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    Science and Religion_A Very Short Introduction


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      Science and Religion: A Very Short Introduction

      * * *

      VERY SHORT INTRODUCTIONS are for anyone wanting a stimulating and accessible way in to a new subject. They are written by experts, and have been published in more than 25 languages worldwide.

      The series began in 1995, and now represents a wide variety of topics in history, philosophy, religion, science, and the humanities. Over the next few years it will grow to a library of around 200 volumes – a Very Short Introduction to everything from ancient Egypt and Indian philosophy to conceptual art and cosmology.

      * * *

      Very Short Introductions available now:

      AFRICAN HISTORY John Parker and Richard Rathbone

      AMERICAN POLITICAL PARTIES AND ELECTIONS L. Sandy Maisel

      THE AMERICAN PRESIDENCY Charles O. Jones

      ANARCHISM Colin Ward

      ANCIENT EGYPT Ian Shaw

      ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY Julia Annas

      ANCIENT WARFARE Harry Sidebottom

      ANGLICANISM Mark Chapman

      THE ANGLO-SAXON AGE John Blair

      ANIMAL RIGHTS David DeGrazia

      ANTISEMITISM Steven Beller

      ARCHAEOLOGY Paul Bahn

      ARCHITECTURE Andrew Ballantyne

      ARISTOTLE Jonathan Barnes

      ART HISTORY Dana Arnold

      ART THEORY Cynthia Freeland

      THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY Michael Hoskin

      ATHEISM Julian Baggini

      AUGUSTINE Henry Chadwick

      BARTHES Jonathan Culler

      BESTSELLERS John Sutherland

      THE BIBLE John Riches

      THE BRAIN Michael O’Shea

      BRITISH POLITICS Anthony Wright

      BUDDHA Michael Carrithers

      BUDDHISM Damien Keown

      BUDDHIST ETHICS Damien Keown

      CAPITALISM James Fulcher

      THE CELTS Barry Cunliffe

      CHAOS Leonard Smith

      CHOICE THEORY Michael Allingham

      CHRISTIAN ART Beth Williamson

      CHRISTIANITY Linda Woodhead

      CLASSICS Mary Beard and John Henderson

      CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY Helen Morales

      CLAUSEWITZ Michael Howard

      THE COLD WAR Robert McMahon

      CONSCIOUSNESS Susan Blackmore

      CONTEMPORARY ART Julian Stallabrass

      CONTINENTAL PHILOSOPHY Simon Critchley

      COSMOLOGY Peter Coles

      THE CRUSADES Christopher Tyerman

      CRYPTOGRAPHY Fred Piper and Sean Murphy

      DADA AND SURREALISM David Hopkins

      DARWIN Jonathan Howard

      THE DEAD SEA SCROLLS Timothy Lim

      DEMOCRACY Bernard Crick

      DESCARTES Tom Sorell

      DESIGN John Heskett

      DINOSAURS David Norman

      DOCUMENTARY FILM Patricia Aufderheide

      DREAMING J. Allan Hobson

      DRUGS Leslie Iversen

      THE EARTH Martin Redfern

      ECONOMICS Partha Dasgupta

      EGYPTIAN MYTH Geraldine Pinch

      EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY BRITAIN Paul Langford

      THE ELEMENTS Philip Ball

      EMOTION Dylan Evans

      EMPIRE Stephen Howe

      ENGELS Terrell Carver

      ETHICS Simon Blackburn

      THE EUROPEAN UNION John Pinder and Simon Usherwood

      EVOLUTION Brian and Deborah Charlesworth

      EXISTENTIALISM Thomas Flynn

      FASCISM Kevin Passmore

      FEMINISM Margaret Walters

      THE FIRST WORLD WAR Michael Howard

      FOSSILS Keith Thomson

      FOUCAULT Gary Gutting

      FREE WILL Thomas Pink

      THE FRENCH REVOLUTION William Doyle

      FREUD Anthony Storr

      FUNDAMENTALISM Malise Ruthven

      GALAXIES John Gribbin

      GALILEO Stillman Drake

      GAME THEORY Ken Binmore

      GANDHI Bhikhu Parekh

      GEOGRAPHY John A. Matthews and David T. Herbert

      GEOPOLITICS Klaus Dodds

      GERMAN LITERATURE Nicholas Boyle

      GLOBAL CATASTROPHES Bill McGuire

      GLOBALIZATION Manfred Steger

      GLOBAL WARMING Mark Maslin

      THE GREAT DEPRESSION AND

      THE NEW DEAL Eric Rauchway

      HABERMAS James Gordon Finlayson

      HEGEL Peter Singer

      HEIDEGGER Michael Inwood

      HIEROGLYPHS Penelope Wilson

      HINDUISM Kim Knott

      HISTORY John H. Arnold

      HISTORY OF LIFE Michael Benton

      HISTORY OF MEDICINE William Bynum

      HIV/AIDS Alan Whiteside

      HOBBES Richard Tuck

      HUMAN EVOLUTION Bernard Wood

      HUMAN RIGHTS Andrew Clapham

