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The evolution-creation struggle / Michael Ruse.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Cambridge, Mass. ; London : Harvard University Press, 2005.Description: 1 online resource (327 pages)Content type:
Media type:
Carrier type:
ISBN:
  • 9780674042971
  • 0674042972
  • 0674016874
  • 9780674016873
  • 9780674022553
  • 0674022556
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version:: Evolution-creation struggle.DDC classification:
  • 231.7652 22
LOC classification:
  • BT712 .R88 2005eb
NLM classification:
  • 2006 F-742
  • BT 712
Other classification:
  • online - EBSCO
  • 42.02
  • BN 4300
Online resources:
Contents:
Christianity and its discontents -- From progress to evolution -- Growth of a pseudoscience -- Charles Darwin -- Failure of a professional science -- Social Darwinism -- Christian responses -- Fundamentalism -- Population genetics -- Evolution today -- Nature as promise -- Earth's last days?
Summary: Creation versus evolution: What seems like a cultural crisis of our day, played out in courtrooms and classrooms across the county, is in fact part of a larger story reaching back through the centuries. The views of both evolutionists and creationists originated as inventions of the Enlightenment--two opposed but closely related responses to a loss of religious faith in the Western world. In his latest book, Michael Ruse, a preeminent authority on Darwinian evolutionary thought and a leading participant in the ongoing debate, uncovers surprising similarities between evolutionist and creationist thinking. Exploring the underlying philosophical commitments of evolutionists, he reveals that those most hostile to religion are just as evangelical as their fundamentalist opponents. But more crucially, and reaching beyond the biblical issues at stake, he demonstrates that these two diametrically opposed ideologies have, since the Enlightenment, engaged in a struggle for the privilege of defining human origins, moral values, and the nature of reality. Highlighting modern-day partisans as divergent as Richard Dawkins and Left Behind authors Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins, Ruse's bracing book takes on the assumptions of controversialists of every stripe and belief and offers to all a new and productive way of understanding this unifying, if often bitter, quest.
List(s) this item appears in: Creation - Science - Evolution
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number URL Status Notes Barcode
eBook eBook Biblioteca "Angelicum" Pont. Univ. S.Tommaso d'Aquino Nuvola online online - EBSCO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Online access Not for loan (Accesso limitato) Accesso per gli utenti autorizzati / Access for authorized users (ebsco)282316

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Christianity and its discontents -- From progress to evolution -- Growth of a pseudoscience -- Charles Darwin -- Failure of a professional science -- Social Darwinism -- Christian responses -- Fundamentalism -- Population genetics -- Evolution today -- Nature as promise -- Earth's last days?

Print version record.

Creation versus evolution: What seems like a cultural crisis of our day, played out in courtrooms and classrooms across the county, is in fact part of a larger story reaching back through the centuries. The views of both evolutionists and creationists originated as inventions of the Enlightenment--two opposed but closely related responses to a loss of religious faith in the Western world. In his latest book, Michael Ruse, a preeminent authority on Darwinian evolutionary thought and a leading participant in the ongoing debate, uncovers surprising similarities between evolutionist and creationist thinking. Exploring the underlying philosophical commitments of evolutionists, he reveals that those most hostile to religion are just as evangelical as their fundamentalist opponents. But more crucially, and reaching beyond the biblical issues at stake, he demonstrates that these two diametrically opposed ideologies have, since the Enlightenment, engaged in a struggle for the privilege of defining human origins, moral values, and the nature of reality. Highlighting modern-day partisans as divergent as Richard Dawkins and Left Behind authors Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins, Ruse's bracing book takes on the assumptions of controversialists of every stripe and belief and offers to all a new and productive way of understanding this unifying, if often bitter, quest.