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The Territories of Science and Religion Kindle Edition
The conflict between science and religion seems indelible, even eternal. Surely two such divergent views of the universe have always been in fierce opposition? Actually, that’s not the case, says Peter Harrison: Our very concepts of science and religion are relatively recent, emerging only in the past three hundred years, and it is those very categories, rather than their underlying concepts, that constrain our understanding of how the formal study of nature relates to the religious life.
In The Territories of Science and Religion, Harrison dismantles what we think we know about the two categories, then puts it all back together again in a provocative, productive new way. By tracing the history of these concepts for the first time in parallel, he illuminates alternative boundaries and little-known relations between them—thereby making it possible for us to learn from their true history, and see other possible ways that scientific study and the religious life might relate to, influence, and mutually enrich each other.
A tour de force by a distinguished scholar working at the height of his powers, The Territories of Science and Religion promises to forever alter the way we think about these fundamental pillars of human life and experience.
“An admirable contribution to the history of science and religion.” —Publishers Weekly
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Harrison’s The Territories of Science and Religion is a subfield-defining book. It decisively demonstrates that presuming either conflict or collaboration between science and religion is premature: a preliminary to any exploration of those connections must begin with a recognition that we do not know what those terms mean, and that the jumble of meanings that we have inherited have been clumped together in starkly different ways throughout the history of western thought." ― Marginalia
"This book is excellent. In less than 200 pages, Harrison transports his reader from Thales’ Miletus six centuries before Christ across the Middle Ages to Victorian Britain, following the footprints of 'science,' 'religion,' 'philosophy,' 'belief,' and a host of other related Latin and English words. The traditional chronological framework of the history of science endures; its content, though, is new." ― Zygon
"The complexities of ancient attitudes toward our cherished practices, which we assume had to be valued by all reasonable ages, can be found admirably laid out in Peter Harrison’s invaluable new tome, The Territories of Science and Religion. Harrison’s book deserves a place right next to all your most important critiques of modernity and genealogies of secularization." ― Patheos
"Harrison wisely notes that those who want there to be ‘conflict between science and religion’ are unlikely to yield to the historian’s pen. A sophisticated analysis of the kind he has provided nonetheless prompts many searching questions, not least about the residual place, if any, of moral sensibilities in scientific research. . . . Extremely rewarding." ― Times Literary Supplement
"Harrison’s new book,Territories of Science and Religion is essential reading. It is the most important study of the history of science and religion since the publication in 1991 of John Brooke’s Science and Religion: Some Historical Perspectives." ― Science & Religion: Exploring the Spectrum
"Harrison’s new book, a revision of his 2011 Gifford Lectures and the capstone to a series of books about religion and science, combines his genealogical studies of 'religion' with a similar genealogy of modern concepts of 'science'." ― First Things
"[Harrison's] is a careful and nuanced scholarship, which is precisely why it doesn’t get much play in a public discourse invested in the clickbait of the conflict metaphor. In Territories, first presented at the 2011 Gifford Lectures in Edinburgh, Harrison builds on his previous work to take on the new atheist 'conflict' party more directly. The bulk of the book is a patient, fine-grained archaeology of the terms 'science' and 'religion.' Indeed, in some ways, Harrison has written a biography of these concepts." ― Los Angeles Review of Books
“Simply put, Peter Harrison’s The Territories of Science and Religion is the most significant contribution to the history of science and religion since the appearance of John Hedley Brooke’s landmark study, Science and Religion: Some Historical Perspectives, nearly a quarter-century ago. Drawing on his wealth of historical, philosophical, and linguistic knowledge, Harrison provides a fresh, authoritative introduction to this still all-too-often misunderstood topic.” ― Ronald L. Numbers, University of Wisconsin–Madison
"A bare-bones summary of Harrison’s argument hardly does justice to its
originality and subtlety, nor to the arresting insights that he derives from wellchosen
examples....Impressive chronological scope and erudition." ― Journal of the American Academy of Religion
"Harrison’s account affords us crucial insights about the way in which the separation between the territories of science and religion eventually emerged. Moreover, it provides an ever-useful warning against projecting contemporary categories, even those we today consider foundational, back on the history that eventually brought them about." ― Isis
“This is one of the most sophisticated accounts of the supposed battle between science and religion that I have read. The strategy taken is historical: Harrison argues that science and religion as we now understand them are both recent concepts, and that in the past, they were more complementary than opposed. In this way the author hopes to undermine the idea that there is an eternal and fundamental tension between the two. Superbly documented and incisively argued, this book brings a welcome new perspective on a difficult debate.” ― Daniel Garber, Princeton University
"It is always a pleasure to observe Harrison deploying his skill in argument, repertoire of apt quotations, and power of analogy. One argument joins so neatly to the next that it seems willfull to withhold assent from the conclusion." ― Metascience
