Amazon.com Review
Faith, Science & Understanding is a brief, erudite collection of writings by John Polkinghorne, a fellow of Queen's College, Cambridge, and one of the world's leading experts on science and theology. Polkinghorne begins this book by exploring the place of theology in the university, the role of revelation in religion, and the particular relations that have formed between theology and various disciplines within the sciences. Building on these foundations, Part II of the book considers the question that dominated theology-and-science debates during the 1990s: "How we may conceive of divine agency in a way that respects the integrity of the scientific account of the process of the physical world and which also does justice to the religious intuition and experience of God's providential interaction within history?" Finally, Part III provides Polkinghorne's assessment of the entire English tradition of thinking about theology and science as well as his opinions regarding the work of his eminent colleagues in the field. Polkinghorne's lapidary English prose polishes his insights to a fine luster; this is not the kind of plain talking you'll find in Richard Feynmann. But the reader's patience is rewarded.
Faith, Science & Understanding is a short book that expertly surveys a long history--an excellent orientation to a complex and important set of questions.
--Michael Joseph Gross
From Booklist
Theologian and physicist Polkinghorne is eminently qualified to write on theology and science. This book consists of "further thoughts" on issues raised in four earlier books. Polkinghorne strongly argues theology's place in the postmodern university, drawing attention to its methodological affinity with the natural sciences. In both, he insists on a "bottom up" approach--that is, more pragmatic than systematic--in which biblical material and creation are read as evidence, not simply as revelation. Later, he locates himself in a group of scientist-theologians that includes Ian Barbour and Arthur Peacocke; readers will find this self-location, which includes delineation of parallels and divergences, most helpful. He also critically reviews Wolfhart Pannenberg and Thomas Torrance, two theologians who have ventured to address science. The concluding chapter is a concise history of science and theology in England that corrects popular distortions connected with the reception and continuing influence of Darwin. In all, the book is an engaging discussion of an important, little understood disciplinary intersection as well as a congenial point of entry into Polkinghorne's influential work.
Steven SchroederCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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