TY - BOOK AU - Hänsel,Markus TI - The true countenance of man: science and belief as coordinate magisteria (Coma) : a theory of knowledge SN - 9783110320220 AV - BL240.3 U1 - 501 23 PY - 2012/// CY - Frankfurt, Paris PB - Ontos Verlag KW - Religion and science KW - Science KW - Philosophy KW - Philosophy and religion KW - Religion et sciences KW - SCIENCE KW - Philosophy & Social Aspects KW - bisacsh KW - fast N1 - Title from PDF title page (viewed on July 29, 2013); Includes bibliographical references; 1. I think, therefore I believe: Cogito ergo credo. Metaphysics and Religious Knowledge as a Fundament for and Beneficial Force within Natural Science and Western Society; 2. A new Continent in the Philosophy of Science. Review of Markus von Hänsel-Hohenhausen: "I think, therefore I believe"; 3. From the Electron to the Holy Trinity. The Unity of the single-origin, dual World in the Three Pillar Analogy on Axiom and Dogma and the Catholicity of the Knowable to turn God's Evidence; 4. The Countenance in the World. Thoughts on Identity in the twenty-first Century; 5. Selected Comments on the Book "The Countenance in the World"6. Theomorphosis of the World. Theomorphosis of the World A look at Gestalt seeing and hearing in Christian cultural circle in connection with Markus von Hänsel-Hohenhausen's Work; Old Europe and contemporary Philosophy. Afterword to the American Edition; Sources, Translators, Illustrations N2 - "The basis of the author's proof rests largely on the current state of research in mathematics, biology and physics. In spite of the holistic thesis, the argument remains strictly analytic and logical in its progression. Of course, it produces provocative conclusions: the coordination of the two great sources of knowledge, on the one hand scientific (which cannot make its proofs work without belief) and on the other hand Christian belief (which cannot stand without rationality); the falsity of their supposed mutual antagonism; the truth of Christian dogma out of physically grounded analogies; and finally a theory of the knowable, which leads to a 'Catholicity of the knowable'"--Back cover UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=603461 ER -