      HUME A. J. Ayer

      IDEOLOGY Michael Freeden

      INDIAN PHILOSOPHY Sue Hamilton

      INTELLIGENCE Ian J. Deary

      INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION Khalid Koser

      INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Paul Wilkinson

      ISLAM Malise Ruthven

      JOURNALISM Ian Hargreaves

      JUDAISM Norman Solomon

      JUNG Anthony Stevens

      KABBALAH Joseph Dan

      KAFKA Ritchie Robertson

      KANT Roger Scruton

      KIERKEGAARD Patrick Gardiner

      THE KORAN Michael Cook

      LAW Raymond Wacks

      LINGUISTICS Peter Matthews

      LITERARY THEORY Jonathan Culler

      LOCKE John Dunn

      LOGIC Graham Priest

      MACHIAVELLI Quentin Skinner

      THE MARQUIS DE SADE John Phillips

      MARX Peter Singer

      MATHEMATICS Timothy Gowers

      THE MEANING OF LIFE Terry Eagleton

      MEDICAL ETHICS Tony Hope

      MEDIEVAL BRITAIN John Gillingham and Ralph A. Griffiths

      MEMORY Jonathan Foster

      MODERN ART David Cottington

      MODERN CHINA Rana Mitter

      MODERN IRELAND Senia Pašeta

      MOLECULES Philip Ball

      MORMONISM Richard Lyman Bushman

      MUSIC Nicholas Cook

      MYTH Robert A. Segal

      NATIONALISM Steven Grosby

      NELSON MANDELA Elleke Boehmer

      THE NEW TESTAMENT AS LITERATURE Kyle Keefer

      NEWTON Robert Iliffe

      NIETZSCHE Michael Tanner

      NINETEENTH-CENTURY BRITAIN Christopher Harvie and H. C. G. Matthew

      NORTHERN IRELAND Marc Mulholland

      NUCLEAR WEAPONS Joseph M. Siracusa

      THE OLD TESTAMENT Michael D. Coogan

      PARTICLE PHYSICS Frank Close

      PAUL E. P. Sanders

      PHILOSOPHY Edward Craig

      PHILOSOPHY OF LAW Raymond Wacks

      PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE Samir Okasha

      PHOTOGRAPHY Steve Edwards

      PLATO Julia Annas

      POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY David Miller

      POLITICS Kenneth Minogue

      POSTCOLONIALISM Robert Young

      POSTMODERNISM Christopher Butler

      POSTSTRUCTURALISM Catherine Belsey

      PREHISTORY Chris Gosden

      PRESOCRATIC PHILOSOPHY Catherine Osborne

      PSYCHIATRY Tom Burns

      PSYCHOLOGY Gillian Butler and Freda McManus

      THE QUAKERS Pink Dandelion

      QUANTUM THEORY John Polkinghorne

      RACISM Ali Rattansi

      THE RENAISSANCE Jerry Brotton

      RENAISSANCE ART Geraldine A. Johnson

      ROMAN BRITAIN Peter Salway

      THE ROMAN EMPIRE Christopher Kelly

      ROUSSEAU Robert Wokler

    &nb
    sp; RUSSELL A. C. Grayling

      RUSSIAN LITERATURE Catriona Kelly

      THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION S. A. Smith

      SCHIZOPHRENIA Chris Frith and Eve Johnstone

      SCHOPENHAUER Christopher Janaway

      SCIENCE AND RELIGION Thomas Dixon

      SEXUALITY Véronique Mottier

      SHAKESPEARE Germaine Greer

      SIKHISM Eleanor Nesbitt

      SOCIAL AND CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY John Monaghan and Peter Just

      SOCIALISM Michael Newman

      SOCIOLOGY Steve Bruce

      SOCRATES C. C. W. Taylor

      THE SPANISH CIVIL WAR Helen Graham

      SPINOZA Roger Scruton

      STUART BRITAIN John Morrill

      TERRORISM Charles Townshend

      THEOLOGY David F. Ford

      THE HISTORY OF TIME Leofranc Holford-Strevens

      TRAGEDY Adrian Poole

      THE TUDORS John Guy

      TWENTIETH-CENTURY BRITAIN Kenneth O. Morgan

      THE VIKINGS Julian Richards

      WITTGENSTEIN A. C. Grayling

      WORLD MUSIC Philip Bohlman

      THE WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION Amrita Narlikar

      Available soon:

      1066 George Garnett

      AUTISM Uta Frith

      EXPRESSIONISM Katerina Reed-Tsocha

      RELIGION IN AMERICA Timothy Beal

      SCOTLAND Rab Houston

      STATISTICS David J. Hand

      THE UNITED NATIONS Jussi M. Hanhimáki

      THE VIETNAM WAR Mark Atwood Lawrence

      For more information visit our websites

      www.oup.com/uk/vsi

      www.oup.com/us

      Thomas Dixon

      SCIENCE AND RELIGION

      A Very Short Introduction

      Great Clarendon Street, Oxford OX2 6DP

      Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide in

      Oxford New York

      Auckland Cape Town Dar es Salaam Hong Kong Karachi Kuala Lumpur Madrid Melbourne Mexico City Nairobi New Delhi Shanghai Taipei Toronto

