Modern Physics and Ancient Faith explained

Modern Physics and Ancient Faith (2003) is a book by Stephen M. Barr, a physicist from the University of Delaware[1] and frequent contributor to First Things. This book is "an extended attack" on what Barr calls scientific materialism. National Review says of the book: "[A] lucid and engaging survey of modern physics and its relation to religious belief. . . . Barr has produced a stunning tour de force . . . [a] scientific and philosophical breakthrough."[2]

Contents

The book is divided into five parts spanning 26 chapters. The main religious and philosophical themes include determinism, mind as a machine, anthropic principle, and the big bang theory.[3] Its main thesis is that science and religion only appear in conflict because many have "conflated science with philosophical materialism."

Reviews

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Modern Physics and Ancient Faith // Books // University of Notre Dame Press . undpress.nd.edu . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090210055954/http://undpress.nd.edu/book/P00848 . 2009-02-10.
  2. Stephen P. Weldon. Isis, December 2004, volume 95 issue 4, p. 742-743