary Biology: Can One Speak of “Design” in Nature?
For Further Reading
Chapter 22: Evolutionary Psychology: The Origins of Religious Belief
For Further Reading
Chapter 23: The Psychology of Religion: Exploring Religious Experience
William James
Sigmund Freud
The Present State of Affairs
For Further Reading
Chapter 24: The Cognitive Science of Religion: Is Religion “Natural”?
For Further Reading
PART IV: Case Studies in Science and Religion
Chapter 25: Pierre Teilhard de Chardin (1881–1955)
For Further Reading
Chapter 26: Thomas F. Torrance (1913–2007)
For Further Reading
Chapter 27: Charles A. Coulson (1910–74)
For Further Reading
Chapter 28: Ian G. Barbour (born 1923)
For Further Reading
Chapter 29: Arthur Peacocke (1924–2006)
For Further Reading
Chapter 30: Wolfhart Pannenberg (born 1928)
For Further Reading
Chapter 31: John Polkinghorne (born 1930)
For Further Reading
Chapter 32: Nancey Murphy (born 1951)
For Further Reading
Chapter 33: Alister E. McGrath (born 1953)
For Further Reading
Chapter 34: Philip Clayton (born 1956)
For Further Reading
Conclusion
References
Index
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