Book Description
Can Science and Religion Work Together, After All?
It's time for science and religion to stop shouting at each other and start talking with each other. This book leads the way. It is the result of an extraordinary ongoing conversation among a group of highly respected scientists, physicians, philosophers, and theologians. Together, they share profound insights into the deepest questions humans ask and explore the invisible forces and powerful beliefs that shape our lives. Their insights reflect both humanity's latest science and its most enduring wisdom. Their answers and questions will challenge you–and reward you with a richer understanding of who we are, what we share, and what it means.
What do we really know about human nature?
How do we see what we see, know what we know, feel what we feel?
How do people come to believe in God?
Where does empathy come from?
What can evolutionary psychology and neuroscience teach us about ethics?
What are the health benefits of faith?
Where do you end, and others begin?
What do marriage, family, and friendship mean?
How can people repair the broken connections that keep them lonely?
Who are we? What connects us to each other and to the universe? What makes human beings believe in their marriages, friends, families, societies, God?
Men and women have long sought to answer questions like these through religion. For centuries, they have been joined by scientists bringing increasingly powerful new methods and worldviews. Whether scientist or theologian, physician or philosopher, they share a quest: to understand the invisible forces and powerful beliefs that shape human life.
Today, these explorers have much to learn from each other. In the Chicago Social Brain Network, an interdisciplinary group of scholars have come together to exchange ideas across the boundaries that have divided science, religion, and philosophy for far too long.
This book invites you into their conversation and journey. Join them as they explore human nature and human connections: Discover what can be learned from evolutionary analyses and Plato, MRIs and the Gospel of Matthew.
- The social brain and the human journey
Is humanity marching towards cooperation and social resilience? - Why and how we connect
Our invisible relationships with each other–and our search for trust and meaning - “You and I" as one: mind and body, individual and society
Human language, neuronal substrates, synchrony, and social coordination - Belief, connection, and learning
How human beings construct their private experiences of God
About the Author
The Chicago Social Brain Project is an ongoing network of more than a dozen scholars unbounded by disciplinary precincts, geographical borders, or methodological perspectives. The Network’s goal is to set aside the antagonisms that have grown up between science and humanities in order to explore diverse ways of seeing the world, and shed new light on the human mind. Its scholars hail from psychology, neurology, theology, statistics, philosophy, internal medicine, anthropology, sociology, and other disciplines. Network members interact constantly, and the entire Network convenes twice annually for a four-day retreat to discuss, critique, and learn from each others’ work.
Book Details
- Hardcover: 240 pages
- Publisher: FT Press; 1 edition (October 18, 2010)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0137075456
- ISBN-13: 978-0137075454
[Normal] - FT.Press.Invisible.Forces.and.Powerful.Beliefs.May.2010.rar (21.9 MiB, 828 hits) [Direct] - FT.Press.Invisible.Forces.and.Powerful.Beliefs.May.2010.rar [Fast] - FT.Press.Invisible.Forces.and.Powerful.Beliefs.May.2010.rar |