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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Prof Avihu ZakaiPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: T.& T.Clark Ltd Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.481kg ISBN: 9780567356703ISBN 10: 0567356701 Pages: 352 Publication Date: 22 December 2011 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Language: English Table of ContentsI. Philosophia ancilla theologiae: Science and Religion in Jonathan Edwards's Thought 1. philosophia ancilla theologiae 2. Edwards's Typological and Emblematic View of the World of Nature 3. The Great Chain of Being 4. The God of Mechanical Philosophers 5. The School of 'Physico-Theology' 6. Edwards and the School of Physico-Theology II. The Rise of Modern Science and the Decline of Theology as the 'Queen of Sciences' 1. Regina Scientiarum - theology as the 'Queen of Sciences' 2. Copernicus - 'Astronomy is written for astronomers' 3. Kepler - The new Physica Coelestis (Celestial Physics) 4. Galileo - The Book of Nature 'is written in the language of mathematics' III. 'All Coherence Gone' - Donne and the 'New Philosophy' of Nature 1. The New scientia naturalis 2. Science, Fears, Doubts and Anxieties 3. John Donne and the 'new Philosophy' a) 'Doubts and Anxieties': Ignatius His Conclave: b) 'All Coherence Gone': The First Anniversarie IV. 'God of Abraham' and 'not of philosophers': Pascal against the Philosophers' Disenchantment of the World 1. 'The Eternal Silence of These Infinite Spaces Frightens Me' 2. Pascal against the 'Philosophers' 3. 'The God of Abraham' and the 'God of Philosophers' 4. The Theatre of Nature: Natura naturata and natura naturans V. Religion and the Newtonian Universe Reactions to Newtonian science by Jonathan Swift, John Edwards, George Berkeley, William Blake, and others VI. Jonathan Edwards's Philosophy of Nature: The Re-Enchantment of the World in the Age of Scientific Reasoning 1. The scientific Revolution's Disenchantment of the World 2. Atomic Doctrine 3. The Mechanization of the World of Nature 4. The Laws of Nature 5. God and the World 6. The Nature of the Created OrderReviewsAn accessible overview of religious responses to the emergent natural philosophy. * British Society for Literature and Science * [This book] does two valuable services. First, it places Edwards on a scholarly map which joins English and American theatres of philosophy. And secondly, it celebrates a discourse which criticized the new mechanistic philosophies, a discourse which needs to be digested before being injected into modern debates over nature and transcendent meaning, as some readers of Edwards are wont to do. * Reviews in Religion & Theology * It is compelling and profound...It will pay dividends to the reader who wants to struggle with the relationship between the material reality of the world as presented by modern science and the spiritual realities of a God-driven world as implied in the gospel.' * Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology * This is an informative volume that situates Edwards in a broad context of early modern religious response to the Enlightenment mechanical philosophy; which divorced nature from spirit. Comparing the American philosopher-theologian Edwards to the likes of Donne, Pascal and Leibniz, Zakai shows that rather than simply reasserting religious claims, Edwards articulated a singularly sophisticated response to the New Science - appropriating what he could while also reconceiving a religious view of the cosmos. -- Gerald R. McDermott 'A stunning achievement, this sustained analysis delineates Edwards's response to early modern science. It positions Edwards with others (like Donne and Pascal) who thought its presuppositions and procedures radically challenged Trinitarian Christianity. While relentlessly criticizing heresies (like Arianism, Socinianism and Deism), Edwards labored to re-invigorate study of the book of nature -- through typological exegesis of scripture not mathematical analysis. Philosophically rejecting Newtonian science, Edwards advanced his theology of divine self-disclosure: God creates, sustains, directs and redeems nature and history alike.' - John F. Wilson, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA. -- John F. Wilson Reviewed by Don Schweitzer, St. Andrew's College, Saskatoon, Canada to appear in the Toronto Journal of Theology (Canada) 'Zakai's study of Edwards in relation to the secularizing trends of early Western modernity offers an insightful and exemplary history of ideas in the early modern period that will be a 'must read' for all Edwards scholars.' -- Don Schweitzer "An accessible overview of religious responses to the emergent natural philosophy. * British Society for Literature and Science * [This book] does two valuable services. First, it places Edwards on a scholarly map which joins English and American theatres of philosophy. And secondly, it celebrates a discourse which criticized the new mechanistic philosophies, a discourse which needs to be digested before being injected into modern debates over nature and transcendent meaning, as some readers of Edwards are wont to do. * Reviews in Religion & Theology * ""It is compelling and profound...It will pay dividends to the reader who wants to struggle with the relationship between the material reality of the world as presented by modern science and the spiritual realities of a God-driven world as implied in the gospel.' * Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology * This is an informative volume that situates Edwards in a broad context of early modern religious response to the Enlightenment mechanical philosophy; which divorced nature from spirit. Comparing the American philosopher-theologian Edwards to the likes of Donne, Pascal and Leibniz, Zakai shows that rather than simply reasserting religious claims, Edwards articulated a singularly sophisticated response to the New Science - appropriating what he could while also reconceiving a religious view of the cosmos. -- Gerald R. McDermott ‘A stunning achievement, this sustained analysis delineates Edwards's response to early modern science. It positions Edwards with others (like Donne and Pascal) who thought its presuppositions and procedures radically challenged Trinitarian Christianity. While relentlessly criticizing heresies (like Arianism, Socinianism and Deism), Edwards labored to re-invigorate study of the ""book of nature"" -- through typological exegesis of scripture not mathematical analysis. Philosophically rejecting Newtonian science, Edwards advanced his theology of divine self-disclosure: God creates, sustains, directs and redeems nature and history alike.' - John F. Wilson, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA. -- John F. Wilson Reviewed by Don Schweitzer, St. Andrew's College, Saskatoon, Canada to appear in the Toronto Journal of Theology (Canada) ‘Zakai's study of Edwards in relation to the secularizing trends of early Western modernity offers an insightful and exemplary history of ideas in the early modern period that will be a 'must read' for all Edwards scholars.' -- Don Schweitzer" Author InformationAvihu Zakai is Professor of early modern history and early American history at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His fields of interest are Protestant religious history in both Europe and America in the early modern period, from the Protestant Reformation to the Great Awakening in America. In the past he published several books with, among others, Cambridge University Press and Princeton University Press. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |