Book contents
- Frontmatter
- CONTENTS
- List of Contributors
- List of Figures
- Introduction
- Part I Methodological Issues
- Part II Historical Issues
- Part III Contemporary Issues
- 8 ‘Rescuing Darwin’ in Brazil
- 9 The Creationist/Evolutionist Debate, from Science to Myth
- 10 ‘Person’ as Converging Notion for Neuroscience, Philosophy and Religion
- 11 Indeterminism and Pluralism in Nature: From Science to Philosophy and Theology
- Notes
- Index
11 - Indeterminism and Pluralism in Nature: From Science to Philosophy and Theology
from Part III - Contemporary Issues
- Frontmatter
- CONTENTS
- List of Contributors
- List of Figures
- Introduction
- Part I Methodological Issues
- Part II Historical Issues
- Part III Contemporary Issues
- 8 ‘Rescuing Darwin’ in Brazil
- 9 The Creationist/Evolutionist Debate, from Science to Myth
- 10 ‘Person’ as Converging Notion for Neuroscience, Philosophy and Religion
- 11 Indeterminism and Pluralism in Nature: From Science to Philosophy and Theology
- Notes
- Index
Summary
The relationship between determinism and freedom has been one of the main concerns in philosophy throughout history. Many philosophers have opposed freedom (or chance) to necessity (or causality) when discussing whether freedom is present or not in the connection between processes and their results, as a way to differentiate between necessary (or causal) processes and free (or random) processes. Different definitions and notions have been used in the debates over determinism. On the one hand, the terms contingency, randomness, emergency, uncertainty, free will and freedom seem to point to an indeterministic position on reality. On the other hand, the notions of necessity, causation, law-likeness, predictability and fatalism seem to suggest a deterministic stance. But does science properly distinguish between these notions? If so, how does it do this? Furthermore, how does philosophy contribute towards the elucidation of such distinctions? Does a deterministic or an indeterministic world view affect theological thought?
In the deterministic view, everything that has happened (past), everything that happens (present) and everything that will happen (future) is already determined, conditioned or established. During the classical and medieval periods, determinism had a metaphysical connotation, derived from the principle of universal causation. In modern times, however, deterministic conceptions laid their theoretical foundations in scientific knowledge and were associated with the notions of prediction and law-likeness. Paradigmatic mechanistic determinism regarded the world as a great clockwork-like system.
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- Information
- Latin American Perspectives on Science and Religion , pp. 135 - 146Publisher: Pickering & ChattoFirst published in: 2014