Description

Book Synopsis

“ In this beautifully and intelligently written book, Ferguson not only reports on some of the intellectual tremors jolting the world of thinking women and men, but also considers the basic questions with penetrating analysis, yet at a very readable level. . . . An excellent book.”Choice

Heralded for its readability and scholarship, The Fire in the Equations offers a fascinating discussion of scientific discoveries and their impact on our beliefs. The book’s title is derived from Dr. Stephen Hawking’s pondering, “What is it that breathes fire into the equations and makes a universe for them to describe?”

Originally published in the U.S. in 1995, it provides an excursion through new theories of quantum physics and cosmology, ranging from the nature of time, the big bang, the “unreasonable effectiveness” of mathematics, laws of nature, and their possible relation to God, chaos theory, black holes, Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle, particle physics, Darwin's theory of evolution, and the role of God in all these equations. It even raises such questions as “how God might answer prayers” from the point of view of physics.

While she gives no absolute answers, Kitty Ferguson takes the reader through a world of paradoxes and improbabilities, explaining how believing in a pre-determined universe and free will as a theory of human behavior is possible. She concludes that what we know about science doesn't necessarily make God inevitable, but does not rule God out either.



Trade Review
“ In this beautifully and intelligently written book, Ferguson not only reports on some of the intellectual tremors jolting the world of thinking women and men, but also considers the basic questions with penetrating analysis, yet at a very readable level. . . . An excellent book.”
Choice

"Ferguson weaves science, philosophy, and theology together with verve and clarity."
– John Polkinghorne, Queen’s, Cambridge

"This is a clear account of the ultimate question."
– Stephen W. Hawkings



Table of Contents
Preface / xi
A Word about Inclusive Language / xiv
Acknowledgments / xv
1 ‘They Buried Him in Westminster Abbey’ / 1
2 Seeing Things / 4
Is the rational universe an illusion? / 12
‘In Nature’s infinite book of mysteries . . .can we read very much at all? / 19
Is objective reality a mirage? / 25
Are we really free agents? / 30
Is the universe a uni-verse? / 33
3 Almost Objective / 35
Where is fancy bred? / 37
The spectacles-behind-the-eyes / 44
The muse of science: Is truth beautiful? / 59
Does truth surpass proof? / 63
The elite of science / 66
The spirit of the times / 69
The essential Godlessness of science / 73
At the limits of scientific truth / 78
First steps beyond the mind’s-eye view / 80
Is there anything else? / 81
The insidiousness of God / 86
The morality of science: Is truth good? / 87
4 Romancing the Creation / 89
The uncomfortable concept of a beginning / 90
The Gordian knot of singularity / 102
The magic of imaginary time / 108
The pulsing universe and the arrow of entropy / 117
The mysterious wobbling of nothingness / 123
‘Reality (whatever that may be)’ / 126
Reality in the absence of apples / 129
What place for a creator? / 134
The third candidate / 137
The mother of all chicken-and-egg stories / 139
5 The Elusive Mind of God / 143
God as the embodiment of the laws of physics / 145
A presence behind the process 146
The leap to purpose: The God who wishes to drink tea / 147
The watchmaker / 149
The universe as a ‘put-up job’ / 163
Second Gordian knot: The anthropic principle / 164
Hacking at the second Gordian knot / 166
The inflationary universe / 167
Baby universes to the rescue! / 171
Not the ether again! 173
The longing of Johannes Kepler / 178
The fiddler on the roof / 184
6 The God of Abraham and Jesus / 185
The law-breaker / 189
The hard edge of legalism / 191
The soft underbelly of legalism / 195
The death of the God of the Gaps / 204
Chaos meets Control 205
‘Top-down’ determinism? / 221
‘I AM’ / 225
When truths collide / 228
The ultimate self-confirming hypothesis / 231
The masterful use of parallel perfect fifths / 234
Who is the ‘I’ in ‘I AM’? / 239
7 Inadmissible Evidence / 241
Public vs. private knowledge / 242
Admissible evidence? / 245
The spectacles-behind-the-eyes, revisited / 246
The cloud of witnesses / 247
A game of ‘I Doubt It’ / 251
The Lucy problem / 253
‘I should not believe such a story were it told me by Cato!’ / 254
‘The Invincible Ignorance of Science’ / 259
‘For the Bible tells me so’—the evidence of scripture / 260
Is there proof in the pudding? The evidence of results / 263
Armchair truth: The argument from reason / 266
The argument from explanatory power / 270
The argument from nature / 274
The argument from availability / 277
8 Theory of Everything . . . Mind of God / 279
Notes / 284
Bibliography / 293
Index / 301
Back to Tabs

The Fire in the Equations: Science Religion & Search For God

    Product form

    £21.03

    Includes FREE delivery

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Mon 6 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback by Kitty Ferguson

    10 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of The Fire in the Equations: Science Religion & Search For God by Kitty Ferguson

      Publisher: Templeton Foundation Press,U.S.
      Publication Date: 08/06/2004
      ISBN13: 9781932031676, 978-1932031676
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      “ In this beautifully and intelligently written book, Ferguson not only reports on some of the intellectual tremors jolting the world of thinking women and men, but also considers the basic questions with penetrating analysis, yet at a very readable level. . . . An excellent book.”Choice

      Heralded for its readability and scholarship, The Fire in the Equations offers a fascinating discussion of scientific discoveries and their impact on our beliefs. The book’s title is derived from Dr. Stephen Hawking’s pondering, “What is it that breathes fire into the equations and makes a universe for them to describe?”