“Learned, lucid, and illuminating, Peter Harrison’s analysis of scientia and religio from antiquity to the present shows how their non-linear transformation from interior virtues to exteriorized bodies of knowledge made possible the creation of the later nineteenth-century myth about an allegedly timeless ‘conflict between science and religion.’ One hopes that not only historians of science and religion but also contemporary perpetuators of the myth read and learn from this book.” ― Brad S. Gregory, author of The Unintended Reformation: How a Religious Revolution Secularized Societ
"Classical thinkers understood scientia and religio as qualities or virtues; beginning around the 16th century, however, the meanings gradually shifted such that both were understood as entities conceived in terms of doctrines and practices. This shift, Harrison contends, was the precondition for modern conflicts between science and religion. Considering important turning points in a long swath of Western history from the classical world to the present, Harrison analyzes past activities connected to our present understanding of these terms, including natural philosophy, theology, belief, and doctrine. Arguing cogently and persuasively on a vital topic, The Territories of Science and Religion is a much-needed scholarly work." ― Ann Taves, University of California, Santa Barbara
"Contemporary debates would lead you to believe that science and religion are eternally at odds with each other. In The Territories of Science and Religion, Harrison interrogates the modern assumptions behind this viewpoint and delineates the story of the categories science and religion. He shows that understanding these concepts divided as distinct realms of inquiry is a relatively recent history, politically shaped, and often accidental in its construction. In reality, what we conceptualize as these two separate spheres of life were intimately bound up with one another, often in concert in social life. Harrison also warns us about the consequences of projecting our contemporary conceptual spheres back through the past. In our conversation we discuss ancient Greek philosophy, early Christian thought, natural theology and natural philosophers, conceptions of progress, forms of charity, the professionalization of science, and the creation of scientists." ― New Books Network
"Harrison’s purpose in this brilliant survey is not to pretend that there is or can be no conflict between 'religion' and 'science.' Rather it is point to the fact that those categories are not self-evident, still less timeless, and that any conflict--or indeed any independence, dialogue or integration--between them will depend largely on how each of the territories is defined. His study ends towards the end of the 19th century but it is a lesson we still need to hear today."
Harrison’s purpose in this brilliant survey is clearly, therefore, not to pretend that there is or can be no conflict between ‘religion’ and ‘science’. Rather it is point to the fact that those categories are not self-evident, still less timeless, and that any conflict – or indeed any independence, dialogue or integration – between them will depend largely on how each of the territories is defined."
― Theos
"A well-researched, richly detailed argument for how the epistemological map of nature in the West was radically redrawn in the passage to modernity, sharply distinguishing facts from values in the creation of the specifically modern territories of science and religion. . . . The Territories of Science and Religion helps us rethink the origins of the key modern categories of science and religion, and in doing so provides a new vantage point on the rise of modernity. If you happen to be new to Harrison’s work, this tome will leave you searching for more by this fine scholar." ― Reading Religion
"The Territories of Science and Religion is relevant as a study of semantic change, and to the field of conceptual history. Obviously, it is also relevant in the history of science, the history of religion, and the history of the various intersections of these categories....An impressive and welcome work. The straightforward narrative of the book also makes it a great read." ― Contributions to the History of Concepts
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The Territories of Science and Religion
By Peter HarrisonThe University of Chicago Press
Copyright © 2015 The University of ChicagoAll rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-226-18448-7
Contents
Preface,A Note on the Graphs,
1. The Territories of Science and Religion,
2. The Cosmos and the Religious Quest,
3. Signs and Causes,
4. Science and the Origins of "Religion",
5. Utility and Progress,
6. Professing Science,
Epilogue,
Acknowledgments,
Abbreviations,
Notes,
Bibliography,
Index,
CHAPTER 1
The Territories of Science and Religion
How ridiculous are the boundaries of mortals! —Seneca, Natural Questions
The ideas entertained of God by wicked men must be bad, and those of good men most excellent. —Clement of Alexandria, Stromata
Maps and Territories
If a historian were to contend that he or she had discovered evidence of a hitherto unknown war that had broken out in the year 1600 between Israel and Egypt, this claim would be treated with some skepticism. The refutation of this claim would involve simply pointing out that the states of Israel and Egypt did not exist in the early modern period, and that whatever conflicts might have been raging at this time could not on any reasonable interpretation be accurately described as involving a war between Israel and Egypt. Neither would skeptical historians be impressed if their colleague produced medieval maps that indicated the existence of such places as Jerusalem and Alexandria, and included the various topographical features—rivers, deserts, mountains, plains, coastlines—that we currently might include in any description of the modern states of Israel and Egypt (see figure 1). At issue here would be not whether the relevant geographical territory existed then, but whether there were comparable boundaries and self-conscious national identities. Denial of the existence of a sixteenth-century Israel does not entail a denial of the existence of the territory that currently comprises that nation, but rather a denial that the territory was then viewed in a particular light, as something circumscribed by a set of boundaries and informed by particular ideals of nationhood. During this period the territories of what we now know as Israel and Egypt were part of the same thing, namely, the Ottoman Empire. The idea of a medieval Israel and a medieval Egypt could only come about through the mistaken application of our present maps onto past territories.
