Religion, Neuroscience and New Physics in Dialogue

Religion, Neuroscience and New Physics in Dialogue

Stone Age Souls in Modern Minds

By Darren Marks

Can we live with being merely a brain with a history of being souls? Can our supra-nature, learnt in the crucible of religion and expressed in theology, survive without being exiled to the quantum mysteries of consciousness? Our very survival depends on these questions being answered in this non-expert conversational work.

Hardback, 142 Pages

ISBN:9781839980091

August 2021

£80.00, $125.00

  • About This Book
  • Reviews
  • Author Information
  • Series
  • Table of Contents
  • Links
  • Podcasts

About This Book

Can we live with being merely a brain with a history of being souls? Can our supra-nature, learnt in the crucible of religion and expressed in theology, survive without being exiled to the quantum mysteries of consciousness? Our very survival depends on these questions being answered and in a manner by which a non-expert can understand.

The book explores these ideas and posits how we might be able to understand ourselves as merely brain without the confusion of pixie dust in the nanotubules, reorienting ourselves to the idea of Nature, and our humane ethical response. By looking at the challenge of neuroscience to identity and our souls, the book explores the tension of being scientific and theological and helps guide the reader to what can be said by either front in our axial age.

The work places the soul, neuroscience and the new physics (as refuge for emergence of souls) into a conversation that considers what can be said about the Real of reality, including G-d. The book works theology, religion and science together so that each is given its voice and place in the conversation on how humans can become nature realists as a response to our challenges as a species with respect to climate change and worldwide pandemics.

Reviews

“This book breaks important new ground in the frontiers of the science and theology debate. Its exploration of the theological problems presented by neuroscience is both novel and accessible, and will be of interest not only to those working in theological anthropology and the science-theology debate. It also addresses non-specialist readers working in such fields as biological science, medicine, and spiritual care in clinical settings.” — Dr. Gary D. Badcock, Peache Professor of Divinity (Emeritus), Huron at Western University, Canada

Author Information

Dr Darren Marks has degrees in science and theology from the University of Toronto and Oxford University. He teaches at Huron University College.

Series

No series for this title.

Table of Contents

Preface; 1. Stone Age Souls; 2. Modern Minds—Education to Reality?; 3. Multiverses or the Home of God?; 4. Three Great Errors: Deconstructing Nature, Naturalism and Scientism: Fictions or Delusions?; 5. Returning the Soul: Fictions or Illusions?; 6. Can We Be Good? What Models Do We Have?; 7. Concluding Postscript or We’re Okay?

Links

No Podcasts for this title.
Comodo SSL