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A look at the questions students should be asking as they study the natural sciences in relation to the Christian worldview and think critically about God's creation.
More Reviews and RecommendationsDorothy F. Chappell is dean of natural and social sciences and professor of biology at Wheaton College in Wheaton, IL.
David Cook is Arthur F. Holmes Professor of Faith and Learning and professor of philosophy at Wheaton College in Wheaton, Illinois.
This book argues that it is possible for our study of the natural world to enhance our understanding of God and for our faith to inform and influence our study and application of science.
Whether you are a student, someone employed in the sciences, or simply an interested layperson, Not Just Science will help you develop the crucial skills of critical thinking and reflection about key questions in Christian faith and natural science.
The contributors provide a systematic approach to both raising and answering the key questions that emerge at the intersection of faith and various disciplines in the natural sciences. Among the questions addressed are the context, limits, benefits, and practice of science in light of Christian values. Questions of ethics as they relate to various applied sciences are also discussed. The end goal is an informed biblical worldview on both nature and our role in obeying Gods mandate to care for his creation.
With an honest approach to critical questions, Not Just Science fills a gap in the discussion about the relationship between faith and reason. This is a most welcomed addition to these significant scholarly conversations.
Ron Mahurin, PhD
Vice President, Professional Development and Research
Council for Christian Colleges & Universities
CONTENTS
Foreword13
Introduction15
Dorothy F. Chappell and E. David Cook
P A R T O N E
PRESUPPOSITIONS
1. How Have Christian Faith and Natural Science Interacted
in History?27
Joseph L. Spradley
2. What Are the Philosophical Implications of Christianity
for the Natural Sciences?48
E. David Cook and Robert C. OConnor
3. What Are the Theological Implications for Natural
Science?61
Vincent E. Bacote and Stephen R. Spencer
4. How Does Society Interact with Science?79
Dorothy F. Chappell and E. David Cook
P A R T T W O
SELECTED NATURAL SCIENCES
AND MATHEMATICS
5. What Do We Learn about the Creator from Astronomy and
Cosmology?97
Jennifer J. Wiseman
6. Crucial Questions at the Interface of Christian Faith and
Biological Sciences109
Why Should We Care about the Extinction of Species?109
Raymond J. Lewis
What Are the Limits in Bioengineering?.115
E. David Cook
What Is the Mind-Brain Problem?119
William M. Struthers
Is Wellness a Human Body Stewardship Issue?.124
Peter H. Walters
How Do Scientific Views on Human Origins Relate
to the Bible?129
Dean E. Arnold
7. Crucial Questions at the Interface of Christian Faith
and Earth Sciences141
What Is Gods Purpose for Natural Disasters?141
Stephen O. Moshier
Why Should Christians Be Interested in Geology?148
Ralph Stearley
Environmental Stewardship: What Are the Roles for
Science and Faith?158
Randy Van Dragt and James A. Clark
8. Crucial Questions at the Interface of Christian Faith,
Mathematical Sciences, and Computer Science.174
Whose Idea WasMathematics?174
Terence H. Perciante
How Is Gods Creativity Manifested in Computer
Science?183
Thomas J. VanDrunen
9. Crucial Questions at the Interface of Christian Faith and
the Physical Sciences190
A. How Does Christianity Influence How to Think
about Physics?190
What Are Matter and Energy at the Most
Fundamental Level?190
Loren Haarsma
B. How Does Christianity Influence How to Think
about Chemistry?.208
The Creation of Life: Charting When, Where,
and How?209
Larry L. Funck
How Does Chemistry Impact Human Society?.223
Peter K. Walhout
Are Pharmaceutical Drugs Good or Bad?.228
Jennifer L. Busch
Is There Meaning beyond the Biomolecular?234
Greta M. Bryson
10. How Are Technology and Engineering Related
to Christianity?243
Should Christians Embrace Technology?243
Peter K. Walhout
Does Engineering Contribute to a Better Future?247
Stewart M. DeSoto and Gayle E. Ermer
11. Crucial Questions in the Applied Sciences257
How Is Science Applied across Cultures?257
Paul W. Robinson and Helene Slessarev-Jamir
What Values and Health-Care Priorities Are Expressed
in Our Health-Care Delivery System?.267
June A. Arnold
Just Agriculture?279
Robb De Haan and Ron Vos
12. How Should the Christians Foundational Beliefs Shape
the Work of Scientists?289
E. David Cook
Conclusion297
Dorothy F. Chappell and E. David Cook
Acknowledgments301
Special Thanks303
The Authors.305
Not Just Science
Copyright 2005 by E. David Cook and Dorothy F. Chappell
Requests for information should be addressed to:
Zondervan, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49530
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Not just science : questions where Christian faith and natural science intersect / Dorothy F. Chappell and E.
