Provocative and immensely well informed, The Order of Things
represents a substantial and original contribution to the fields of
systematic theology, historical theology, and the science and
religion dialogue. Leading theologian, Alister E. Mc Grath explores
how the working methods and assumptions of the natural sciences can
be used to inform and stimulate systematic theology.
* * Written by one of today’s best-known Christian writers
* Explores how the working methods and assumptions of the natural
sciences can be used to inform and stimulate systematic
theology
* Continues Mc Grath’s acclaimed exploration of scientific
theology, begun with his groundbreaking three-volume work, A
Scientific Theology
* Includes a landmark extended analysis of whether doctrinal
development can be explained using Darwinian evolutionary models,
and exploration of how the transition from a ‘scientific
theology’ to a future ‘scientific dogmatics’
might be made
* Supported by a published review of Mc Grath’s scientific
theology project, which is currently the best brief introduction to
his thought.
Daftar Isi
Preface.
Taking the Enlightenment Seriously.
Renewing the Quest for Reliable Knowledge.
On Developing a Scientific Theology.
Introducing the Essays.
1. Alister Mc Grath’s Scientific Theology. A review Article by Dr Benjamin Myers, University of Queensland.
2. Is a ‘Scientific Theology’ Intellectual Nonsense?Engaging with Richard Dawkins.
The Universal Scope of the Natural Sciences.
Darwinism and the Impossibility of Theology.
Faith and Evidence in Science and Theology.
Theology as a Virus of the Mind?.
Does Theology Impoverish Our View of the Universe?.
3. A University Sermon: On Natural Theology.
4. Towards the Restatement and Renewal of a Natural Theology:A Dialogue with the Classic English Tradition.
Natural Theology: an Autobiographical Reflection.
Natural Theology as Discernment.
The Golden Age of English Natural Theology.
The Boyle Lectures and the Problem of Heterodoxy.
William Paley and the Divine Watchmaker.
The Challenge of Darwinism for Natural Theology.
Incarnation, Trinity, and Natural Theology.
Responding to Karl Barth: Natural Theology as a Specifically Christian Undertaking.
Tradition, Interpretation and the Discovery of God : Natural Theology and Meno’s Paradox.
Cognitive and perceptual approaches to Natural Theology.
5. Stratification: Levels of Reality and the Limits of Reductionism.
Stratification in Nicolai Hartmann.
Stratification in Roy Bhaskar.
Stratification, Emergence, and the Failure of Reductionism.
Mathesis Universalis: Heinrich Scholz and the Flawed Quest for Methodological Uniformity.
6. The Evolution of Doctrine? A Critical Examination of the Theological Validity of Biological Models of Doctrinal Development.
Nature as a Source of Theological Models.
The Notion of Doctrinal Development.
‘Universal Darwinism’ and the Development of Culture.
Are Human Ideas and Values Outside the Darwinian Paradigm?.
Darwinianism, Lamarckianism, or What? The Indeterminate Mechanism of Cultural Evolution.
Cultural Evolution: an Historical Case Study.
Directing Evolution: Antonio Gramsci and the Manipulation of Cultural Development.
The Memetic Approach to Intellectual Evolution.
Doctrinal Development: are there Islands of Theological Stability?.
Contingency, History and Adaptation in the Evolutionary Process.
Contingency, History and Adaptation in the Development of Doctrine.
Chalcedon, Metaphysics, and Spandrels: Evolutionary Perspectiveson the Chalcedonian Definition of Faith.
7. Assimilation in the Development of Doctrine: The Theological Significance of Jean Piaget.
Piaget on ‘Reflective Abstraction’.
Assimilation to Jewish Religious Norms: Ebionitism.
Assimilation to Roman Cultural Norms: Pelagianism.
Assimilation to Anglo-Saxon Cultural Norms: Christ as Hero.
The Achievement of Equilibration: Factors Encouraging Theological Accommodation.
8. A Working Paper: The Ordering of the World in a Scientific Theology.
9. A working Paper: Iterative Procedures and Closure in Systematic Theology.
10. The Church as the Starting Point for a Scientific Dogmatics.
Starting from the Visible Reality of the Church.
Can Theology be Empirical? John Locke versus John Dewey.
The church as an Empirical Social Reality.
Stanley Hauerwas on Seeing the Church.
Transignification and Transvaluation: the Church and New Ways of Sseeing Things.
Conclusion.
Bibliography.
Index
Tentang Penulis
Alister E. Mc Grath is Professor of Historical Theology at Oxford University. He earned his D.Phil. from Oxford for research in molecular biophysics, and his D.D. for research in historical and systematic theology. He is the author of numerous bestselling textbooks and also the acclaimed Scientific Theology trilogy: Nature, Reality, and Theory (2001-3).