Book contents
- Religion After Science
- Cambridge Studies in Religion, Philosophy, and Society
- Religion After Science
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Prologue: The 10,000-Year Test
- 1 Development and the Divine
- 2 The End Is Not Near
- 3 Big Ambitions
- 4 A Poor Record
- 5 Verdict: Immature, Not Doomed
- 6 A New Path for Science and Religion
- 7 The New Agnosticism
- 8 Naturalism Tamed
- 9 Agnostic Religion?
- 10 The New Humanism
- Epilogue: The Religion Project
- Notes
- Index
Prologue: The 10,000-Year Test
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 August 2019
- Religion After Science
- Cambridge Studies in Religion, Philosophy, and Society
- Religion After Science
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Prologue: The 10,000-Year Test
- 1 Development and the Divine
- 2 The End Is Not Near
- 3 Big Ambitions
- 4 A Poor Record
- 5 Verdict: Immature, Not Doomed
- 6 A New Path for Science and Religion
- 7 The New Agnosticism
- 8 Naturalism Tamed
- 9 Agnostic Religion?
- 10 The New Humanism
- Epilogue: The Religion Project
- Notes
- Index
Summary
Until little more than 200 years ago, almost everyone who contemplated the history of humanity went back only a few thousand years in time. People who entertained thoughts about the future regarded the end of the human story as nearer than the beginning. Those doing science or philosophy or commenting on religion imagined such activities to be nearing – or to have crossed – the finish line. Then came the discovery of deep geological time and evolution … And virtually nothing changed.
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- Religion after ScienceThe Cultural Consequences of Religious Immaturity, pp. 1 - 6Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019