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  • - An Essay on Ring Composition
    av Mary Douglas
    351

  • - An Ancient People Debating Its Future
    av David Hartman
    461

  • av Jacques Maritain
    371

  • av Bas C. van Fraassen
    581

  • av Albert J. Reiss
    511

  • - A Social Conception of God
    av Charles Hartshorne
    441

  • av Robert Andrews Millikan
    811

  • - Some Prolegomena for Cultural and Religious History
    av Walter J. Ong
    657

  • - A Study of the History of Life and of Its Significance for Man, Revised Edition
    av George Gaylord Simpson
    657

  • - A Promethan Religion for the Modern World
    av William Pepperell Montague
    811

  • - Things, Thought, and Action in Chinese Medicine
    av Judith Farquhar
    407

    A short and thoughtful introduction to traditional Chinese medicine that looks beyond the conventional boundaries of Western modernism and biomedical science

  • av Carl Gustav Jung
    277

  • - Religion and Science since Jefferson and Darwin
    av Keith Stewart Thomson
    811

  • - Second Edition
    av Paul Tillich
    251

  • av John Dewey
    301

    One of Americas greatest philosophers outlines a faith that is not confined to sect, class, or race. Dr. Dewey calls for the emancipation of the true religious quality from the heritage of dogmatism and supernaturalism that characterizes historical religions. He describes a positive, practical, and dynamic faith, verified and supported by the intellect and evolving with the progress of social and scientific knowledge.The pure distillation of the thought of a great mind on the great subject of religion.John Haynes Holmes, New York Herald Tribune

  • - Human Cognition at the Nexus of Science and Religion
    av Barbara Herrnstein Smith
    871

  • - Reflections on the God Debate
    av Terry Eagleton
    267

    Terry Eagletons witty and polemical Reason, Faith, and Revolution is bound to cause a stir among scientists, theologians, people of faith and people of no faith, as well as general readers eager to understand the God Debate. On the one hand, Eagleton demolishes what he calls the superstitious view of God held by most atheists and agnostics and offers in its place a revolutionary account of the Christian Gospel. On the other hand, he launches a stinging assault on the betrayal of this revolution by institutional Christianity.There is little joy here, then, either for the anti-God brigadeRichard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens in particularnor for many conventional believers. Instead, Eagleton offers his own vibrant account of religion and politics in a book that ranges from the Holy Spirit to the recent history of the Middle East, from Thomas Aquinas to the Twin Towers.

  • - Why Does It Continue?
     
    497

    Why does the tension between science and religion continue? How have those tensions impacted the public debate about so-called 'intelligent design' as a scientific alternative to evolution? This title addresses the conflict from its philosophical roots to its manifestations within American culture.

  • av John Polkinghorne
    151

    John Polkinghorne is a major figure in todays debates over the compatibility of science and religion. Internationally known as both a theoretical physicist and a theologianthe only ordained member of the Royal SocietyPolkinghorne brings unique qualifications to his inquiry into the possibilities of believing in God in an age of science. In this thought-provoking book, the author focuses on the collegiality between science and theology, contending that these "e;intellectual cousins"e; are both concerned with interpreted experience and with the quest for truth about reality. He argues eloquently that scientific and theological inquiries are parallel.The book begins with a discussion of what belief in God can mean in our times. Polkinghorne explores a new natural theology and emphasizes the importance of moral and aesthetic experience and the human intuition of value and hope. In other chapters, he compares sciences struggle to understand the nature of light with Christian theologys struggle to understand the nature of Christ. He addresses the question, Does God act in the physical world? And he extends his ideas about the role of chaos theory, surveys the prospects for future dialogue between scientific and theological thinkers, and defends a critical realist understanding of the activities of both disciplines. Polkinghorne concludes with a consideration of the nature of mathematical truths and the links between the complementary realities of physical and mental experience.

  • - An Essay on Interpretation
    av Paul Ricoeur
    881

  • - Johann Joseph Gassner and the Demons of Eighteenth-Century Germany
    av H. C. Erik Midelfort
    867

  • av Erich Fromm
    401

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