Description
This book sets out a new agenda for science-theology interactions and offers examples of what that agenda might look like when implemented. It explores, in innovative ways, what follows for science-theology discussions from recent developments in the history of science. The contributions take seriously the historically conditioned nature of the categories ‘science’ and ‘religion’ and consider the ways in which these categories are reinforced in the public sphere. Reflecting on the balance of power between theology and the sciences, the authors demonstrate a commitment to moving beyond traditional models of one-sided dialogue and seek to give theology a more active role in determining the interdisciplinary agenda.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Peter Harrison and Paul Tyson
PART ONE: theology and the sciences
1. More history, more theology, more philosophy, more science: the state of theological engagement with science
Andrew Davison
2. Theology and science in the field
Simone Kotva
3. Religion and the science of climate destabilisation: the case for (re)entanglement
Michael S Northcott
4. The inflation of nature and the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis
Nathan Lyons
PART TWO: ‘science’ and ‘religion’ in the public sphere
5. Pop science and pop theology: new ways of exploring an old dialogue
David Wilkinson
6. An unfortunate communicatio idiomatum: on the curious spectacle of two modern inventions morphing into one another in the public square
Sotiris Mitralexis
7. Is science the theology of modernity?
Paul Tyson
PART THREE: theologies of science
8. Why do scientific research in the 21st century?
Keith R. Fox
9. After an apologetics of conflict: biblical exegesis for a creation theology of science
Tom McLeish & David Wilkinson
10. Creation as deconstruction in Cusanus, Luther, and Hamann
Knut Alfsvåg
AFTERWORD: The bigger picture: science, religion, and historical change
11. Divine pedagogy – speculations about ‘science’ and ‘religion’ after the next great breakthrough
Charles Taylor