Showing Results for
- Academic Journals (610)
Search Results
- 610
Academic Journals
- 610
- 1From:The Midwest Quarterly (Vol. 49, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedRECENT YEARS HAVE WITNESSED sharply divergent accounts of the history of the relationship between science and religion. On one extreme there is the "warfare hypothesis" set forth in early works such as John William...
- 2From:In die Skriflig (Vol. 48, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedGod did not create once and then put an end to it. Testimony from Scripture shows that God continuously establishes or creates new things. Humans can therefore expect to always see and experience new things in creation....
- 3From:Pediatrics (Vol. 111, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedObjectives. Identify pediatrician (faculty and resident) beliefs about spirituality and religion (SR) in medicine and the relationship of those beliefs to SR behavior and experiences in clinical practice. Methods. A...
- 4From:The Futurist (Vol. 33, Issue 8) Peer-ReviewedIs God Dead? Not according to philosopher Robert MeLLert, who suggests that humanity's scientific progress may change our conception of God rather than extinguish faith. Toward the end of the nineteenth century, the...
- 5From:Omni (Vol. 14, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedThe existence of man is closely related to the existence of the universe and the laws that govern it. Sir Isaac Newton and other scientists of his time believed that the laws of physics were thoughts in the mind of God....
- 6From:Mosaic: An interdisciplinary critical journal (Vol. 49, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAlasdair Gray's prize-winning novel Poor Things, postmodern in its game-playing with literary conventions, critiques, within a neo-Victorian historical frame, oppressive institutions and ideologies, but not without...
- 7From:Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith (Vol. 70, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe church has long discussed the nature of the human-divine relationship. A key point of contention has been what it might mean to say that humans are "fallen" or "broken" creatures, heirs of original sin. As science...
- 8From:Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith (Vol. 71, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedIn his letter responding to my article "Doubt and Faith in Science and Religion" (PSCF 70, no. 2 [2018]: 90-100), Martin Huizinga argues that many actual observations and experiences are not contingent on any...
- 9From:Science & Spirit (Vol. 18, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedIt's one of the most compelling stories ever told. A group of ignorant church officials beat up on an old man, who had scientific "truth" in his grasp. Then they threw him into a medieval dungeon. There he...
- 10From:NeuroQuantology: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Neuroscience and Quantum Physics (Vol. 14, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedIn 2003, the four of us spent several weeks in Calabria, Italy. We interviewed local people about folk healing remedies, attended a Feast Day honoring St. Cosma and St. Damian, and paid two visits to the Shrine of...
- 11From:Afterimage (Vol. 36, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedMy work explores visual interpretations of stories about science and religion. Whether scientific or religious truth, these intellects rarely agree. This work metaphorically alludes to the clash between logic and faith...
- 12From:The Councilor: A Journal of the Social Sciences (Vol. 75, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAlvin Plantinga, Where the Conflict Really Lies: Science, Religion, and Naturalism Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011. In Where the Conflict Really Lies: Science, Religion, and Naturalism, Alvin Plantinga presents a...
- 13From:HTS Teologiese Studies (Vol. 74, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIs there a metaphorical wall that separates science and religion? In the continued interaction between science and religion, the questions of ontology (what is there?) and epistemology (how do we know what is there?)...
- 14From:Currents in Theology and Mission (Vol. 41, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedWhy do theologians need to know science? I came to Wartburg Seminary in 1979 with a background in physics and a conviction that it was important for the church to speak about relationships between Christian faith and...
- 15From:Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith (Vol. 63, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThis article recommends that more intentional focus on the theological character of the biblical message that involves the work of the Holy Spirit can be helpful in resisting the concordism, prevalent in some...
- 16From:Buddhist-Christian Studies (Vol. 31) Peer-ReviewedMuch of the discussion in current science-religion dialogue focuses on "limit" or "boundary" questions. (1) In the natural sciences, boundary questions are questions that arise in scientific research that cannot be...
- 17From:Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith (Vol. 64, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedEmpowerment of the very poor to produce sufficient, healthful food for personal consumption and trade is critical to the reduction of chronic hunger and poverty. To produce food in a sustainable way that does not...
- 18From:Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith (Vol. 64, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedDonald A. Huebner, "Biblical Longevities: Some Questions and Issues" (PSCF 63, no. 4 [2011]: 287-8) has published a five-point critique of my article on biblical longevities, "Biblical Longevities: Empirical Data or...
- 19From:First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life (Issue 194)The conversation between science and religion has suffered two sad losses recently, with the deaths of Peter E. Hodgson, the English physicist, on December 8, and Fr. Stanley L. Jaki, the historian and philosopher of...
- 20From:Nature (Vol. 454, Issue 7202) Peer-ReviewedWhen a wealthy individual seeks to leave a legacy through scientific philanthropy, researchers usually greet such generosity enthusiastically. But the death of investment mogul John Templeton marks an unusual, and...