Understanding the Present: Science and the Soul of Modern ManDoubleday, 1993 - 269 стор. Though science has advanced our understanding of the universe and provided us with the toys and weapons of modern civilization, it has failed to answer the ultimate questions: Who am I? Does life have a purpose? Is there a God? What lies beyond death? By taking no account of our most fundamental needs, science devalues human experience and even threatens to destroy our inner selves. Well-known British science commentator Bryan Appleyard begins with a marvelously compact overview of science from the ancient Greeks to the "weird science" of the 1990s, showing precisely how we reached our present dilemma. But he shows us more than how science has led us to the brink of disaster: he proposes the end of science's spirit-killing hegemony and an alternative route to the future. In this thrilling and compelling exploration of the human condition, Appleyard not only exposes the central role of science in shaping our lives and beliefs; he analyzes the health fads, environmentalism, mass communications, and politics of today and explains them all as the outcome of science's four-hundred-year-old assault on our view of ourselves and the universe. Appleyard traces the history of this assault from Copernicus, Newton, and Descartes to Einstein, Feynman, and Hawking. He asks whether new developments in twentieth-century science like quantum mechanics and chaos theory can really be regarded as a way out of the dead end of classical science. Or are they just another spiritual dead end? This is an emergency, Appleyard writes, because we must now find our true nature before science crosses the final frontier of the human self. |
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Сторінка 2
... human imagi- nation , it has fundamental human significance , and it is ultimately capable of answering every question . God is often evoked . Sagan in his introduction to Hawking's book says : " This is also a book about God . . . or ...
... human imagi- nation , it has fundamental human significance , and it is ultimately capable of answering every question . God is often evoked . Sagan in his introduction to Hawking's book says : " This is also a book about God . . . or ...
Сторінка 128
... human intervention of any kind and a mistrust of all human solutions . It is also clear that such an attitude is the logical climax of the environmentalists ' position . Dismayed by the visions of destruction and apocalypse , they look ...
... human intervention of any kind and a mistrust of all human solutions . It is also clear that such an attitude is the logical climax of the environmentalists ' position . Dismayed by the visions of destruction and apocalypse , they look ...
Сторінка 190
... human organization . No earthly might could stand in its way , since the souls of any who rebelled were guaranteed to suffer in eternity . Fallible human beings might sin or even believe otherwise . Indeed , even within the Church ...
... human organization . No earthly might could stand in its way , since the souls of any who rebelled were guaranteed to suffer in eternity . Fallible human beings might sin or even believe otherwise . Indeed , even within the Church ...
Зміст
The humbling of | 46 |
Defending the faith | 75 |
75 | 251 |
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Інші видання - Показати все
Understanding the Present: Science and the Soul of Modern Man Bryan Appleyard Перегляд фрагмента - 1994 |
Understanding the Present: Science and the Soul of Modern Man Bryan Appleyard Перегляд фрагмента - 1992 |
Understanding the Present: Science and the Soul of Modern Man Bryan Appleyard Попередній перегляд недоступний - 1994 |
Загальні терміни та фрази
answer Anthropic appeared Aquinas Aristotelian Aristotle atom attempt become believe Big Bang causality celebrated century certainty chaos chaos theory Christian classical science complexity conviction cosmology culture defined Descartes Descartes's dream earth effect Einstein everything existence explain fact faith finally Freeman Dyson Freud fundamental Galileo Homais human idea imagination implications individual insight intellectual Isaac Newton Kant knowledge liberal lives logic Ludwig Wittgenstein machine magic mathematics matter Max Perutz Max Weber meaning ment mind modern moral nature Newton Newtonian nineteenth observation ourselves particles perhaps philosophical physics possible precisely problem progress quantum mechanics quantum theory R. H. Tawney rational reality realm reason religion religious revealed Richard Dawkins science's scientific scientists seemed sense simply society soul space spiritual strange Theory of Everything things thought tion truth understand universe vision words wrong wrote
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