Current Promotions
Browse
Refine by
Advanced Search Links
Doing Without Adam and Eve: Sociobiology and Original Sin  -     
        By: Patricia A Williams

Doing Without Adam and Eve: Sociobiology and Original Sin

Augsburg Fortress / Paperback
$17.10 (CBD Price)
Retail: $19.00
Save: $1.90 (10%)
Availability: Usually ships in 24-48 hours.
CBD Stock No: WW632850
 
Buy Item 10% Off Add To Cart

* This product is not available for expedited shipping.



Product Description

In this provocative new addition to the acclaimed series, Patricia Williams assays the doctrine of original sin with a scientific lens and, based on sociobiology, offers an alternative Christian account of human nature's foibles and future.Focusing on the Genesis 2 and 3 account Williams shows how its "historical" interpretation in early Christianity not only misread the text but derived an idea of being human profoundly at odds with experience and contemporary science.Williams's work, frank in its assessment of traditional misunderstandings, challenges theologians and all Christians to reassess the roots and branches of this linchpin doctrine.

Product Information

Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 227
Vendor: Augsburg Fortress
Dimensions: 9 X 6 (inches)
ISBN: 0800632850
ISBN-13: 9780800632854
Availability: Usually ships in 24-48 hours.
Series: Theology and the Sciences

Related Products

Publisher's Description

In this provocative new addition to the Theology and the Sciences series, Patricia Williams assays the original sin doctrine with a scientific lens and, based on sociobiology, offers an alternative Christian account of human nature's foibles and future.

Focusing on the Genesis 2 and 3 account, Williams shows how its "historical" interpretation in early Christianity not only misread the text but derived an idea of being human profoundly at odds with experience and contemporary science. After gauging Christianity's several competing notions of human nature -- Protestant, Catholic, and Orthodox -- against contemporary biology, Williams turns to sociobiological accounts of the evolution of human dispositions toward reciprocity and limited cooperation as a source of human good and evil. From this vantage point she offers new interpretations of evil, sin, and the Christian doctrine of atonement.

Williams's work, frank in its assessment of traditional misunderstandings, challenges theologians and all Christians to reassess the roots and branches of this linchpin doctrine.

Product Reviews



Product Q&A

Availability

Availability: Usually ships in 24-48 hours.

Find Related Products

Author/Artist Review

Start A New Christianbook.com Search