The Bible, Protestantism, and the Rise of Natural ScienceCambridge University Press, 26. jul. 2001 - 313 sider In this book, Dr. Harrison examines the role played by the bible in the emergence of natural science. He shows how both the contents of the bible, and more particularly the way it was interpreted, had a profound influence on conceptions of nature from the third century to the seventeenth. The rise of modern science is linked to the Protestant approach to texts, an approach which spelt an end to the symbolic world of the middle ages, and established the conditions for the scientific investigation and technological exploitation of nature. |
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Side 5
... Bacon . The suggestion that puritanism might have acted as a catalyst in the develop- ment of modern science was subsequently adopted by R. F. Jones in Ancients and Moderns ( 1936 ) , and Robert K. Merton , ' Puritanism , Pietism , and ...
... Bacon . The suggestion that puritanism might have acted as a catalyst in the develop- ment of modern science was subsequently adopted by R. F. Jones in Ancients and Moderns ( 1936 ) , and Robert K. Merton , ' Puritanism , Pietism , and ...
Side 61
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Side 64
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Side 82
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Side 90
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Indhold
Worlds visible and invisible | 11 |
THE THREE SENSES | 15 |
WORDS AND THINGS | 28 |
Sensible signs and spoken words | 34 |
THE DISCOVERY OF NATURE | 39 |
THE WHOLE AND THE PARTS | 44 |
RESTORING LOST LIKENESSES | 56 |
The two reformations | 64 |
The purpose of nature | 161 |
DIVINE DESIGNS AND HUMAN UTILITIES | 169 |
THE CENTRE OF THE UNIVERSE | 177 |
THE NATURAL WORLD AND THE MORAL ORDER | 185 |
GOD AND THE BOOK OF NATURE | 193 |
Eden restored | 205 |
THE FALL | 211 |
THE DELUGE AND CONFUSION OF TONGUES | 222 |
TEXTS AND THE EMPIRICAL WORLD | 78 |
NEW WORLDS | 82 |
CORRUPT TEXTS AND REFORMED RELIGION | 92 |
THE LITERAL SENSE AND THE MATERIAL WORLD | 107 |
Rereading the two books | 121 |
TYPOLOGY AND ACCOMMODATION | 129 |
THE COSMOLOGY OF MOSES | 138 |
THE SCIENCE OF THE LAST THINGS | 147 |
REVERSING THE CURSE | 226 |
REPLANTING THE GARDEN | 235 |
LEARNING THE LANGUAGE OF NATURE | 249 |
Conclusion | 266 |
274 | |
306 | |
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
Adam allegorical ancient animals Aquinas argued Aristotle Augustine authority Bacon beasts Bible biblical body book of nature Boyle Burnet Christian Church Commentary creation creatures Deluge Derham Discourse divine doctrine earth Edwards English Epistle Dedicatory exegetes Franzius Galileo garden Genesis God's Hakewill heaven hermeneutical Hexameron Honorius Augustodunensis Hugh of St Ibid interpretation John knowledge Leibniz literal sense London Luther meaning medieval microcosm Middle Ages modern moral Moses natural history natural objects natural philosophy natural world Newton observed Origen original Paracelsus paradise Philo physical Physico-Theology Physiologus plants Platonic Pluche Protestant Protestant Reformation Pseudodoxia Epidemica Puritanism Reformation religion religious resurrection Robert Robert Boyle Robert Grosseteste sacred Samuel Hartlib scientific scripture serpent seventeenth century similitudes soul spiritual Stephen Switzer symbolic texts theological Theory things of nature Thomas thought tion tradition Treatise truths unicorn Webster Whiston William William of Auvergne Wisdom words writings wrote
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Side 1 - Philosophy is written in this grand book, the universe, which stands continually open to our gaze. But the book cannot be understood unless one first learns to comprehend the language and read the letters in which it is composed. It is written in the language of mathematics...