Magisteria The entangled histories of science and religion

Nicholas Spencer

Book - 2023

"Most things you 'know' about science and religion are myths or half-truths. The real history of science and religion is rich, strange and personal. It's about the role of religion in inspiring, and strangling, science before the scientific revolution. It's about the sincere but eccentric faith and the quiet, creeping doubts of the most brilliant scientists in history. Above all, it's about the question of what it means to be human and who gets to say - an ever more urgent question in the twenty-first century. From eighth-century Baghdad to the frontiers of AI today, via medieval Europe, nineteenth-century India and Soviet Russia, Magisteria sheds a new light on this complex story."--Dust jacket flap.

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Subjects
Genres
History
Published
London, England : Oneworld Publications 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Nicholas Spencer (author)
Physical Description
xii, 467 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 419-450) and index.
ISBN
9780861544615
  • Introduction: The Natures of the Beast
  • The story of a story
  • Developing and destroying a myth
  • What is a human, and who gets to say?
  • Entanglement
  • Part 1. Science and Religion Before Science or Religion
  • 1. The Nature of Natural Philosophy: Science and Religion in the Ancient World
  • 'Her quivering limbs were delivered to the flames': placing a murder
  • 'All things are full of gods': scientia and religio
  • 'We have no need for curiosity beyond Christ Jesus': ambiguous attitudes
  • 'Do not let anyone ask if Moses is writing a work of astronomy': from the ruins
  • 2. A Fragile Brilliance: Science and Islam
  • 'There was no more science worth mentioning in Islamic countries': the case against Islamic science
  • 'O Philosopher … What is good?': golden years
  • 'Not as an invading force but as an invited guest': the case for Islamic science
  • 'The problems of physics are of no importance for us': the points of tension
  • 3. Ambiguous and Argumentative: Science and Judaism
  • 'Nature is so obedient to him': science in early Judaism
  • 'Our Gods are as numerous as our towns': varied believing
  • 'Apothecaries, cooks and bakers': Maimonides and the handmaiden
  • 'It was inevitable that the philosophers deny the Torah': the reaction
  • 4. Science in Christendom
  • 'A poignant lost opportunity': the so-called 'Middle' Ages
  • 'Between you and me, reason only shall be judge': medieval physicists
  • 'What else should authority be called but a bridle?': the coming of Aristotle
  • 'Nothing is better known because of knowing theology': fighting in Paris
  • 'According to the imagination': the birth of the thought experiment
  • 5. 1543 and All That
  • 'A memorable history of science and religion': not a revolution
  • 'The theologians will easily calm down': the revolution will be postponed
  • 'The indestructible sun [is] subject to destruction': the Wittenberg interpretation
  • 'A martyr for magic': the death of Bruno
  • Part 2. Genesis
  • 6. Galileo Galilei
  • 'A prisoner to the Inquisition': on meeting Galileo
  • 'Have faith, Galileo, and go forth': navigating a new world
  • 'Why stand ye gazing up into heaven?': rising star
  • 'How one goes to heaven and not how heaven goes': coming out writing
  • 'Who would there be to settle our controversies if Aristotle were deposed?': turning tides
  • 'I resorted to the natural gratification everyone feels for his own subtleties': endgame
  • 7. The Many Births of Science
  • 'Experimental Christians': 'Protestant' science
  • 'As pious as he is capable': 'Catholic' science
  • 'Not to intermeddle in Spiritual things': 'secular' science
  • 8. The Perils of Perfect Harmony
  • 'This most elegant system': religious enlightenment
  • 'On the wonderful secrets of nature': physico-theology
  • 'Our employment in heaven': science in the English Eden
  • 'Too much to deny and too little to be sure': underneath the harmony
  • 9. Mechanising the Soul
  • 'The mechanism of the human mind': machine learning
  • 'Make the theologians swallow the poison': animal cruelty
  • 'Let us not limit nature's resources': polyp power
  • 'It is a monster got of a man and she-baboon': blurred boundaries
  • 'Antagonists think they have quenched his opinions': the tide turning
  • Part 3. Exodus
  • 10. About Time
  • 'Into the abyss of time': naturalising Genesis
  • 'A barren Golgotha': the case of the brain
  • 'Gradual and slow improvement of human nature': a new future
  • 11. The Balance
  • 'Better than a dog anyhow': Marry. Not Marry.
  • 'Like confessing a murder': between Erasmus and Paley
  • 'An incalculable waste': grandeur and grief
  • 'I am sharpening up my claws': and so to Oxford
  • 12. Globalisation
  • 'Illuminate the dark paths': missionary science
  • 'The vileness and degeneracy of Europe: Western science
  • 'Our race is depressed enough': human science
  • 13. Peace and War
  • 'The science of dead matter': peace
  • 'An irreversible doom': war
  • Part 4. The Ongoing, Entangled Histories of Science and Religion
  • 14. The Trial of the Century
  • 'They are true parasites': America before Scopes
  • 'Civilisation is on trial': the road to Dayton
  • 'This is a battle between religion and science': the trial
  • 'Between science and Bryanism': aftermath
  • 15. Entangled and Uncertain
  • 'A purely scientific matter': the new physics
  • 'Spooky action at a distance': on not bringing down the house
  • 'A conscious and intelligent mind': Einstein and friends
  • 'Therefore, there is a Creator': a new beginning
  • 16. Infantile Delusions
  • 'The natural history of religion': primitive religion
  • 'A whole climate of opinion': infantile religion
  • 'Superstition, like belief, must die': revaluing religion
  • 17. Storming the Heavens
  • 'I'll give you my halo, you give me your helmet': religious science
  • 'People think of these men as not just superior men but different creatures': scientific religion
  • 18. Irreducibly Complex
  • 'Scratch an altruist': ending the mystery of human nature
  • 'Breath-taking inanity': anti-evolutionism 2.0
  • 'Replete with religious metaphors': irreducible complexity
  • 19. Artificial Anxieties
  • 'His brain was on fire': abnormal activity
  • 'Humans are merely tools': Alpocalypse now
  • 'We should not be irreverently usurping His power': taking the Test
  • Notes
  • Further Reading
  • Acknowledgements
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Spencer (Darwin and God), a senior fellow at Christian think tank Theos, surveys the entwined history of science and religion in this dense, ambitious outing. From the classical world until the present, Spencer argues, science and religion have not been locked in an "endless war," and, conversely, they have often worked hand-in-hand. For instance, the first successful attempt to measure the effect of pressure on the temperature and volume of a gas was "based in the gardens of a monastery, drew on the help of its monks, conducted by the Catholic Florin Périer suggested... by the Catholic Descartes." Meanwhile, Isaac Newton contended that the solar system "could not have arisen without the design" of an "intelligent" being. Spencer touches on the Islamic "Golden Age" of science and draws links between Protestantism and empiricism in 18th-century Europe, spurred partly by a reading of scripture that posited "humans were created to know." The most provocative section probes artificial intelligence and the question of "what/who is the human... and who gets to decide?"--a dilemma that has preoccupied religious thinkers over time. While Spencer presents a nuanced account, it sprawls to its detriment and hinges on arguments that often rely on a glut of repetitive anecdotes rather than deeper analyses. Readers will have to be patient to get the most out of this. (May)

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