Results 301 to 310 of about 235,074 (351)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
How is theology about nature natural theology?
Studia Theologica - Nordic Journal of Theology, 1989(1989). How is theology about nature natural theology? Studia Theologica - Nordic Journal of Theology: Vol. 43, No. 2, pp. 197-209.
openaire +2 more sources
Process Studies, 2011
Abstract In this article several strengths of Hartshorne’s approach to the concept of God are explored, especially regarding the relationship between God and science, as well as certain weaknesses, notably regarding panentheism.
openaire +2 more sources
Abstract In this article several strengths of Hartshorne’s approach to the concept of God are explored, especially regarding the relationship between God and science, as well as certain weaknesses, notably regarding panentheism.
openaire +2 more sources
Natural theology and nature's disguises
Journal of the History of Biology, 1982Henry Walter Bates’s paper on the phenomenon of mimicry in butterflies’ was read at the Linnean Society of London on November 21, 1861-three days short of the second anniversay of Darwin’s publication of On the Origin of Species. In this paper Bates described surprising resemblances among butterfly specimens of different families.
openaire +2 more sources
1999
It has been claimed that Natural Theology has been an incentive to the scientific investigation of nature and that, conversely, this investigation yields arguments in favour of it. Certainly some of the greatest scientists (Kepler, Boyle, Newton, Hutton) used their discipline to point to the power, wisdom and goodness of the Creator of all things.
openaire +2 more sources
It has been claimed that Natural Theology has been an incentive to the scientific investigation of nature and that, conversely, this investigation yields arguments in favour of it. Certainly some of the greatest scientists (Kepler, Boyle, Newton, Hutton) used their discipline to point to the power, wisdom and goodness of the Creator of all things.
openaire +2 more sources
1991
Although Faraday’s early biographers emphasised his empiricism, historians of science have more recently sought to understand Faraday in terms of his theoretical commitments and have argued that his success resulted from his rich and insightful use of theoretical constructs such as the lines of force which he conceived permeating space.
openaire +2 more sources
Although Faraday’s early biographers emphasised his empiricism, historians of science have more recently sought to understand Faraday in terms of his theoretical commitments and have argued that his success resulted from his rich and insightful use of theoretical constructs such as the lines of force which he conceived permeating space.
openaire +2 more sources
2013
It is not a universally accepted view, but neither is it a shocking or novel one, that Hobbes was a critic of religion. So far from being novel, this was the view of many of Hobbes’s contemporaries, some of whom regarded him not just as a critic of religion but as a bitter enemy of it.
openaire +2 more sources
It is not a universally accepted view, but neither is it a shocking or novel one, that Hobbes was a critic of religion. So far from being novel, this was the view of many of Hobbes’s contemporaries, some of whom regarded him not just as a critic of religion but as a bitter enemy of it.
openaire +2 more sources
The Problem of Natural Theology
Religious Studies, 1972It is a curious fact that the much maligned ontological argument to prove the existence of God has in recent times enjoyed a revival of interest to which even Karl Barth, the arch-enemy of natural theology has contributed; but since the revival of interest has appared in a wide diversity of intellectual contexts, both philosophical and theological, the
openaire +2 more sources
Scottish Journal of Theology, 1964
The phrase ‘a theology of nature’ is an abbreviation for ‘a theological account of natural happenings’—happenings which are properly investigated in the first instance by appropriate ‘natural sciences’. A Christian theology of nature seeks to provide a systematic appreciation of the physical universe, its items and occurrences, from a Christian ...
openaire +2 more sources
The phrase ‘a theology of nature’ is an abbreviation for ‘a theological account of natural happenings’—happenings which are properly investigated in the first instance by appropriate ‘natural sciences’. A Christian theology of nature seeks to provide a systematic appreciation of the physical universe, its items and occurrences, from a Christian ...
openaire +2 more sources
Hypothesis and Natural Theology [PDF]
We now come to the General Scholium at the end of Book III. Newton begins by criticizing the “hypothesis of vortices.” This is the theory by which Descartes and his followers attempted to explain the orbits of the planets by likening them to submerged masses being swept around the sun by the complex flow of ethereal whirlpools filling the spaces ...
openaire +1 more source

