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Divine Action and Modern Science

A radical critique of current attempts to reconcile natural sciences with the concept of divine action.

Nicholas Saunders (Author)

9780521801560, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 31 October 2002

254 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.8 cm, 0.54 kg

' … a valuable (and accessible) contribution to the debate.' Scottish Journal of Theology

Divine Action and Modern Science considers the relationship between the natural sciences and the concept of God acting in the world. Nicholas Saunders examines the Biblical motivations for asserting a continuing notion of divine action and identifies several different theological approaches to the problem. He considers their theoretical relationships with the laws of nature, indeterminism, and probabilistic causation. His book then embarks on a radical critique of current attempts to reconcile special divine action with quantum theory, chaos theory and quantum chaos. As well as considering the implications of these problems for common interpretations of divine action, Saunders also surveys and codifies the many different theological, philosophical and scientific responses to divine action. The conclusion reached is that we are still far from a satisfactory account of how God might act in a manner that is consonant with modern science despite the copious recent scholarship in this area.

Preface
1. Motivations
2. Theological approaches to divine action
3. The laws of nature and miracles
4. Determinism and SDA
5. Divine action and quantum theory
6. Does God cheat at dice?
7. Chaos theory and divine action
8. Whole-part models of SDA
9. Is SDA really tenable?
References
Index.

Subject Areas: Physics [PH], Philosophy of science [PDA], Christian theology [HRCM]

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