Describing the Hand of God: Divine Agency and Augustinian Obstacles to the Dialogue between Theology and Science - eBook
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Describing the Hand of God: Divine Agency and Augustinian Obstacles to the Dialogue between Theology and Science - eBook  -     By: Robert Brennan

Describing the Hand of God: Divine Agency and Augustinian Obstacles to the Dialogue between Theology and Science - eBook

Pickwick Publications / 2015 / ePub

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Stock No: WW108584EB

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Title: Describing the Hand of God: Divine Agency and Augustinian Obstacles to the Dialogue between Theology and Science - eBook
By: Robert Brennan
Format: DRM Free ePub
Vendor: Pickwick Publications
Publication Date: 2015
ISBN: 9781498279758
ISBN-13: 9781498279758
Stock No: WW108584EB

Publisher's Description

The question of divine agency in the world remains one important unresolved underlying obstacle in the dialogue between theology and science. Modern notions of divine agency are shown to have developed out of the interaction of three factors in early modernity. Two are well known: late medieval perfect-being theology and the early modern application of the notion of the two books of God's revelation to the understanding of the natural order. It is argued the third is the early modern appropriation of the Augustinian doctrine of inspiration. This assumes the soul's existence and a particular description of divine agency in humans, which became more generally applied to divine agency in nature. Whereas Newton explicitly draws the parallel between divine agency in humans and that in nature, Darwin rejects its supposed perfection and Huxley raised serious questions regarding the traditional understanding of the soul. This book offers an alternative incarnational description of divine agency, freeing consideration of divine agency from being dependent on resolving the complex issues of perfect-being theology and the existence of the soul. In conversation with Barth's pneumatology, this proposal is shown to remain theologically coherent and plausible while resolving or avoiding a range of known difficulties in the science-theology dialogue.

Author Bio

Robert Brennan is an ordained minister and theologian with a background in industrial physics and postgraduate qualifications in physics and theology.

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