My suggestion is that something similar is true for the entities "science" and "religion," and more specifically, that many claims about putative historical relationships are confused for much the same reason as claims about a sixteenth-century conflict between Israel and Egypt: that is to say, they involve the distorting projection of our present conceptual maps back onto the intellectual territories of the past. So familiar are the concepts "science" and "religion," and so central to Western culture have been the activities and achievements that are usually labeled "religious" and "scientific," that it is natural to assume that they have been enduring features of the cultural landscape of the West. But this view is mistaken. To be sure, it is true that in the West from the sixth century BC attempts were made to describe the world systematically, to understand the fundamental principles behind natural phenomena, and to provide naturalistic accounts of the causes operating in the cosmos. Yet, as we shall see, these past practices bear only a remote resemblance to modern science. It is also true that almost from the beginning of recorded history many societies have engaged in acts of worship, set aside sacred spaces and times, and entertained beliefs about transcendental realities and proper conduct. But it is only in recent times that these beliefs and activities have been bounded by a common notion "religion," and have been set apart from the "nonreligious" or secular domains of human existence.
In pointing out that "science" and "religion" are concepts of relatively recent coinage, I intend to do more than make a historical claim about the anachronistic application of modern concepts to past eras. What I have in mind is not only to set out the story of how these categories "science" and "religion" emerge in Western consciousness, but also to show how the manner of their emergence can provide crucial insights into their present relations. In much the same way that we can make sense of certain contemporary international conflicts by attending to the historical processes through which national boundaries were carved out of a geographical territory, so too, with the respective territories of religion and the natural sciences. Just as the borders of nation-states are often more a consequence of imperial ambitions, political expedience, and historical contingencies than of a conscious attending to more "natural" fault lines of geography, culture, and ethnicity—think in this context of the borders of the modern state of Israel—so the compartmentalization of modern Western culture that gave rise to these distinct notions "science" and "religion" resulted not from a rational or dispassionate consideration of how to divide cultural life along natural fracture lines, but to a significant degree has been to do with political power—broadly conceived—and the accidents of history.
The Joints of Nature
Another way of thinking about these two concepts is to consider an analogy with what philosophers call "natural kinds." The label "natural kind" is applied to natural groupings of things, the identity of which is natural in the sense that it does not depend on human beings. The sciences of chemistry and zoology, for example, seek to identify such kinds. Chemical elements and compounds are good examples of natural kinds—water, carbon, and hydrocarbons, for example. Occasionally, our everyday concepts, our ideas of what things go together do not map very well onto true natural kinds. We all know what jade is, for example. This lustrous, green, semiprecious stone would seem like a good candidate for being a natural kind. But as it turns out, there are two chemically distinct substances that are called "jade"—jadeite and nephrite. One is a silicate of sodium and aluminum; the other a silicate of lime and magnesia. Once microstructure is taken into consideration, it becomes clear that jade is not a natural kind, because it is actually two different kinds of natural thing. My argument with regard to the categories "religion" and "science" is that to some degree we are mistaken in thinking that they are analogous to natural kinds, because despite the apparent similarities among those things that we call religions and the things that we call sciences, in fact the concepts and the way we deploy them masks important empirical differences.
