Especially interesting are three of the 22 chapters where we eavesdrop on conversations [the authors] have airing their sometimes differing approaches to the subject. The chain of arguments is also lightened by sections where the authors speak of their own personal journeys into faith... I warmly recommend this book.

Russell Stannard, Theology

[The authors] are not the first to make the case that more moderation is in order in science and religion discussions. But their collective approach in particular makes it enormously powerful.

Yiftach Fehige, , Metascience

This rigorous and wide-ranging discussion of central issues at the interface between science, philosophy and religion reflects the formidable intelligence and insight of the joint authors... [They] have thought deeply, conversed widely and articulated coherent ways of making sense of the world that does justice both to the Christian commitment and scientific integrity.

David Lorimer, Paradigm Explorer

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[The authors] have produced an eminently readable and profoundly thoughtful and thought-provoking text that takes seriously both the developments of contemporary science and the insights of theistic religion. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED

C. D. Kay, Wofford College, CHOICE connect

The discussions of modern science and Christian theology are rigorous, crisp and clear ... the authors have invited us into a world that is both scientific and religious, where the human imagination is enriched by both.

Simon Oliver, Times Higher Education

This book is remarkably good value at the price. As the subtitle suggests, it is an invitation from three professors of science and philosophy to engage gracefully with often hotly contested issues, and will indeed encourage any open-minded reader to keep on seeking after God.

John Saxbee, Church Times

This book deserves a wide circulation... It offers one of the most intelligent and readable dicussions of the relationship between science, religion and philosophy.

Paul Richardson, Church of England Newspaper

[It Keeps Me Seeking] is worth close attention as it aims to take a fresh look at how science contributes to the bigger picture of human flourishing ... This is an ambitious book and should elicit many responses.

Reg Naulty, The Friend

The authors of this wide-ranging book, three committed Christians versed in science and philosophy, explain their perspective with a clarity that will stimulate readers, of any faith or none, who share their wonder at the mystery of existence.

Lord Rees, Astronomer Royal, President of the Royal Society 2005-2010

The three authors of this book have two important things in common: each is an internationally acclaimed name in one of the most exciting areas of modern physics, the foundations of quantum mechanics and/or the cutting-edge application of it known as quantum information, and each is a devout and unapologetic Christian believer. In this book they try to convey, in simple language which requires no background expertise in either quantum physics or theology, the ways in which for them the latter enthusiasm informs, and is informed by, the former.

Sir Anthony Leggett, Nobel Prize in Physics 2003

Many people believe there ought to be a creative dialogue between science and faith, but don't know how to get started. This book's rare combination of two scientists and a philosopher offers a remarkably fresh approach. The informative and stimulating viewpoints expressed here exemplify the kind of gracious engagement and open-minded discussion of key issues in which many more ought to get involved.

Professor N. T. Wright, University of St Andrews, Bishop of Durham 2003-2010

With humility and curiosity, the authors seek meaning and purpose through the lenses of science, philosophy and religion, embracing the idea that it's better to have questions you can't answer than answers you can't question.

Professor Max Tegmark, MIT, author of Life 3.0: Being Human in the age of AI

A rallying call for the quests to find meaning on both the physical and the spiritual planes to join hands.

Rolf Heuer, President of the German Physical Society, Director General of CERN 2009-2015

A truly beautiful invitation to look at how science and faith can work together to further our desire for God.

