Science, Religion, and the Human Experience

(Jacob Rumans) #1
darwin, design, and the unification of nature 179


  1. John Brooke,Science and Religion: Some Historical Perspectives(Cambridge:
    Cambridge University Press, 1991), 117–151.

  2. For example, Steven Weinberg,Dreams of a Final Theory: The Search for the
    Fundamental Laws of Nature(New York: Pantheon, 1992). For a recent critique of the
    drive for unification, see Nancy Cartwright,The Dappled World: A Study of the Bounda-
    ries of Science(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999).

  3. Alfred Whitehead,Science and the Modern World(New York: Mentor Books,
    1964), 19. For a much fuller account of the interpenetration of scientific and theologi-
    cal discourse in the formative processes of Western science, see Amos Funkenstein,
    Theology and the Scientific Imagination from the Middle Ages to the Seventeenth Century
    (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1986).

  4. Keith Hutchison, “Idiosyncrasy, Achromatic Lenses, and Early Romanti-
    cism,”Centaurus34 (1991): 125–171.

  5. Rene ́ Descartes,Philosophical Writings: A Selection, ed. Elizabeth Anscombe
    and Peter Geach (London: Nelson, 1954), 296.

  6. Ian Hacking, “The Disunities of the Sciences,” inThe Disunity of Science,ed.
    Peter Galison and David Stump (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1996),
    37–74.

  7. Richard Westfall, “The Rise of Science and the Decline of Orthodox Christi-
    anity: A Study of Kepler, Descartes and Newton,” inGod and Nature: Historical Essays
    on the Encounter between Christianity and Science, ed. David Lindberg and Ronald
    Numbers (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1986), 218–237.

  8. Kenneth Howell,God’s Two Books: Copernican Cosmology and Biblical Interpre-
    tation in Early Modern Science(Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 2002),
    109–135.

  9. Peter Hess, “ ‘God’s Two Books’: Revelation, Theology and Natural Science in
    the Christian West,” inInterdisciplinary Perspectives on Cosmology and Biological Evolu-
    tion, ed. Hilary Reagan and Mark Worthing (Adelaide: Australian Theological Forum,
    2002), 19–49, especially 32–33; James Moore, “Geologists and Interpreters of Genesis
    in the Nineteenth Century,” in Lindberg and Numbers,God and Nature, 322–350.

  10. Galileo, “Letter to the Grand Duchess Christina” (1615), inThe Galileo Affair:
    A Documentary History, ed. Maurice Finocchiaro (Berkeley: University of California
    Press, 1989), 87–118.

  11. For the contextualizing of this particular analogy, see Peter Harrison,The Bi-
    ble, Protestantism and the Rise of Natural Science(Cambridge: Cambridge University
    Press, 1998).

  12. John Brooke and Geoffrey Cantor,Reconstructing Nature: The Engagement of
    Science and Religion(Edinburgh: T and T Clark, 1998), 144–145.

  13. Hacking, “The Disunities of the Sciences,” 46.

  14. Ibid., 47.

  15. Isaac Newton,Opticks(New York: Dover, 1952), 376.

  16. Penelope Gouk,Music, Science and Natural Magic in Seventeenth-Century En-
    gland(New Haven: Yale University Press, 1999), 224–257.

  17. Cited by Richard Westfall,Force in Newton’s Physics(London: Macdonald,
    1971), 397.

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