
- 194 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
In this re–examination of the roots of the relationship between religion and science, David Hawkin focuses on the concept of autonomy as he explores the question: Is there continuity and compatibility between the autonomy that underlies Christian faith and the role of individual freedom in the technological age?
What makes this work particularly valuable is Professor Hawkin's review of the theological, philosophical, political, psychological, and sociological works that have formed our ideas of the nature of both Christianity and modernity — Reimarus, Strauss, Schweitzer, and Bultmann on the quest for the historical Jesus; Bauer and Turner on Christian faith and practice; Machiavelli, Nietzsche, Darwin, Freud, and Marx on our historicity; Gogarten, Cox, and Bonhoeffer who affirm our autonomy in the technological process; Ellul and George who deny it.
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Table of contents
- Table of Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- PART I: THE PHENOMENON OF CHRISTIANITY
- Conclusion to Part I: Understanding the Phenomenon of Christianity
- PART II: THE PHENOMENON OF MODERNITY
- Conclusion to Part II: Understanding the Phenomenon of Modernity
- PART III: CHRIST AND MODERNITY
- Conclusion: Christian Self-Understanding in a Technological Age
- NOTES
- Bibliography
- Index