      With offices in

      Argentina Austria Brazil Chile Czech Republic France Greece Guatemala Hungary Italy Japan Poland Portugal Singapore South Korea Switzerland Thailand Turkey Ukraine Vietnam

      Oxford is a registered trade mark of Oxford University Press

      in the UK and in certain other countries

      Published in the United States

      by Oxford University Press Inc., New York

      © Thomas Dixon 2008

      The moral rights of the author have been asserted

      Database right Oxford University Press (maker)

      First published 2008

      All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of Oxford University Press, or as expressly permitted by law, or under terms agreed with the appropriate reprographics rights organization. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside the scope of the above should be sent to the Rights Department, Oxford University Press, at the address above

      You must not circulate this book in any other binding or cover

      and you must impose the same condition on any acquirer

      British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data

      Data available

      Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data

      Data available

      ISBN 978–0–19–929551–7

      1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2

      Typeset by SPI Publisher Services, Pondicherry, India

      Printed in Great Britain by

      Ashford Colour Press Ltd, Gosport, Hampshire

      For Emma Dixon

      Contents

      Preface

      Acknowledgements

      List of illustrations

      1 What are science–religion debates really about?

      2 Galileo and the philosophy of science

      3 Does God act in nature?

      4 Darwin and evolution

      5 Creationism and Intelligent Design

      6 Mind and morality

      References and further reading

      Index

      Preface

      Books about science and religion generally fall into one of two categories: those that want to persuade you of the plausibility of religion and those that want to do the opposite. This Very Short Introduction falls into neither category. It aims instead to offer an informative and even-handed account of what is really at stake. The polemical passion the subject often generates is an indication of the intensity with which people identify themselves with their beliefs about nature and God, whether they are religious or not. The origins and functions of those beliefs form the subject of this book.

      In recent years the topic of ‘science and religion’ has become almost synonymous, especially in the United States, with debates about evolution. For this reason, two of the six chapters of this book are devoted to evolutionary subjects. The modern American debate about evolution and ‘Intelligent Design’ illustrates particularly clearly how stories about conflict or harmony between science and religion can be used in political campaigns – in this case relating to the control of education and the interpretation of the First Amendment to the US Constitution.

      Historical notions about famous individuals, especially Galileo Galilei and Charles Darwin; philosophical assumptions about miracles, laws of nature, and scientific knowledge; and discussions of the religious and moral implications of modern science, from quantum mechanics to neuroscience, are regular features of science–religion debates today. All of these are scrutinized here.

      It is no part of my aim in this book to persuade people to stop disagreeing with each other about science and religion – far from it. My hope is only that it might help people to disagree with each other in a well-informed way.

      Acknowledgements

      I was first introduced to this fascinating topic, as an undergraduate student, by Fraser Watts’s lectures on theology and science at Cambridge University, and by John Hedley Brooke’s classic Science and Religion: Some Historical Perspectives (Cambridge, 1991). Subsequently, as a postgraduate, I was taught at the Universities of London and Cambridge by distinguished historians and philosophers of science, including Janet Browne, Hasok Chang, Rob Iliffe, Peter Lipton, Jim Moore, and Jim Secord. I am indebted to all of them and to the supportive and stimulating research environment I encountered in Cambridge both at the Department for the History and Philosophy of Science and in the Faculty of Divinity. I am also grateful for the support of colleagues, in more recent years, in Lancaster and London. I would particularly like to mention Stephen Pumfrey and Angus Winchester at Lancaster University, and Geoffrey Cantor for his help with the organization of a conference there on ‘Science and Religion: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives’ in July 2007 to mark John Hedley Brooke’s retirement. I learned a great deal from all the contributors to that conference. Most recently I have benefited from the guidance and encouragement of my colleagues at Queen Mary, University of London, especially Virginia Davis, Colin Jones, Miri Rubin, Yossef Rapoport, Rhodri Hayward, Joel Isaac, and Tristram Hunt. Emilie Savage-Smith and Salman Hameed have given me much-appreciated guidance on the subject of Islam and science. At Oxford University Press, Marsha Filion, Andrea Keegan, and James Thompson helped me through the production process with patience, skill, and enthusiasm. Fiona Orbell acquired the images and necessary permissions with great speed and efficiency, and Alyson Silverwood ensured that the text was copyedited to the highest standard. Special thanks are due to those friends who took the time and trouble to read drafts of the text and offer me advice on how to improve it, namely Emily Butterworth, Noam Friedlander, James Humphreys, Finola Lang, Dan Neidle, Trevor Sather, Léon Turner, and especially Giles Shilson. My greatest debt is to my family. The book is dedicated to my sister Emma, who advised me to become an academic and no
    t a lawyer.

     


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