Justin Welby, Archbishop of Canterbury

Here is a fresh look at how science contributes to the bigger picture of human flourishing, through a collage of science and philosophy, richly illustrated by the authors' own experience and personal reflection. They survey the territory of fundamental physics, machine learning, philosophy of human identity, evolutionary biology, miracles, arguments from design, naturalism, the history of ideas, and more. The natural world can be appreciated not only for itself, but also as an eloquent gesture, a narrative and a pointer beyond itself. Our human journey is not to a theorem or a treatise, but to a meeting which encompasses all our capacities. In this meeting, science is the means to find out about the structure of the physical world of which we are a part, not a means to reduce ourselves and our fellow human beings to mere objects of scrutiny, and still less a means to attempt the utterly futile exercise of trying to do that to God. We have intellectual permission to be open to the notion that God can be trusted and known. The material world encourages an open-hearted reaching out to something more, with a freedom to seek and to be received by what lies beyond the scope of purely impersonal descriptions and attitudes.
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An exposition on the common phrase "science and religion". Science has something to say about every aspect of human experience, and religion is, broadly speaking, the attempt by people to find and assert meaningfulness.
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1: Introduction: three themes 2: What is this book: re-orientation 3: Religion, history and philosophy 4: How is science to be carried forward? 5: What does it mean to be me? 6: Two Tabors 7: The deeply subtle nature of physically existing things 8: Issues arising from quantum physics 9: General relativity, language and learning 10: On the way 11: The argument from design 12: Biological evolution 13: The struggle is nothing new 14: Miracles and how God works 15: You can't live a divided life 16: A dialogue about naturalism 17: Learning from the Bible 18: Conclusion
Les mer
Especially interesting are three of the 22 chapters where we eavesdrop on conversations [the authors] have airing their sometimes differing approaches to the subject. The chain of arguments is also lightened by sections where the authors speak of their own personal journeys into faith... I warmly recommend this book.
Les mer
Brings together science, religion and philosophy to cogently explain the thesis Blends the authors personal experiences, while maintaining scholarly integrity, to produce a colourful discourse Assumes belief in God as basic, rather like an axiom in geometry
Les mer
Andrew Briggs was elected in 2002 as the first holder of the newly created Chair in Nanomaterials at the University of Oxford. After studying physics at Oxford he gained a PhD at the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge, he then studied for a degree in Theology at Cambridge, winning the Chase Prize for Greek, before returning to Oxford in 1980 to pursue an academic career in science. His research interests focus on nanomaterials for quantum technologies and their incorporation into practical devices. Hans Halvorson is Stuart Professor of Philosophy at Princeton University. He has written extensively on philosophical issues in physics and the other sciences, on mathematical logic, and on the relationship between science and religion. He received the Mellon New Directions in the Humanities Fellowship (2008), the Cushing Memorial Prize in the History and Philosophy of Physics (2004), Best Article of the Year by a Recent Ph.D. (Philosophy of Science Association, 2001), and Ten Best Philosophy Articles of the Year (The Philosopher's Annual, both 2001 and 2002). Andrew Steane is a Physics Professor at Oxford University. His research is in fundamental physics. This includes experimental laser cooling and manipulation of atoms, quantum information theory and computing, and some aspects of relativity and thermal physics. From 1995-1999 he was a Royal Society University Research Fellow, based at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow by Special Election of St Edmund Hall, Oxford (1996-1999). In 1999 he became a University Lecturer and Tutorial Fellow in Physics of Exeter College, Oxford. He was awarded the Maxwell Medal and Prize of the Institute of Physics in 2000 for the discovery of quantum error correction. He has written two textbooks and two books for a wider readership.
Les mer
Brings together science, religion and philosophy to cogently explain the thesis Blends the authors personal experiences, while maintaining scholarly integrity, to produce a colourful discourse Assumes belief in God as basic, rather like an axiom in geometry
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780198808282
Publisert
2018
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
614 gr
Høyde
221 mm
Bredde
147 mm
Dybde
24 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
368

Biographical note

Andrew Briggs was elected in 2002 as the first holder of the newly created Chair in Nanomaterials at the University of Oxford. After studying physics at Oxford he gained a PhD at the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge, he then studied for a degree in Theology at Cambridge, winning the Chase Prize for Greek, before returning to Oxford in 1980 to pursue an academic career in science. His research interests focus on nanomaterials for quantum technologies and their incorporation into practical devices. Hans Halvorson is Stuart Professor of Philosophy at Princeton University. He has written extensively on philosophical issues in physics and the other sciences, on mathematical logic, and on the relationship between science and religion. He received the Mellon New Directions in the Humanities Fellowship (2008), the Cushing Memorial Prize in the History and Philosophy of Physics (2004), Best Article of the Year by a Recent Ph.D. (Philosophy of Science Association, 2001), and Ten Best Philosophy Articles of the Year (The Philosopher's Annual, both 2001 and 2002). Andrew Steane is a Physics Professor at Oxford University. His research is in fundamental physics. This includes experimental laser cooling and manipulation of atoms, quantum information theory and computing, and some aspects of relativity and thermal physics. From 1995-1999 he was a Royal Society University Research Fellow, based at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow by Special Election of St Edmund Hall, Oxford (1996-1999). In 1999 he became a University Lecturer and Tutorial Fellow in Physics of Exeter College, Oxford. He was awarded the Maxwell Medal and Prize of the Institute of Physics in 2000 for the discovery of quantum error correction. He has written two textbooks and two books for a wider readership.