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Can science explain everything? door John C.…
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Can science explain everything? (editie 2019)

door John C. Lennox

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An inspiring new perspective on the science versus religion debate. Can science explain everything? Many people think so. Science, and the technologies it has spawned, has delivered so much to the world: clean water; more food; better healthcare; longer life. And we live in a time of rapid scientific progress that holds enormous promise for many of the problems we face as humankind. So much so, in fact, that many see no need or use for religion and belief systems that offer us answers to the mysteries of our universe. Science has explained it, they assume. Science and religion just do not mix. Oxford Maths Professor and Christian believer Prof. John Lennox offers a fresh way of thinking about science and Christianity that dispels the common misconceptions about both. He reveals that not only are they not opposed, but they can and must mix to give us a fuller understanding of the universe and the meaning of our existence. John Lennox is Professor of Mathematics at the University of Oxford and Fellow in Mathematics and Philosophy of Science at Green Templeton College.… (meer)
Lid:cathadley
Titel:Can science explain everything?
Auteurs:John C. Lennox
Info:[place of publication not identified] : The Good Book Company, [2019],℗♭2019.
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Can Science Explain Everything? door John Lennox

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Can science explain everything - it's a tall order Professor Lennox!



MULTIPLE DIMENSIONS - General

Firstly, because of great modern sciences such as quantum mechanics, science has led to to things such as string theory and multiple dimensions. How can science map and and explain what occurs in these multiple dimensions? If we have problems mapping out and explaing what occurs in our 3D world, then what about the world of multiple dimensions?



MULTIPLE DIMENSIONS - Gravity

How can we even explain, to any great level of completenes, what occurs to parts of our own 3D world, when, for example, it is believed in string theory / multiple dimensions that gravity, for example, passes out of our 3D world and into other dimensions and then returns back into our 3D world, again - as proposed to exlain why gravity is so much weaker than the other main forces.



ORIGINS versus NATURE OF Time / Space / Matter

Science can do a lot about explaining the nature of time / space / matter. But it's new ball games when it comes to explaining the origins of time / space / matter. Either time / space / matter came out of absolute nothingness (?) or have existed, in some shape or form, infinetly (?)



NOMINAL VALUES OF MATHEMATICS?

Why does Maths exist? Why is pi 3.14159265 (when the pefect cicles doesn't exist in the natural world). The perfect circle is nominal.



DO YOU BELIEVE IN SPIRITUAL EXISTENCE OR NOT? If spiritual existence exists, then can science explain everything about it? Surely science can only explain time / space / matter?



FREE WILL

If we are just made of material substance, then how are we able to escape the predetermined laws of the natural world on the one hand, and the blind chaotic world of the natural world on the other to have free will?



BEAUTY IN INANIMATE NATURE?

Why do people recongize beauty in inanimate nature (i.e. the sun setting on a canyon as opposed to the beauty in a peacock's tail? - so non-functional beauty as opposed to functional beauty - the functional beauty of the peacock's tail leads to the peacock finding a mate for procreation - there is no purpose in the sun being beautiful). Sure, not all might find the sun beautiful, but there is something in inanimate nature that we all fine beautifull - and even if we don't, we can all understand the concept of beauty in inanimate nature. Why? What is this thing beauty?



LOVE / COMPASSION

Can science explain why men fall for women who tick less of the biological boxes for finding a partner and passing on the genese. For example, a man chooses woman A over woman B. Woman A has poor child-bearing hips, poor child-rearing body, weak body, dried up breasts, warts on her hands, a beard to boot! He chooses her over woman B who is, physically, perfect for bearing and bringing up children, is strong and healthy, with voluptuous breasts, and a beautiful face. But the man just prefers woman A. He is "in love" with her. He loves her personality. She is much more fun and interesting than woman B (even if woman B is more intelligent, too).

- What's going on here?

And what's going on with the strong man who passes a poor, old dying beggar in the ditch. By helping the old man, the young strong man gains nothing for himself or for his friends or family or perhaps society in general (except in a "moral" sense). He helps the man out of compassion - for "moral" reasons.

- What's going on here?



GOOD / EVIL

Compassion, as in above, is an example of goodness.

But there's, also, evil. For example, the evil of The Holocaust. What is evil? Can science give a satisfactory answer about what is evil - why it exists? As Woody Allen asks his father in Hannah and Her Sisters:

"Why are there Nazis?"

His father answers (in his strong Brooklyn accent), struggling to open a tin of something with a tin-opener

"How the heck do I know, I don't even know how this can-opener works?"

- What is conscience? How do we get a "conscience"? If we get it through purely external means (i.e. parents and society), then if you lived in Nazi Germany, and your parents were both loyal, mean Nazis, you'd be screwed, right? ( )
  antao | Sep 5, 2020 |
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An inspiring new perspective on the science versus religion debate. Can science explain everything? Many people think so. Science, and the technologies it has spawned, has delivered so much to the world: clean water; more food; better healthcare; longer life. And we live in a time of rapid scientific progress that holds enormous promise for many of the problems we face as humankind. So much so, in fact, that many see no need or use for religion and belief systems that offer us answers to the mysteries of our universe. Science has explained it, they assume. Science and religion just do not mix. Oxford Maths Professor and Christian believer Prof. John Lennox offers a fresh way of thinking about science and Christianity that dispels the common misconceptions about both. He reveals that not only are they not opposed, but they can and must mix to give us a fuller understanding of the universe and the meaning of our existence. John Lennox is Professor of Mathematics at the University of Oxford and Fellow in Mathematics and Philosophy of Science at Green Templeton College.

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