David Cook, general editors.
p. cm.
Summary: A look at some of the questions students should be asking as they study the natural sciences
in relation to the Christian worldview and think critically about Gods creationProvided by
publisher.
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN-10: 0-310-26383-2 (pbk.)
ISBN-13: 978-0-310-26383-2
1. Religion and science. I. Chappell, Dorothy F., 1947- II. Cook, E. David (Edward David), 1947-
BL240.3.N68 2005
261.5'5dc22
All Scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are taken from the Holy Bible: New International Version.
NIV. Copyright 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan. All
rights reserved.
Scripture quotations marked ISV are taken from the International Standard Version of the Bible: New Testament.
Copyright 1998 by the ISV Foundation.
Scripture quotations marked KJV are taken from the King James Version of the Bible.
Scripture quotations marked MSG are taken from THE MESSAGE. Copyright by Eugene H. Peterson 1993,
1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002. Used by permission of NavPress Publishing Group.
Scripture quotations marked TNIV are taken from the Holy Bible, Todays New International Version. TNIV.
Copyright 2002, 2004 by InternationalBible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved.
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C H A P T E R 1
Many authors have noted the close interaction between Christianity and science.
Although the two are often assumed to be in conflict, a more positive relationship
between science and faith is evident from their overlapping histories. The
direct influences of Christian ideas on the success of science are often difficult to
assess. However, their mutually supporting roles are evident in history, even when
they sometimes appear to be in conflict. In fact, the roots of modern science can be
traced to early Christian thought, and both science and faith can be seen as historically
interrelated efforts to understand the physical universe and its creative source.
Are natural science and Christian faith locked in conflict, or is there evidence of
cooperation between the two?
Perhaps the most typical view of the relationship between science and faith is one
of conflict or confrontation, even though the emphasis on this warfare model
has greatly diminished at the scholarly level. Historically, the idea of warfare
between science and Christianity developed during the latter half of the nineteenth
century with the rise of positivism and evolutionary theories. Before this time, a
close relationship between the two was evident from the number of pioneering scientists
who were Christians and the number of clergymen who participated in scientific
activities. The growing professionalism of science in the nineteenth century
led to a spirit of competition and confrontation with the religious establishment.
The increasing conflict and the formulation of a warfare model were supported
by two influential books. John William Draper published the first edition of his
History of the Conflict between Religion and Science in 1874. Andrew Dickson
White published his two-volume History of the Warfare of Science and Theology
in Christendom in 1896. Both books had a strongly positivist and antireligious view
of history, and both portrayed the natural sciences as the champions of academic
freedom and the liberators of humanity from religious oppression. The popular
interpretation of Darwinian theory in terms of the survival of the fittest seemed
to support this warfare model, with science replacing religious authoritarian claims
in the struggle for cultural supremacy.
In the first half of the twentieth century, logical positivism claimed victory in the
supposed warfare between science and Christianity. The positivists view was that
only empirically verifiable knowledge is valid and that all other kinds of knowledge
are opinion and emotion, literally non-sense. Of course, this view itself was
not empirically verifiable, but it became the dominant view for nearly fifty years.
In the second half of the century, increasing historical analysis of science began to
show the close relationship between science and culture and the way science
changes with shifting cultural ideas and values.
In the twentieth century, certain fundamentalist Christian groups who saw the
natural sciences in opposition to a more literal interpretation of the Bible embraced
the warfare model. For example, a recent book by Henry Morris, president of the
Institute for Creation Research, that attacks the theory of evolution is entitled The
Long War against God. The book treats modern evolutionary theory as the continuation
of Satans attempt to dethrone God. At times the popular media assume
the conflict view in discussing the relation between science and religion, often concluding
that science disproves religion.
Do cooperation and convergence offer a legitimate model of understanding issues
at the intersection of natural science and Christian faith?
A more fruitful and historically accurate approach to the relation between science
and Christianity is one of cooperation and convergence rather than confrontation
and conflict. This view emphasizes the Augustinian idea that all truth is Gods
truth and that advances in science should be seen as adding to Gods revelation in
nature. In such a view, the content of Christian theology will sometimes influence
and motivate scientific work, and discoveries in the natural sciences will sometimes
clarify and correct Christian thought.
Some of the most important features that distinguish modern science from its
ancient Greek heritage can be identified in the early centuries of the Christian
church, especially in the christological controversies that dominated Christian theology
for more than a millennium. Christian ideas have influenced scientific thinking
at several points in history. Such ideas are also essential in any attempt to
understand science from a Christian perspective.
An understanding of the divinity of Christ emerged early in Christian thought,
leading to a stronger foundation for theoretical science.
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