In the case of jade, the assumption that there is a single unitary entity can be dispelled by careful measurement of some less obvious properties. The two minerals have slightly different specific gravities, refractive indices, and hardnesses. Infrared spectrographic analysis will also reveal their different chemical makeup. In the case of religion, my suggestion is that in addition to careful examination of the empirical characteristics of the so-called religions—which already brings to light an enormous and possibly irreconcilable diversity—their history is also revealing. Another instance of apparent kinds reinforces the point. Superficially, whales look like fish, and bats like birds, and folk taxonomies tend to group them together. Careful examination of the internal structures will reveal a different pattern of affinities, but so would the evolutionary history of these creatures, assuming that the latter could be established. The family histories of these groups would make it apparent that whales and bats should both properly be classified with the mammals. Similar considerations apply to both "religion" and "science," and we can reconstruct the history of these ideas with much greater precision than we can establish the phylogeny of biological taxa. What the history of the categories will show is how disparate, or at least significantly distinct, activities have come to be classified together. In the case of science, "natural history" and "natural philosophy" came together under the rubric "science" for the first time in the nineteenth century. These activities had involved quite different approaches to the study of nature and arguably their modern descendents—biology and physics—still exhibit the vestiges of their genealogical past. Thus, just as our use of the single word "jade" disguises the different composition of the two kinds that now bear that label, so the use of "science" for both historical sciences such as geology and evolutionary biology and physical sciences such as chemistry and physics tends to mask fundamental differences. These differences will necessarily complicate any global claims about the entities "science" and "religion" and their imagined relationship.
What follows from these considerations is that we distort the past if we uncritically apply our modern categories to past activities that would have been conceptualized by those who engaged in them in a quite different way. We should not use our present maps to understand their territory. We should not assume natural kinds where there are none. This means that the idea of a perennial conflict between science and religion must be false, just as claims about an early modern conflict between Israel and Egypt must be false. And this will be equally true for any claimed relationship between science and religion before the modern period. In addition we can say that contemporary "science-religion" relations, however construed (that is to say, whether positively or negatively), are to a large degree determined by the historical conditions under which disciplinary boundaries originated and developed over time. To advert once again to the map-territory analogy, we can ask whether the conceptual maps that we currently rely on to navigate through our cultural terrain are, to use the ugly but apt phrase, "fit for purpose." Thus, the question of the origins of boundaries can move beyond description and understanding to a critical inquiry into the appropriateness of how current conceptual maps divide territory. Good concepts, to use Plato's vivid image, carve nature at the joints (rather than, as he went on to say, dismembering it like a clumsy butcher). Part of the burden of this book, then, is to ask whether these particular ways of dividing aspects of contemporary Western culture—"science" and "religion"—are helpful ones. In addressing this question I hope to show that "science" and "religion" are not self-evident or natural ways of dividing up cultural territory, that history shows this to be the case (as indeed does present consideration of cultures other than our own), and that persisting with these categories in an uncritical fashion can not only generate unhelpful conflict between science and religion, but can also disguise what perhaps ought to be legitimate sources of tension between the ways of faith and the formal study of nature. In short, this project attempts to set out a historical cartography of the categories "religion" and "science"—arguably the two cultural categories most important for an understanding of the nature of modernity and its legacy—with a view to casting light on their present relationship.
All of this implies that there is something not quite right with how we presently think about the relationship between science and religion, whether we think of it in terms of conflict or congruence, or even if we think that they do not have much to do with each other. Not only is too much of our present discussion uninformed by relevant historical considerations—imagine a comparable analysis of tensions in the Middle East that made no reference to history—but it is also often oblivious to the problematic nature of the categories in question. Much contemporary discussion about science and religion assumes that there are discrete human activities, "science" and "religion," which have had some unitary and enduring essence that persists over time. That this is not the case, I hope to illustrate in a number of ways, one of which involves closely attending to the history of the relevant terms.
In the remaining sections of this chapter I will make some rather cursory and compressed remarks about the history of the terms "religion" and "science" (or at least of their Latin equivalents). More extended treatments will come in the chapters that follow, but for now I am seeking simply to establish a basic case for the importance of reconsidering our historical understanding of these two concepts.
The History of "Religion"
In the section of his monumental Summa theologiae that is devoted to a discussion of the virtues of justice and prudence, the thirteenth-century Dominican priest Thomas Aquinas (1225–74) investigates, in his characteristically methodical and insightful way, the nature of religion. Along with North African Church Father Augustine of Hippo (354–430), Aquinas is probably the most influential Christian writer outside of the biblical authors. From the outset it is clear that for Aquinas religion (religio) is a virtue—not, incidentally, one of the preeminent theological virtues, but nonetheless an important moral virtue related to justice. He explains that in its primary sense religio refers to interior acts of devotion and prayer, and that this interior dimension is more important than any outward expressions of this virtue. Aquinas acknowledges that a range of outward behaviors are associated with religio—vows, tithes, offerings, and so on—but he regards these as secondary. As I think is immediately obvious, this notion of religion is rather different from the one with which we are now familiar. There is no sense in which religio refers to systems of propositional beliefs, and no sense of different religion s (plural). Between Thomas's time and our own, religio has been transformed from a human virtue into a generic something, typically constituted by sets of beliefs and practices. It has also become the most common way of characterizing attitudes, beliefs, and practices concerned with the sacred or supernatural.
