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Truth in Science, the Humanities and Religion~ [electronic resource] / edited by M. E. H. Nicolette Mout, Werner Stauffacher.

Contributor(s): Publisher: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 2010Description: VIII, 192 p. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781402098963
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 501 23
LOC classification:
  • B67
Online resources:
Contents:
From the contents Foreword -- Opening Session. Session I Philosophy. Panel Discussion -- Session II Mathematics - Physics And Cosmology. Panel And General Discussion. Panel And General Discussion -- Session III Biological Sciences – Biodiversity – Sustainability. Panel And General Discussion -- Session IV History – Social Sciences. Panel Discussion. Panel And General Discussion -- Session V Theology – Religion. Panel And General Discussion -- Session VI Conclusion -- Concluding Remarks. Bibliography. Name Index. Chairmen, Speakers, Invited Discussants. Appendix. The International Balzan Foundation.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: by the Academies of the two countries – to the Italian-Swiss University of Lugano for the two-day-Symposium. The question of the meaning of “truth” is central to many areas of contemporary debate, whether between those subscribing to a post-Enlightenment view of the world and those who seek fundamental truth in religious texts, or between those maintaining that there are absolute truths and those believing facts to be social constructs. For some, the ultimate truth is revealed through religious faith and t- tual authority. Can this view be reconciled with an evidence-based, materialist, post-Enlightenment perspective of the truth as embraced by the natural sciences? If religion holds the key to the truth, which religion and which truths? During the five thematic sessions of the symposium, all attended by the same audience and by all the speakers and panel members, these and many other qu- tions, but in particular the one about the meaning of truth, were examined and debated. The whole range of perspectives represented on the panels and in the au- ence came to the fore. After the keynote lecture by Professor Simon Blackburn, the five sessions covered the following disciplines: philosophy, mathematics, physics, cosmology, the biological sciences including biodiversity and sustainability, h- tory, the social sciences, theology and religion. This volume contains the speakers’ lectures, the corresponding reactions of the invited panel members as well as the panel and general discussions of the two-d- symposium.
Item type: eBooks
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From the contents Foreword -- Opening Session. Session I Philosophy. Panel Discussion -- Session II Mathematics - Physics And Cosmology. Panel And General Discussion. Panel And General Discussion -- Session III Biological Sciences – Biodiversity – Sustainability. Panel And General Discussion -- Session IV History – Social Sciences. Panel Discussion. Panel And General Discussion -- Session V Theology – Religion. Panel And General Discussion -- Session VI Conclusion -- Concluding Remarks. Bibliography. Name Index. Chairmen, Speakers, Invited Discussants. Appendix. The International Balzan Foundation.

by the Academies of the two countries – to the Italian-Swiss University of Lugano for the two-day-Symposium. The question of the meaning of “truth” is central to many areas of contemporary debate, whether between those subscribing to a post-Enlightenment view of the world and those who seek fundamental truth in religious texts, or between those maintaining that there are absolute truths and those believing facts to be social constructs. For some, the ultimate truth is revealed through religious faith and t- tual authority. Can this view be reconciled with an evidence-based, materialist, post-Enlightenment perspective of the truth as embraced by the natural sciences? If religion holds the key to the truth, which religion and which truths? During the five thematic sessions of the symposium, all attended by the same audience and by all the speakers and panel members, these and many other qu- tions, but in particular the one about the meaning of truth, were examined and debated. The whole range of perspectives represented on the panels and in the au- ence came to the fore. After the keynote lecture by Professor Simon Blackburn, the five sessions covered the following disciplines: philosophy, mathematics, physics, cosmology, the biological sciences including biodiversity and sustainability, h- tory, the social sciences, theology and religion. This volume contains the speakers’ lectures, the corresponding reactions of the invited panel members as well as the panel and general discussions of the two-d- symposium.

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