Description

Book Synopsis
In The Material Image, Donald H. Wacome sets out to reconcile the Christian faith and contemporary science by embracing, rather than evading, its naturalistic implications. The sciences are our best way to know ourselves and the world we inhabit, Wacome argues, but this does not make belief in miracles unreasonable. The sciences reveal that we are fully material beings, the product of unguided natural selection. God created human persons for the vocation of sharing in the everlasting Triune life and work, but this creation does not involve design. The mind is the embodied, socially situated brain. There is no immaterial soul; we are the material image of our transcendent Creator. This materialist conception does not preclude the resurrection of the body. The freedom that matters for the human creature is compatible with our being governed by the laws of nature. Morality and religion are natural, merely human, legacies of our evolutionary history, which God employs in pursuit of fellowship with us. Christians can faithfully and enthusiastically welcome the image of human beings given in contemporary science.

Table of Contents
Chapter 1. Christianity, Naturalism, and Science

Chapter 2. Knowledge

Chapter 3. Miracles

Chapter 4. Origins

Chapter 5. Mind

Chapter 6. Freedom

Chapter 7. Morality

Chapter 8. Religion

Chapter 9. Resurrection

The Material Image: Reconciling Modern Science

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Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Sat 27 Dec 2025.

A Hardback by Donald H. Wacome

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    View other formats and editions of The Material Image: Reconciling Modern Science by Donald H. Wacome

    Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
    Publication Date: 29/09/2020
    ISBN13: 9781978703902, 978-1978703902
    ISBN10: 1978703902

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    In The Material Image, Donald H. Wacome sets out to reconcile the Christian faith and contemporary science by embracing, rather than evading, its naturalistic implications. The sciences are our best way to know ourselves and the world we inhabit, Wacome argues, but this does not make belief in miracles unreasonable. The sciences reveal that we are fully material beings, the product of unguided natural selection. God created human persons for the vocation of sharing in the everlasting Triune life and work, but this creation does not involve design. The mind is the embodied, socially situated brain. There is no immaterial soul; we are the material image of our transcendent Creator. This materialist conception does not preclude the resurrection of the body. The freedom that matters for the human creature is compatible with our being governed by the laws of nature. Morality and religion are natural, merely human, legacies of our evolutionary history, which God employs in pursuit of fellowship with us. Christians can faithfully and enthusiastically welcome the image of human beings given in contemporary science.

    Table of Contents
    Chapter 1. Christianity, Naturalism, and Science

    Chapter 2. Knowledge

    Chapter 3. Miracles

    Chapter 4. Origins

    Chapter 5. Mind

    Chapter 6. Freedom

    Chapter 7. Morality

    Chapter 8. Religion

    Chapter 9. Resurrection

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