      Originally published in the U.S. in 1995, it provides an excursion through new theories of quantum physics and cosmology, ranging from the nature of time, the big bang, the “unreasonable effectiveness” of mathematics, laws of nature, and their possible relation to God, chaos theory, black holes, Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle, particle physics, Darwin's theory of evolution, and the role of God in all these equations. It even raises such questions as “how God might answer prayers” from the point of view of physics.

      While she gives no absolute answers, Kitty Ferguson takes the reader through a world of paradoxes and improbabilities, explaining how believing in a pre-determined universe and free will as a theory of human behavior is possible. She concludes that what we know about science doesn't necessarily make God inevitable, but does not rule God out either.



      Trade Review
      “ In this beautifully and intelligently written book, Ferguson not only reports on some of the intellectual tremors jolting the world of thinking women and men, but also considers the basic questions with penetrating analysis, yet at a very readable level. . . . An excellent book.”
      Choice

      "Ferguson weaves science, philosophy, and theology together with verve and clarity."
      – John Polkinghorne, Queen’s, Cambridge

      "This is a clear account of the ultimate question."
      – Stephen W. Hawkings



      Table of Contents
      Preface / xi
      A Word about Inclusive Language / xiv
      Acknowledgments / xv
      1 ‘They Buried Him in Westminster Abbey’ / 1
      2 Seeing Things / 4
      Is the rational universe an illusion? / 12
      ‘In Nature’s infinite book of mysteries . . .can we read very much at all? / 19
      Is objective reality a mirage? / 25
      Are we really free agents? / 30
      Is the universe a uni-verse? / 33
      3 Almost Objective / 35
      Where is fancy bred? / 37
      The spectacles-behind-the-eyes / 44
      The muse of science: Is truth beautiful? / 59
      Does truth surpass proof? / 63
      The elite of science / 66
      The spirit of the times / 69
      The essential Godlessness of science / 73
      At the limits of scientific truth / 78
      First steps beyond the mind’s-eye view / 80
      Is there anything else? / 81
      The insidiousness of God / 86
      The morality of science: Is truth good? / 87
      4 Romancing the Creation / 89
      The uncomfortable concept of a beginning / 90
      The Gordian knot of singularity / 102
      The magic of imaginary time / 108
      The pulsing universe and the arrow of entropy / 117
      The mysterious wobbling of nothingness / 123
      ‘Reality (whatever that may be)’ / 126
      Reality in the absence of apples / 129
      What place for a creator? / 134
      The third candidate / 137
      The mother of all chicken-and-egg stories / 139
      5 The Elusive Mind of God / 143
      God as the embodiment of the laws of physics / 145
      A presence behind the process 146
      The leap to purpose: The God who wishes to drink tea / 147
      The watchmaker / 149
      The universe as a ‘put-up job’ / 163
      Second Gordian knot: The anthropic principle / 164
      Hacking at the second Gordian knot / 166
      The inflationary universe / 167
      Baby universes to the rescue! / 171
      Not the ether again! 173
      The longing of Johannes Kepler / 178
      The fiddler on the roof / 184
      6 The God of Abraham and Jesus / 185
      The law-breaker / 189
      The hard edge of legalism / 191
      The soft underbelly of legalism / 195
      The death of the God of the Gaps / 204
      Chaos meets Control 205
      ‘Top-down’ determinism? / 221
      ‘I AM’ / 225
      When truths collide / 228
      The ultimate self-confirming hypothesis / 231
      The masterful use of parallel perfect fifths / 234
      Who is the ‘I’ in ‘I AM’? / 239
      7 Inadmissible Evidence / 241
      Public vs. private knowledge / 242
      Admissible evidence? / 245
      The spectacles-behind-the-eyes, revisited / 246
      The cloud of witnesses / 247
      A game of ‘I Doubt It’ / 251
      The Lucy problem / 253
      ‘I should not believe such a story were it told me by Cato!’ / 254
      ‘The Invincible Ignorance of Science’ / 259
      ‘For the Bible tells me so’—the evidence of scripture / 260
      Is there proof in the pudding? The evidence of results / 263
      Armchair truth: The argument from reason / 266
      The argument from explanatory power / 270
      The argument from nature / 274
      The argument from availability / 277
      8 Theory of Everything . . . Mind of God / 279
      Notes / 284
      Bibliography / 293
      Index / 301
      Back to Tabs

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account