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Modern physical science is constituted by specialized scientific
fields rooted in experimental laboratory work and in rational and
mathematical representations. Contemporary scientific explanation
is rigorously differentiated from religious interpretation,
although, to be sure, scientists sometimes do the philosophical
work of interpreting the metaphysics of space, time, and matter.
However, it is rare that either theologians or philosophers
convincingly claim that they are doing the scientific work of
physical scientists and mathematicians. The rigidity of these
divisions and differentiations is relatively new. Modern physical
science was invented slowly and gradually through interactions of
the aims and contents of mathematics, theology, and natural
philosophy since the seventeenth century. In essays ranging in
focus from seventeenth-century interpretations of heavenly comets
to twentieth-century explanations of tracks in bubble chambers, ten
historians of science demonstrate metaphysical and theological
threads continuing to underpin the epistemology and practice of the
physical sciences and mathematics, even while they became
disciplinary specialties during the last three centuries. The
volume is prefaced by tributes to Erwin N. Hiebert, whose teaching
and scholarship have addressed and inspired attention to these
issues.
Modern physical science is constituted by specialized scientific
fields rooted in experimental laboratory work and in rational and
mathematical representations. Contemporary scientific explanation
is rigorously differentiated from religious interpretation,
although, to be sure, scientists sometimes do the philosophical
work of interpreting the metaphysics of space, time, and matter.
However, it is rare that either theologians or philosophers
convincingly claim that they are doing the scientific work of
physical scientists and mathematicians. The rigidity of these
divisions and differentiations is relatively new. Modern physical
science was invented slowly and gradually through interactions of
the aims and contents of mathematics, theology, and natural
philosophy since the seventeenth century. In essays ranging in
focus from seventeenth-century interpretations of heavenly comets
to twentieth-century explanations of tracks in bubble chambers, ten
historians of science demonstrate metaphysical and theological
threads continuing to underpin the epistemology and practice of the
physical sciences and mathematics, even while they became
disciplinary specialties during the last three centuries. The
volume is prefaced by tributes to Erwin N. Hiebert, whose teaching
and scholarship have addressed and inspired attention to these
issues.
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