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Basing himself on Christian sources-literally "from Saint Paul to
Meister Eckhart"-Wolfgang Smith formulates what he terms an
"unexpurgated" account of gnosis, and demonstrates its central
place in the perfection of the Christ-centered life. He observes,
moreover, that the very conception of a "supreme knowing," as
implied by the aforesaid sources, has a decisive bearing upon
cosmology, which moreover constitutes the underlying principle upon
which his earlier scientific and philosophical work-beginning with
his ground-breaking treatise on the interpretation of quantum
mechanics-has been based. The "fact of gnosis," however, has a
decisive bearing on the theological notion of creatio ex nihilo as
well, and it is this imperative that Smith proposes to explore in
the present work. What is thus demanded, he contends, is the
inherently Kabbalistic notion of a creatio ex Deo et in Deo, not to
replace, but to complement the creatio ex nihilo. This leads to an
engagement with Christian Kabbalah (Pico de la Mirandola, Johann
Reuchlin, and Cardinal Egidio di Viterbo especially) and with Jacob
Boehme, culminating in an exegesis of Meister Eckhart's doctrine.
The author argues, first of all, that Eckhart does not (as many
have thought) advocate a "God beyond God" theology: does not, in
other words, hold an inherently Sabellian view of the Trinity.
Smith maintains that Eckhart has not in fact transgressed a single
Trinitarian or Christological dogma; what he does deny implicitly,
he shows, is none other than the creatio ex nihilo, which in effect
Eckhart replaces with the Kabbalistic creatio ex Deo. In this
shift, moreover, Smith perceives the transition from "exoteric" to
"esoteric" within the integral domain of Christian doctrine.
Wolfgang Smith brings to his writing a rare combination of
qualities and experiences, not the least his ability to move freely
between the somewhat arcane worlds of science and traditional
metaphysics. Alongside Dr. Smith's imposing qualifications in
mathematics, physics, and philosophy, we find his hard-earned
expertise in Platonism, Christian theology, traditional
cosmologies, and Oriental metaphysics. His outlook has been
enriched both by his diverse professional experiences in the
high-tech world of the aerospace industry and in academia, and by
his own researches in the course of his far-reaching intellectual
and spiritual journeying. Here is that rare person who is equally
at home with Eckhart and Einstein, Heraclitus and Heisenberg Harry
Oldmeadow, La Trobe University]
Darwin. Dawkins. Dennett. - This voluble triumvirate has gained
oracular status for many scientists and laypersons in the
contemporary world. But though the edifice of thought they have
erected over and against tradition and faith has gained currency in
today's nihilistic mind, it is now rapidly eroding in the serious
world of ideas. But what of that heady amalgam of Science and
Christianity first put together by Teilhard de Chardin, which
struck the Catholic world like a whirlwind around the time of the
Second Vatican Council and continues to the present day in the work
of such Catholic evolutionists as John Haught and Kenneth R.
Miller? What as a rule has rendered Catholics vulnerable to
Teilhardian tenets-apart from the fact that these conform to the
neo-humanist tendencies of our age-is that the theory is clad in
scientific garb: in the modern world, where Science speaks, it
appears even angels will listen. In Theistic Evolution, Wolfgang
Smith shows himself to be that rare person thoroughly grounded in
both science and theology, and what he proves through detailed and
rigorous argument is that Teilhard de Chardin has in fact sold us a
veritable science-fiction theology. This book, however, is much
more than a masterful and indeed definitive refutation of theistic
evolutionism: it is at the same time an incomparable introduction
to long-forgotten metaphysical and theological truths. In language
at once precise and lucid the author recalls teachings going back
to the Greek and Latin Fathers, and explains their bearing on
questions about the nature of God and man bungled at the hands of
many contemporary scientists and theologians.
For many years, Wolfgang Smith has been putting forward an
expansive vision of the traditional Christian cosmos alongside an
incisive critique of the truncated perspective of contemporary
scientism. In Ancient Wisdom and Modern Misconceptions he shows how
the physical sciences, freed from prevailing misconceptions,
actually corroborate the traditional wisdom long thought to be
dead. Basing himself in part upon epistemological considerations
first enunciated by Sir Arthur Eddington, he shows that the
so-called physical universe proves finally to be constructed by the
strategies of the experimental physicist himself. Following this he
delves into the foundations of astrophysics and planetary
astronomy, and then proceeds to elucidate the concepts of
Intelligent Design and vertical causation. He concludes by showing
how Anthropic Coincidence should be rightly considered.
With equal mastery Smith presents the serious reader with
glimpses of the perennial wisdom eclipsed since the Enlightenment,
and shows that traditional cosmology, so far from being
disqualified, actually provides the keys to an understanding of
science itself. No one entering the fray of current debates
regarding "science and religion" can afford to neglect the immense
implications of this work by Wolfgang Smith.
