Books > Science & Mathematics > Science: general issues > Popular science
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Science (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,880
Discovery Miles 38 800
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Science (Hardcover)
Series: The Art of Living
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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In this challenging and provocative book, Steve Fuller contends
that our continuing faith in science in the face of its actual
history is best understood as the secular residue of a religiously
inspired belief in divine providence. Our faith in science is the
promise of a life as it shall be, as science will make it one day.
Just as men once put their faith in God's activity in the world, so
we now travel to a land promised by science. In "Science", Fuller
suggests that the two destinations might be the same one. Fuller
sympathetically explores what it might mean to live scientifically.
Can science give a sense of completeness to one's life? Can it
account for the entirety of what it is to be human? And what does
our continuing belief in scientific progress say about us as a
species? In answering these questions, Fuller ranges widely over
the history of science and religion - from Aristotle and the
atomists to Dawkins and the neo-Darwinists - and takes a close look
at what science is, how its purpose has changed over the years, and
what role religion and in more recent years atheism have played in
its progression. Science, argues Fuller, is now undergoing its own
version of secularization. We are ceasing to trust science in its
institutional forms, formulated by an anointed class of science
priests, and instead we are witnessing the emergence of what Fuller
calls Protscience' - all sorts of people, from the New Age movement
to anti-evolutionists, claiming scientific authority as their own.
Fuller shows that these groups are no more anti-scientific than
Protestant sects were atheistic. Fearless and thought-provoking,
Science questions some of our most fundamental beliefs about the
nature and role of science, and is a distinct and important
contribution to debates about evolution, intelligent design,
atheism, humanism, the notion of scientific progress, and the
public understanding of science.
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