Biology and Christian EthicsThis stimulating and wide-ranging book mounts a profound enquiry into some of the most pressing questions of our age, by examining the relationship between biological science and Christianity. The history of biological discovery is explored from the point of view of a leading philosopher and ethicist. What effect should modern biological theory and practice have on Christian understanding of ethics? How much of that theory and practice should Christians endorse? Can Christians, for example, agree that biological changes are not governed by transcendent values, or that there are no clear or essential boundaries between species? To what extent can 'Nature' set our standards? Professor Clark takes a reasoned look at biological theory since Darwin and argues that an orthodox Christian philosophy is better able to accommodate the truth of such theory than is the sort of progressive, meliorist interpretation of Christian doctrine which is usually offered as the properly 'modern' option. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 36
Page 4
... material nature , a man may easily have his very senses bewildered ; ... he may become so frozen up , by a too long continued and exclusively material study , as to lose his relish for moral truth , and his vivacity in apprehending it ...
... material nature , a man may easily have his very senses bewildered ; ... he may become so frozen up , by a too long continued and exclusively material study , as to lose his relish for moral truth , and his vivacity in apprehending it ...
Page 13
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Page 14
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Page 16
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Page 25
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
actually ancestors animals Aristotle beauty believe better biological breed C. S. Lewis Cambridge University Press chance characters Christian Ethics civilized claim create creatures Darwin Darwinian Darwinists demand descendants dogs E. O. Wilson earth effect Enneads evolution Evolution of Sex evolutionary exist expect fact feel females forms G. K. Chesterton genes genetic God's human imagine individual insist intellect intelligence Jesus judgement kill kind less lineage living London males Manichaean matter Metaphysics mind Mismeasure modern moral moralists natural selection Nicomachean Ethics non-human obvious offspring once organisms ourselves parents particular pederasty perhaps phenotypic philosophers Plato pleasure Plotinus population possible probably problem reason religion scientists seems selfish selfish gene sense sexual share slaves social society sort species Stephen Jay Gould Stoic story suggest suppose survive theory things thought tion true truth variations virtue Whewell wish wrong