Divine and Contingent Order
Stock No: WW043215
Divine and Contingent Order  -     By: Thomas F. Torrance

Divine and Contingent Order

Bloomsbury Academic / 2005 / Paperback

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Stock No: WW043215

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Product Description

This book examines the implications of the Judaeo-Christian claim for our understanding of the universe that it is contingent: freely created by God out of nothing, and having an existence, freedom, and rational order of its own while still dependent on him. Professor Torrance argues that this claim made possible the development of western empirical science, but that Newtonian physics obscured the connection between the rational order of nature and the Christian doctrine of creation. He shows how modern relativity and quantum theories have once againd rawn attention to the significance of contingence, and imply that the universe is found to be consistently rational only if it is dependent on a creative rationality beyond it. He considers finally the disorderly elements in the universe, both physical and moral, and argues that the doctrine of incarnation as well as of creation is necessary to deal with the intellectual problems which they raise.

Product Information

Title: Divine and Contingent Order
By: Thomas F. Torrance
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 176
Vendor: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication Date: 2005
Dimensions: 8.13 X 5.0 (inches)
Weight: 8 ounces
ISBN: 0567043215
ISBN-13: 9780567043214
Stock No: WW043215

Publisher's Description

This book examines the implications of the Judaeo-Christian claim for our understanding of the universe that it is contingent: freely created by God out of nothing, and having an existence, freedom, and rtional order of its own while still dependent on him.

Professor Torrance argues that this claim made possible the development of western empirical science, but that Newtonian physics obscured the connection between the rational order of nature and the Christian doctrine of creation. He shows how modern relativity and quantum theories have once againd rawn attention to the significance of contingence, and imply that the universe is found to be consistently rational only if it is dependent on a creative rationality beyond it.

He considers finally the disorderly elements in the universe, both physical and moral, and argues that the doctrine of incarnation as well as of creation is necessary to deal with the intellectual problems which they raise.

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