Religion and the Physical Sciences - (Greenwood Guides to Science and Religion) by Kate Boisvert (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- Many people may think that the modern physical sciences - physics, chemistry, astronomy - and religion have little to do with each other.
- About the Author: Kate Grayson Boisvert is an instructor in astronomy at Los Medanos College and a consultant at the Center for Theology and Natural Sciences.
- 352 Pages
- Science, General
- Series Name: Greenwood Guides to Science and Religion
Description
About the Book
Many people may think that the modern physical sciences - physics, chemistry, astronomy - and religion have little to do with each other. There are, however, many points that these two areas intersect. This volume in the Greenwood Guides to Science and Religion will cover the impact of religion and spirituality on some of the great scientific debates of the last 100 years - the origin of the universe, the nature of matter and energy, the quest for a TOE (theory of everything), and the current debates over multiple universes, the anthropic principle, and other aspects of theoretical physics that are borderline philosophy. Debates on these topics are common in popular works, and the author places all of these debates in a context that the average reader can understand.
The volume includes extracts from the most important primary source documents, as well as a glossary and a timeline of events.
Book Synopsis
Many people may think that the modern physical sciences - physics, chemistry, astronomy - and religion have little to do with each other. There are, however, many points that these two areas intersect. This volume in the Greenwood Guides to Science and Religion will cover the impact of religion and spirituality on some of the great scientific debates of the last 100 years - the origin of the universe, the nature of matter and energy, the quest for a TOE (theory of everything), and the current debates over multiple universes, the anthropic principle, and other aspects of theoretical physics that are borderline philosophy. Debates on these topics are common in popular works, and the author places all of these debates in a context that the average reader can understand.About the Author
Kate Grayson Boisvert is an instructor in astronomy at Los Medanos College and a consultant at the Center for Theology and Natural Sciences.