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Can Science Explain Religion? Jones, James W. (Distinguished Professor of Religion, Distinguished Professor of Religion, Rutgers University)
Can Science Explain Religion?
Jones, James W. (Distinguished Professor of Religion, Distinguished Professor of Religion, Rutgers University)
Drawing on scientific research and logical argument James Jones directly confronts the claims that cognitive science can eliminate, or debunk, religion. He provides an accessibly written, persuasive account of why these claims are not convincing.
Marc Notes: Includes bibliographical references and index. Biographical Note: James W. Jones is Distinguished Professor of Religion at Rutgers University. He is the author of fifteen books and numerous professional papers, and the editor of several volumes of collected papers dealing with religion, psychology, and science. He serves on the editorial boards of several publications. He is an ordained priest in the Episcopal Church USA and has maintained a private practice of clinical psychology, specializing in psychophysiology and behavioral medicine. Table of Contents: Acknowledgements Introduction: A Voice from the Border of Religion and ScienceChapter One: Explanations -How Science Seeks to Explain ReligionChapter Two: Explaining-What does it Mean to Explain Religion?Chapter Three: Physicalism-Is a Purely Physicalist Account Compelling?Chapter Four: Beyond Physicalism-Mind and NatureChapter Five: Our Pluralistic Universe - Living on the Border of Science and Religion Appendix: Sources, References, and Further DiscussionsBibliography of Sources Used In Preparing the TextReview Quotes:"This is a tour de force. Jones takes the reader through the full range of debates concerning the use and abuse of cognitive science with respect to religion, displaying both expertise and panache. His unique perspective comes from his work as a clinical psychologist. He calls the different parties to take responsibility for their abstract theories in an argument that is both compelling and morally serious." --Timothy Jenkins, Reader in Anthropology and Religion, University of Cambridge "Few scholars are better suited than James W. Jones to explore the new frontiers of science and religion. He brings philosophical acumen, psychotherapeutic experience, and spiritual sensitivity to bear on the question of what, if anything, new findings in brain-mind science can tell us about religious beliefs and practices. A necessary book for anyone interested in the future of scientific approaches to religion." --Kelly Bulkeley, author of The Wondering Brain: Thinking about Religion With and Beyond Cognitive Neuroscience "This stimulating book on the attempts of cognitive science to explain away religion has the virtue of being fair-minded and comprehensive, without the too-common fault of being boring. Bringing together a knowledge of contemporary science and a sympathy for religion, there is much of value to both believers and those who doubt. It may not be, as the author rather hopes, the last word on the subject. But it is certainly much more than the first word." --Michael Ruse, author of Atheism: What Everyone Needs to Know Publisher Marketing: The "New Atheist" movement of recent years has put the science-versus-religion controversy back on the popular cultural agenda. Anti-religious polemicists are convinced that the application of the new sciences of the mind to religious belief gives them the final weapons in their battle against irrationality and superstition. What used to be a trickle of research papers scattered in specialized scientific journals has now become a torrent of books, articles, and commentary in the popular media pressing the case that the cognitive science of religion can finally fulfill the enlightenment dream of shrinking religion into insignificance, if not eliminating it altogether. James W. Jones argues that these claims are demonstrably false. He notes that cognitive science research is religiously neutral; it can be deployed in many different ways in relation to the actual belief in and practice of religion: to undermine it, to simply study it, and to support it. These different approaches, Jones suggests, reflect the background assumptions and viewpoints brought to the interpretation of the data. The goal of this book is not to defend either a general religious outlook or a particular religious tradition, but to make the case that while there is much to learn from the cognitive scientific study of religion, attempts to use it to "explain" religion are exaggerated and misguided. Drawing on scientific research and logical argument Can Science Explain Religion? directly confronts the claims of these debunkers of religion, providing an accessibly written, persuasive account of why they are not convincing.
Contributor Bio: Jones, James William James W. Jones is Professor of Religion and Adjunct Professor of Clinical Psychology, at Rutgers University.
| Medios de comunicación | Libros Hardcover Book (Libro con lomo y cubierta duros) |
| Publicado | 28 de octubre de 2015 |
| Fecha de lanzamiento original | 2016 |
| ISBN13 | 9780190249380 |
| Editores | Oxford University Press Inc |
| Páginas | 248 |
| Dimensiones | 147 × 219 × 25 mm · 385 g |
| Lengua | Inglés |