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- catalog contributor b1596818.
- catalog contributor b1596819.
- catalog created "1925.".
- catalog date "1925".
- catalog date "1925.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1925.".
- catalog description "A personal heresy recommended: pan-psychism -- The spiritual order -- Religious interpretation of the domain of things -- The "argument" summarized -- Chapter III. The power of the world -- The outlook of primitive man -- The nature psalmists -- The modern change of temper -- The transformation of energy -- A short-cut to Deity -- The conservation of energy -- The origin of energies -- Atomic energies -- The quantum theory -- Relativity -- The outcome of our survey -- Chapter IV. The implications of life -- Emergence of organisms on the earth -- The criteria of livingness -- The characteristic qualities of living creatures: victorious insurgence -- Intricacy -- Effectiveness -- Adaptiveness -- Interlinkage -- Beauty -- Evolution -- The religious interpretation of animate nature -- Chapter V. Psychology and religion -- Problem to be faced -- The gradual emergence of the Psyche -- Integration: nervous, harmonic, and psychical -- Man's solidarity and apartness -- ".
- catalog description "Bibliography: p.275-278.".
- catalog description "Chapter I. Science and Religion -- The so-called conflict should cease -- The aims and methods of science -- Laws of nature -- Scientific analysis -- Science in part historical -- The scientific "why" -- In what sense does science explain? -- The scientific questions -- Limitations of science -- Religion -- The practical pathway to religion -- The emotional pathway -- The intellectual pathway -- Our limitations do not prove the validity of religious solutions -- No antithesis between scientific description and religious interpretation -- No idea-tight compartment -- Form and idea -- Chapter II. The unseen universe and the nature of things -- Beyond our sense -- Invisible life -- Secrets of life -- Structure of the atom -- Energy changes in the atom -- General impressions of matter: homogeneity, intricacy, activity, tenuity -- Error of supposing that the tenuity of the material makes the spiritual order more accessible -- The risk of forgetting "mind" -- ".
- catalog description "The vindication of personality -- Materialism -- Epiphenomenalism -- Biologism -- The unconscious -- Origin of Religion -- The correlates of religion -- The culture of personality -- Chapter VI. A contribution to natural religion -- Does science contribute to religion? -- What science discloses: intelligibility, order, continuity -- Beauty -- Progress in nature -- Correspondences in nature to Man's ideal of progress -- Does nature admit of religious interpretation? -- John Stuart Mill's arraignment of nature -- William James's one-sided view of nature -- Huxley's exaggeration of individualism in nature -- General conclusion: naturalistic description does not exclude transcendental interpretation -- The scientific account of nature is essentially congruent with the religious vision.".
- catalog extent "viii, 280p.".
- catalog hasFormat "Science and religion.".
- catalog isFormatOf "Science and religion.".
- catalog issued "1925".
- catalog issued "1925.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "New York, C. Scribner's Sons,".
- catalog relation "Science and religion.".
- catalog subject "215".
- catalog subject "BL240 .T57 1925a".
- catalog subject "Natural theology.".
- catalog subject "Religion and science 1900-".
- catalog tableOfContents "A personal heresy recommended: pan-psychism -- The spiritual order -- Religious interpretation of the domain of things -- The "argument" summarized -- Chapter III. The power of the world -- The outlook of primitive man -- The nature psalmists -- The modern change of temper -- The transformation of energy -- A short-cut to Deity -- The conservation of energy -- The origin of energies -- Atomic energies -- The quantum theory -- Relativity -- The outcome of our survey -- Chapter IV. The implications of life -- Emergence of organisms on the earth -- The criteria of livingness -- The characteristic qualities of living creatures: victorious insurgence -- Intricacy -- Effectiveness -- Adaptiveness -- Interlinkage -- Beauty -- Evolution -- The religious interpretation of animate nature -- Chapter V. Psychology and religion -- Problem to be faced -- The gradual emergence of the Psyche -- Integration: nervous, harmonic, and psychical -- Man's solidarity and apartness -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "Chapter I. Science and Religion -- The so-called conflict should cease -- The aims and methods of science -- Laws of nature -- Scientific analysis -- Science in part historical -- The scientific "why" -- In what sense does science explain? -- The scientific questions -- Limitations of science -- Religion -- The practical pathway to religion -- The emotional pathway -- The intellectual pathway -- Our limitations do not prove the validity of religious solutions -- No antithesis between scientific description and religious interpretation -- No idea-tight compartment -- Form and idea -- Chapter II. The unseen universe and the nature of things -- Beyond our sense -- Invisible life -- Secrets of life -- Structure of the atom -- Energy changes in the atom -- General impressions of matter: homogeneity, intricacy, activity, tenuity -- Error of supposing that the tenuity of the material makes the spiritual order more accessible -- The risk of forgetting "mind" -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "The vindication of personality -- Materialism -- Epiphenomenalism -- Biologism -- The unconscious -- Origin of Religion -- The correlates of religion -- The culture of personality -- Chapter VI. A contribution to natural religion -- Does science contribute to religion? -- What science discloses: intelligibility, order, continuity -- Beauty -- Progress in nature -- Correspondences in nature to Man's ideal of progress -- Does nature admit of religious interpretation? -- John Stuart Mill's arraignment of nature -- William James's one-sided view of nature -- Huxley's exaggeration of individualism in nature -- General conclusion: naturalistic description does not exclude transcendental interpretation -- The scientific account of nature is essentially congruent with the religious vision.".
- catalog title "Science and religion; being the Morse lectures for 1924, by J. Arthur Thomson.".
- catalog type "text".