No God, No Science Quotes
No God, No Science: Theology, Cosmology, Biology
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Michael Hanby9 ratings, 4.11 average rating, 2 reviews
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No God, No Science Quotes
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“science is intrinsically related to theology because one cannot identify the object of scientific inquiry—namely, nature—without simultaneously distinguishing it from that which is not nature—namely, God—and without giving tacit specification to the character of this “not.”
― No God, No Science: Theology, Cosmology, Biology
― No God, No Science: Theology, Cosmology, Biology
“The notion of a “pure” science free from metaphysical and theological contamination is a fiction and therefore already the expression of a theology.”
― No God, No Science: Theology, Cosmology, Biology
― No God, No Science: Theology, Cosmology, Biology
“Irreducibly metaphysical judgments as to the nature of being, form, time, space, matter, cause, truth, knowledge, explanation, wholes, parts, and the like are the starting point of science, not its conclusions.”
― No God, No Science: Theology, Cosmology, Biology
― No God, No Science: Theology, Cosmology, Biology
“Metaphysical judgments are inherent in what counts as empirical evidence, and these judgments mediate between science and theology proper.”
― No God, No Science: Theology, Cosmology, Biology
― No God, No Science: Theology, Cosmology, Biology
“The relation of science to metaphysics and theology is not fundamentally a scientific question, nor is it fundamentally an empirical, historical, sociological, or even philosophical question, though of course it is all of these. Rather it is fundamentally a theological question, logically consequent upon the question of the relation between God and the world.”
― No God, No Science: Theology, Cosmology, Biology
― No God, No Science: Theology, Cosmology, Biology
“there is no metaphysically neutral starting point from which science can lift itself up by its own intellectual bootstraps.”
― No God, No Science: Theology, Cosmology, Biology
― No God, No Science: Theology, Cosmology, Biology
“The doctrine of creation ex nihilo, in other words, is not a freestanding cosmology. Rather, it is a function of the doctrine of God and the modifications forced upon that doctrine by the Incarnation, which inaugurated a metaphysical revolution that would take up the Greek inheritance and fulfill it from beyond its own resources.”
― No God, No Science: Theology, Cosmology, Biology
― No God, No Science: Theology, Cosmology, Biology
“Conceptions of God and thus metaphysical and theological judgments are an inherent and ineradicable aspect of every conception of reason and nature, not as a matter of historical accident but as a matter of epistemic and ontological necessity.”
― No God, No Science: Theology, Cosmology, Biology
― No God, No Science: Theology, Cosmology, Biology
