Skip to:ContentBottom
Cover image for Knowing the Unknowable : Science and the Religions on God and the Universe.
Knowing the Unknowable : Science and the Religions on God and the Universe.
Title:
Knowing the Unknowable : Science and the Religions on God and the Universe.
Author:
Bowker, John.
ISBN:
9780857714114
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (289 pages)
Contents:
Cover -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Notes on Contributors -- Preface -- Introduction: The Unknowable as Invitation in Science and Religion - John Bowker -- 1. A Taxonomy of Absence - John Rodwell -- 2. Understanding the Radiant Sun: The Unknown and the Unknowable in an Example of Scientific Approach - Ramanath Cowsik -- 3. From the Unknowability of the Universe to the 'Teleology of Reason: a Phenomenological Insight into Apophatic Cosmology - Alexei V. Nesteruk -- 4. On Knowing the Unknowable: Immanuel Kant and the Unknowable Real - Keith Ward -- 5. Three Forms of Negativity in Christian Mysticism - Bernard McGinn -- 6. On Clouds and Veils: Divine Presence and 'Feminine' Secrets in Revelation and Nature - Sarah Coakley -- 7. Knowing the Unknowable about God and the Universe: Humility, Hope and the End of Knowledge - Oliver Davies -- 8. The Unknowable Not Unknown: The Poetry of R.S.Thomas - Margaret Bowker -- 9. Knowing the Unknowable in Indian Traditions: Representation, Absence and Cosmology - Gavin Flood -- 10. Some Theological Reflections on Buddhism and the Unknowability and Hiddenness of God - Paul Williams -- 11. Divine Absence and the Purification of Desires: A Hindu Saint's Experience of a God Who Keeps his Distance - Francis X. Clooney, SJ -- Afterword: Knowing the Unknowable - Rowan Williams -- Index.
Abstract:
Albert Einstein once remarked that behind all observable things lay something quite unknowable. And the motivation for his own work in physics stemmed from something as apparently innocuous as his father first showing him a compass when he was a boy. Yet the wonder and inspiration of that moment , which he never forgot, led ultimately to his own stupendous scientific breakthroughs. This book explores that special territory perceived by Einstein: where the unknown takes over from everything that is understandable, familiar, explicable. And that interface between known and unknown is of the very greatest importance: it lies at the heart of the human quest to take knowledge beyond the boundaries of the known. It is what scientists do when they undertake their research, from the trajectories of comets to the replication of cells. But is is also what religious people do when they start to explore their relationship with what they perceive as the divine. Their mutual effort to 'know the unknowable' is a profoundly important way in which human beings explore the limits of themselves, as well as of the universe. Bringing together distinguished contributors, both scientists and theologians (including Rowan Williams the current Archbishop of Canterbury), to explore the implications of what such an invitation means in practice, this groundbreaking book explores important topics like cosmological absence, negativity in Christian mysticism, and the 'hiddenness' of God in Buddhism.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Electronic Access:
Click to View
Holds: Copies: