Table of Contents
-
Book Overview
-
Chapter 1
Unavoidable Pluralism in Theology and Transitory Pluralism in Science? Mapping the Diversity
-
Chapter 2
Image, Metaphor, and Understanding in Science and Theology
-
Chapter 3
Science and Religion Complement Each Other, Not Compete with One another
-
Chapter 4
The Role of Images in the Social Construction of (Un-)Availability: Theoretical Considerations and Empirical Illustrations
-
Chapter 5
Telling Stories in the Pluriverse: Decolonial Options for Creative Pluralism
-
Chapter 6
On the Importance of Reaching a ‘Maturation Point’ Before Science and Religion Can Interact
-
Chapter 7
The Holism of the New Physics and Its Openness to the Modern Sense of the ‘Religious’
-
Chapter 8
Shifts in the Scientific Mind: Mapping Einstein’s Views on Imagination
-
Chapter 9
Models, Muddles, and Metaphors of the Transcendent
-
Chapter 10
On the Hard Problem of Consciousness: How a Naturalist (Representational) Epistemological Understanding Can Be Easily Harmonized with Developments in Neuroscience, and Post-modern Critique
-
Chapter 11
Imagining the Infinite: Transcendent Models as a Fundamental Nexus Between Science and Religion
-
Chapter 12
The Selective Awareness Experiment: An Argument for Causal Pluralism
-
Chapter 13
Models for Intertwining God’s Story and the Universe Story
-
Chapter 14
Nescience: A Contrast in the Uses of Models Within Science and Theology
-
Chapter 15
Christology, Psychology, and Participation: A Model for Relating Psychological and Theological Understandings of Humanity
-
Chapter 16
Dynamic Systems Theory Meets Theological Anthropology: A Case Study on the Use of Scientific Models in Theological Inquiry
-
Chapter 17
Does Pluralism Itself Need to Be Plural?
-
Chapter 18
Images, Metaphors, and Models in the Quest for Sustainability: The Overlapping Geography of Scientific and Religious Insights
-
Chapter 19
Towards a New Understanding of Embodiment: Alternative Models to the Western Mind-Body Relationship
Attention for Chapter 3:
Science and Religion Complement Each Other, Not Compete with One another