Sacred science? : : on science and its interrelations with religious worldviews / / edited by Simen Andersen yen ... [et al.].

Science and religion are often viewed as dichotomies. But although our contemporary society is often perceived as a rationalization process, we still need broad, metaphysical beliefs outside of what can be proven empirically. Rituals and symbols remain at the core of modern life. Do our concepts of...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Studies in Natural Language and Linguistic Theory ; v.86
TeilnehmendeR:
Year of Publication:2012
Edition:1st ed. 2012.
Language:English
Series:Studies in Natural Language and Linguistic Theory
Physical Description:1 online resource (148 p.)
Notes:Description based upon print version of record.
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Table of Contents:
  • Preface
  • 1. Scientific worldviews, religious minds
  • Science as religion?
  • Science and religious worldviews intertwined
  • Sacred science?
  • 2. Science and religion?
  • Common to all sciences: informed and self-critical argumentation
  • The need for critical studies of the sciences
  • A need for improvement
  • Science: part of the problem, part of the solution
  • Plurality of religions: a need for clarifying definitions and convincing justifications
  • In the new age: a close relationship between monotheism and science
  • The inherent need for a critique of religion
  • Modernization of consciousness
  • 3. What is epistocracy?
  • The historical dimension
  • The organizational dimension
  • The constitutional dimension
  • The process dimension
  • The substance dimension
  • The actor dimension
  • The cognitive dimension
  • The normative dimension
  • Why not epistocracy?
  • 4. Doubt has been eliminated
  • Elimination of doubt and the ethos of science
  • The unscientific belief in science
  • Livssyn – life philosophies
  • First or second modernity
  • 5. The religious belief in rationality, science and democracy
  • Moral imaginaries
  • The ideals of religious freedom and the Enlightenment
  • The liberal dogma
  • Who shall guard whom?
  • 6. Psychology as science or psychology as religion
  • From Protestantism to therapy
  • The turning away from religion
  • Psychology as religion
  • Psychology as religion reconsidered
  • Going back to the roots
  • Conclusion
  • 7: Science without God
  • Introduction: science vs. religion
  • Scientific fundamentalism
  • Can science explain religion?
  • Can science replace religion?
  • Science with God, and science without God
  • Conclusion: we can do without religion
  • 8. Science and religion, natural and unnatural
  • A new “cognitive” contrast
  • Conceptual oversimplification and historical forgetfulness
  • Cognitive commonalities
  • A dubious distinction
  • Cognitively unnatural science?
  • 9. Immortality
  • Variations of socio-technical immortality
  • Engineered immortality
  • Concluding: changing coordinates of transcendence
  • 10. What should be the role of religion in science education and bioethics?
  • The role of religion in science education
  • The importance of creationism for science education
  • The response of science education to creationism
  • The role of religion in bioethics
  • What then is the specific place for religion?
  • Conclusions
  • Current commentary: The arc of civil liberation
  • “Obama”
  • Tahrir Square
  • Occupy Wall Street
  • Contributors.