Schleiermacher’s readers have long been familiar with his proposal
for an ‘eternal covenant’ between theology and natural science.
Yet there is disagreement both about what this ‘covenant’ amounts
to, why Schleiermacher proposed it, and how he meant it to be
persuasive. In The Eternal Covenant, Pedersen argues, contrary to
received wisdom, that the ‘eternal covenant’ is not first a
methodological or political proposal but is, rather, the end result of
a complex case from the doctrine of God, the notion of a world, and an
account of divine action. With his compound case against miracles,
Schleiermacher secures the in-principle explicability of everything in
the world through natural causes. However, his case is not only
negative. Far from a mere concession, the eternal covenant is an
argument for what Schleiermacher calls, ‘the essential identity of
ethics and natural philosophy.’ Indeed, because the nature system is
both intended for love and wisely ordered, the world is a supremely
beautiful divine artwork and is, therefore, the absolute
self-revelation of God. Schleiermacher’s case is a challenging
alternative to reigning accounts of God, nature, divine action, and
the relationship between religion and science.
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Schleiermacher on God and Natural Science
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783110541281
Publisert
2017
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
De Gruyter
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter