Ulteriori informazioni
This book is an important new study on the thought of the late Professor Ian Graeme Barbour (1923-2013). Barbour was a prominent American theologian and physicist who served for many years on the faculty of Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota, USA. His highly significant research on the relationship between theology and science led to an invitation to deliver the esteemed Gifford Lectures in Scotland (1989-1991) and won him the prestigious Templeton Prize in 1999. In this monograph, Joseph R. Laracy analyzes Ian Barbour's distinctive approach to the relationship between theology and science, largely unexplored in the Catholic tradition, according to fundamental theological criteria. He investigates the possibility for Barbour's epistemic, metaphysical, and theological principles to enrich the dialogue and integration (to use Barbour's terms) of the Catholic doctrine of creation with the natural sciences. Throughout the monograph, substantial reference is made to Saint Thomas Aquinas, as a Catholic "monument" to the doctrine of creation in particular, and more generally, the beneficial interaction of natural philosophy, metaphysics, and revealed theology.
This book will likely be of interest to graduate students and scholars in the fields of fundamental and systematic theology, religion and science, the philosophy of science, and the history of science.
Sommario
Foreword - Acknowledgments - List of Abbreviations - Ian Barbour: Life and Works - Barbour's Fundamental Principles: Theological Presuppositions, Epistemology, and Met-aphysics Theology and Science: Similarities and Differences According to Barbour - A Catholic Critique for the Doctrine of Creation - Toward Dialogue and Integration - Index.
Info autore
Joseph R. Laracy, a Catholic priest of the Archdiocese of Newark, serves as assistant professor of systematic theology at Immaculate Conception Seminary School of Theology, Seton Hall University. He is also an affiliated faculty member with the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, the Program of Catholic Studies, Department of the Core Curriculum, and the University Honors Program. Father Laracy earned his doctorate from the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome as well as a master¿s degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a bachelor¿s from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is a fellow of the International Institute of Informatics and Systemics.
Riassunto
This book is an important new study on the thought of the late Professor Ian Graeme Barbour (1923-2013).
Relazione
"In this wonderfully readable and informative book, Father Laracy has given us a very careful, perceptive, and learned study and critique of the philosophy and theology of Ian Barbour, whose writings on the relation of science and religion have had enormous influence. Father Laracy shows that there is much of value in Barbour's thought, but also much that is problematic from the point of view of fundamental Catholic beliefs."-Stephen M. Barr, PhD, Professor Emeritus of Physics, University of Delaware and President, The Society of Catholic Scientists