Modern Physics and Ancient Faith

2003 book by Stephen M. Barr From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Modern Physics and Ancient Faith

Modern Physics and Ancient Faith (2003) is a book by Stephen M. Barr, a physicist from the University of Delaware[1] and frequent contributor to First Things. This book is "an extended attack" on what Barr calls scientific materialism. National Review says of the book: "[A] lucid and engaging survey of modern physics and its relation to religious belief. . . . Barr has produced a stunning tour de force . . . [a] scientific and philosophical breakthrough."[2]

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Modern Physics and Ancient Faith
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AuthorStephen M. Barr
Publication date
2003
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Contents

The book is divided into five parts spanning 26 chapters. The main religious and philosophical themes include determinism, mind as a machine, anthropic principle, and the Big Bang theory.[3] Its main thesis is that science and religion only appear in conflict because many have "conflated science with philosophical materialism."

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References

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