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Simon OliverCreationSimon OliverCreationA Guide for the PerplexedQUALITY PAPERBACK
UPC: 9780567656087Release Date: 8/10/2017
Series:Biographical note:
Simon Oliver is Associate Professor in the Department of Theology and Religious Studies, University of Nottingham, UK. His research interests centre on issues in philosophical theology, the doctrine of creation, and theology and the history of natural science. Main description:
This addition to our popular Guides for the Perplexed series tackles a subject that is enjoying renewed debate: of the major world religions, three - Judaism, Christianity and Islam - claim that the universe is not a brute fact. It is 'created'. But what do we mean by 'creation'? Do we mean that the universe is 'designed'? Is it the product of an evolutionary process? How are creatures related to God, and does God act within creation? Simon Oliver begins with the background to the Christian doctrine of creation in Greek philosophy and the Old Testament. This provides a route into understanding the claim that we are part of a created order that is also the theatre of God's redemptive action in Christ. He examines different understanding of creation, with close reference to the work of patristic and medieval theologians such as Augustine and Aquinas. This leads to an historical guide to the relationship between theological, philosophical and scientific approaches to nature in the modern period including Darwinism and Intelligent Design. Some of the ethical issues concerning humanity's place within, and treatment of, creation and our environment are also examined. Finally, a distinctive yet traditional theology of creation is proposed focused on the concepts of gift and participation as ways of understanding more fully the meaning and implications of the claim that the universe is created. Table of contents:
Introduction
1. Genesis: In the Beginning 2. Creation out of Nothing 3. Creation and Divine Action 4. Creation and Science I 5. Creation and Science II 6. Creation and the Environment Conclusions Further Reading Index |
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