Steane brings to his project a compelling combination of scientific expertise, fine theological instincts, and clear, honest philosophical argument. He also brings considerable literary inventiveness: Science and Humanity is a rigorous scholarly monograph leavened with bursts of lyrical prose and poetry ... Steane's writing is often passionate and moving, as well as consistently lucid and precise. And there is a deep coherence in this eccentric, important book ... [Steane's] own humane, searching intelligence is the strongest witness of the graceful symmetries investigated in Science and Humanity.

Clare Carlisle, The Times Literary Supplement

This is a remarkable book. It is what the subtitle claims, a humane vision for how human life might be understood, that goes about its arguments in a philosophical way. The author is an eminent physicist, professor at Oxford, and co-discoverer of quantum error correction. The book is very clearly, lucidly and persuasively written. Interestingly, too, at the end of chapters, Steane uses poems that he has written, and offers occasional spiritual exercises.

Christopher Southgate, University of Exeter, Modern Believing

The first chapters are impressive, when he cogently argues against any simple-minded reduction of all science to physics...it is refreshing to find a scientist who is open to deep truth outside his own area of expertise.

Roger Trigg, Theology

Se alle

This is a highly personal book, presenting a theological, philosophical, and moral vision in lyrical and sometimes highly idiosyncratic form...Not, I think, since David Bentley Hart's The Experience of God (2013) have I both laughed out loud in delight as I read a book, and more than once been moved to tears.

Andrew Davison, University of Cambridge, Modern Theology

offers reflections and analysis of great interest for those involved in the scienceandtheology dialogue ... the author offers a courageous attempt to develop an updated version about religion's meaning from a more scientific perspective actually the physicist's viewpoint. Such an attempt could help us better conceive how science and religion dialogue when we assume the particular point of view held by the scientist, and less the theological patterns.

Lluis Oviedo, European Society for the Study of Science and Theology

Steane offers important contributions to the philosophy of science in terms of seeing it as part of a holistically constituted human enterprise.

Mark Q, Metascience

[a] profound book

David Lorimer, Paradigm Explorer

This volume's insightful and appealing consideration of the relationship of science and religion will appeal to thoughtful readers regardless of their position regarding this question

CHOICE

This volume's insightful and appealing consideration of the relationship of science and religion will appeal to thoughtful readers regardless of their position.

Professor Samuel C. Pearson (emeritus), Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville

An important contribution towards a humane view of the machinery of science by a leading physicist.

Nicolas Gisin, University of Geneva

This is a bold, original, imaginative and 3-dimensional book, infused with honesty and humility.

Paul Ewart, University of Oxford

This is a deeply personal, poetic and philosophical book by a professional physicist who wants to divert rivers of fresh water to the desiccated discourse of late modern world-views. His urgent patience in addressing poorly-founded atheist arguments, makes compulsive reading. Insistent that the world of relativity, quantum mechanics, and thermodynamics that he loves is perfectly receptive of meaning, purpose, freedom and love, this is a read for anyone who cherishes the miracle of being human.

Tom McLeish, University of York

Andrew Steane reconfigures the public understanding of science, by drawing on a deep knowledge of physics and by bringing in mainstream philosophy of science. Science is a beautiful, multi-lingual network of ideas; it is not a ladder in which ideas at one level make those at another level redundant. In view of this, we can judge that the natural world is not so much a machine as a meeting-place. In particular, people can only be correctly understood by meeting with them at the level of their entire personhood, in a reciprocal, respectful engagement as one person to another. Steane shows that Darwinian evolution does not overturn this but rather is the process whereby such truths came to be discovered and expressed in the world. From here the argument moves towards other aspects of human life. Our sense of value requires from us a response which is not altogether the same as following logical argument. This points us towards what religion in its good forms can express. A reply to a major argument of David Hume, and a related one of Richard Dawkins, is given. The book finishes with some brief chapters setting religion in the context of all human capacities, and showing, in fresh language, what theistic religious response is, or can be, in the modern world.
Les mer
For the general educated reader, this book presents the nature of the physical world, the role of well-motivated religious response.
1: Introduction Part I: Science and philosophy 2: Light 3: The structure of science, part 1 4: The structure of science, part 2 5: Logic and knowledge: the Babel fallacy 6: Reflection 7: Purpose and Cause 8: Darwinian evolution 9: The tree 10: What science can and cannot do 11: What must be embraced, not derived 12: Religious language 13: The Unframeable Picture 14: A farewell to Hume 15: Drawing threads together 16: Extraterrestrial life 17: Does the universe suggest design, purpose, goodness or concern? Part II: Breathing 18: Silence 19: The human community 20: Encounter 21: The human being 22: Witnessed to
Les mer
Steane brings to his project a compelling combination of scientific expertise, fine theological instincts, and clear, honest philosophical argument. He also brings considerable literary inventiveness: Science and Humanity is a rigorous scholarly monograph leavened with bursts of lyrical prose and poetry ... Steane's writing is often passionate and moving, as well as consistently lucid and precise. And there is a deep coherence in this eccentric, important book ... [Steane's] own humane, searching intelligence is the strongest witness of the graceful symmetries investigated in Science and Humanity.
Les mer
Major reconfiguration of a big debate The Embodiment Principle and the Babel Fallacy: big ideas stated and named
Andrew Steane is a Professor of Physics at Oxford University and a Fellow of Exeter College, Oxford. His research includes experimental and theoretical Quantum Computing, atomic physics, and Special Relativity. He co-discovered quantum error correction. His research group, co-led by David Lucas, has pioneered the ion trap approach to quantum computing. He is the author of two undergraduate physics textbooks, and of Faithful to Science: the role of science in religion (OUP 2014). He was awarded the Maxwell Medal and Prize of the Institute of Physics (2000). He is married to Emma Steane; they have three children.
Les mer
Major reconfiguration of a big debate The Embodiment Principle and the Babel Fallacy: big ideas stated and named

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780198824589
Publisert
2018
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
546 gr
Høyde
223 mm
Bredde
148 mm
Dybde
22 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
302

Forfatter

Biographical note

Andrew Steane is a Professor of Physics at Oxford University and a Fellow of Exeter College, Oxford. His research includes experimental and theoretical Quantum Computing, atomic physics, and Special Relativity. He co-discovered quantum error correction. His research group, co-led by David Lucas, has pioneered the ion trap approach to quantum computing. He is the author of two undergraduate physics textbooks, and of Faithful to Science: the role of science in religion (OUP 2014). He was awarded the Maxwell Medal and Prize of the Institute of Physics (2000). He is married to Emma Steane; they have three children.