Basing himself on Christian sources-literally "from Saint Paul to
Meister Eckhart"-Wolfgang Smith formulates what he terms an
"unexpurgated" account of gnosis, and demonstrates its central
place in the perfection of the Christ-centered life. He observes,
moreover, that the very conception of a "supreme knowing," as
implied by the aforesaid sources, has a decisive bearing upon
cosmology, which moreover constitutes the underlying principle upon
which his earlier scientific and philosophical work-beginning with
his ground-breaking treatise on the interpretation of quantum
mechanics-has been based. The "fact of gnosis," however, has a
decisive bearing on the theological notion of creatio ex nihilo as
well, and it is this imperative that Smith proposes to explore in
the present work. What is thus demanded, he contends, is the
inherently Kabbalistic notion of a creatio ex Deo et in Deo, not to
replace, but to complement the creatio ex nihilo. This leads to an
engagement with Christian Kabbalah (Pico de la Mirandola, Johann
Reuchlin, and Cardinal Egidio di Viterbo especially) and with Jacob
Boehme, culminating in an exegesis of Meister Eckhart's doctrine.
The author argues, first of all, that Eckhart does not (as many
have thought) advocate a "God beyond God" theology: does not, in
other words, hold an inherently Sabellian view of the Trinity.
Smith maintains that Eckhart has not in fact transgressed a single
Trinitarian or Christological dogma; what he does deny implicitly,
he shows, is none other than the creatio ex nihilo, which in effect
Eckhart replaces with the Kabbalistic creatio ex Deo. In this
shift, moreover, Smith perceives the transition from "exoteric" to
"esoteric" within the integral domain of Christian doctrine.
Wolfgang Smith brings to his writing a rare combination of
qualities and experiences, not the least his ability to move freely
between the somewhat arcane worlds of science and traditional
metaphysics. Alongside Dr. Smith's imposing qualifications in
mathematics, physics, and philosophy, we find his hard-earned
expertise in Platonism, Christian theology, traditional
cosmologies, and Oriental metaphysics. His outlook has been
enriched both by his diverse professional experiences in the
high-tech world of the aerospace industry and in academia, and by
his own researches in the course of his far-reaching intellectual
and spiritual journeying. Here is that rare person who is equally
at home with Eckhart and Einstein, Heraclitus and Heisenberg Harry
Oldmeadow, La Trobe University]
For many years, Wolfgang Smith has been putting forward an
expansive vision of the traditional Christian cosmos alongside an
incisive critique of the truncated perspective of contemporary
scientism. In Ancient Wisdom and Modern Misconceptions he shows how
the physical sciences, freed from prevailing misconceptions,
actually corroborate the traditional wisdom long thought to be
dead. Basing himself in part upon epistemological considerations
first enunciated by Sir Arthur Eddington, he shows that the
so-called physical universe proves finally to be constructed by the
strategies of the experimental physicist himself. Following this he
delves into the foundations of astrophysics and planetary
astronomy, and then proceeds to elucidate the concepts of
Intelligent Design and vertical causation. He concludes by showing
how Anthropic Coincidence should be rightly considered.
With equal mastery Smith presents the serious reader with
glimpses of the perennial wisdom eclipsed since the Enlightenment,
and shows that traditional cosmology, so far from being
disqualified, actually provides the keys to an understanding of
science itself. No one entering the fray of current debates
regarding "science and religion" can afford to neglect the immense
implications of this work by Wolfgang Smith.
Darwin. Dawkins. Dennett. - This voluble triumvirate has gained
oracular status for many scientists and laypersons in the
contemporary world. But though the edifice of thought they have
erected over and against tradition and faith has gained currency in
today's nihilistic mind, it is now rapidly eroding in the serious
world of ideas. But what of that heady amalgam of Science and
Christianity first put together by Teilhard de Chardin, which
struck the Catholic world like a whirlwind around the time of the
Second Vatican Council and continues to the present day in the work
of such Catholic evolutionists as John Haught and Kenneth R.
Miller? What as a rule has rendered Catholics vulnerable to
Teilhardian tenets-apart from the fact that these conform to the
neo-humanist tendencies of our age-is that the theory is clad in
scientific garb: in the modern world, where Science speaks, it
appears even angels will listen. In Theistic Evolution, Wolfgang
Smith shows himself to be that rare person thoroughly grounded in
both science and theology, and what he proves through detailed and
rigorous argument is that Teilhard de Chardin has in fact sold us a
veritable science-fiction theology. This book, however, is much
more than a masterful and indeed definitive refutation of theistic
evolutionism: it is at the same time an incomparable introduction
to long-forgotten metaphysical and theological truths. In language
at once precise and lucid the author recalls teachings going back
to the Greek and Latin Fathers, and explains their bearing on
questions about the nature of God and man bungled at the hands of
many contemporary scientists and theologians.
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