Aquinas's understanding of religio was by no means peculiar to him. Before the seventeenth century, the word "religion" and its cognates were used relatively infrequently. Equivalents of the term are virtually nonexistent in the canonical documents of the Western religions—the Hebrew Bible, the New Testament, and the Qur'an. When the term was used in the premodern West, it did not refer to discrete sets of beliefs and practices, but rather to something more like "inner piety," as we have seen in the case of Aquinas, or "worship." As a virtue associated with justice, moreover, religio was understood on the Aristotelian model of the virtues as the ideal middle point between two extremes—in this case, irreligion and superstition.
The vocabulary of "true religion" that we encounter in the writings of some of the Church Fathers offers an instructive example. "The true religion" is suggestive of a system of beliefs that is distinguished from other such systems that are false. But careful examination of the content of these expressions reveals that early discussions about true and false religion were typically concerned not with belief, but rather worship and whether or not worship is properly directed. Tertullian (ca. 160–ca. 220) was the first Christian thinker to produce substantial writings in Latin and was also probably the first to use the expression "true religion." But in describing Christianity as "true religion of the true god," he is referring to genuine worship directed toward a real (rather than fictitious) God. Another erudite North African Christian writer, Lactantius (ca. 240–ca. 320), gives the first book of his Divine Institutes the title "De Falsa Religione." Again, however, his purpose is not to demonstrate the falsity of pagan beliefs, but to show that "the religious ceremonies of the [pagan] gods are false," which is just to say that the objects of pagan worship are false gods. His positive project, an account of true religion, was "to teach in what manner or by what sacrifice God must be worshipped." Such rightly directed worship was for Lactantius "the duty of man, and in that one object the sum of all things and the whole course of a happy life consists."
(Continues...)Excerpted from The Territories of Science and Religion by Peter Harrison. Copyright © 2015 The University of Chicago. Excerpted by permission of The University of Chicago Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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Product details
- ASIN : B00SLVOLT6
- Publisher : The University of Chicago Press (April 6, 2015)
- Publication date : April 6, 2015
- Language : English
- File size : 3.8 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 315 pages
- Page numbers source ISBN : 022618448X
- Best Sellers Rank: #488,381 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #223 in Religious Studies - Science & Religion
- #411 in Religious Studies - History
- #658 in Science History & Philosophy
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About the author

Peter Harrison is a former Andreas Idreos Professor of Science and Religion at the University of Oxford and is Professor Emeritus of History and Philosophy at the University of Queensland. He presently holds a Professorial Research Fellowship at the University of Notre Dame, Australia and is a Senior Research Fellow at the Ian Ramsey Centre, Oxford.
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- Reviewed in the United States on September 18, 2015''Harvard biologist E. O. Wilson maintains that scientific materialism 'presents the human mind with an alternative mythology that until now has always point for point in zones of conflict, defeated traditional religion.' Wilson goes on to say that the story of evolution—or, the 'evolutionary epic' as he calls it—'is probably the best myth we will ever have.' ''
Harrison's ambition here is to revise many common "myths" on his subject. He says the common idea of the age long conflict of religion and science is wrong. His method is historical, starting with the Greeks and ending with Darwin. He focuses on the historical use of the words "religio" and "scientia".
Referring to Aquinas in the thirteenth century: "He explains that in its primary sense religio refers to interior acts of devotion and prayer, and that this interior dimension is more important than any outward expressions of this virtue." (6)
This is the opposite meaning of today. Today religion indicates rules, doctrines, organization, leaders and institutions. This is only few centuries old.
"Thomas Aquinas, because when we consider what he has to say on the notion of science ( scientia ) we find an intriguing parallel to his remarks on religio. In an extended treatment of the virtues in the Summa theologiae , Aquinas observes that science ( scientia ) is a habit of mind or an “intellectual virtue.” The parallel with religio, then, lies in the fact that we are now used to thinking of both religion and science as systems of beliefs and practices, rather than conceiving of them primarily as personal qualities." (11)
Harrison says that science followed a parallel path, from internal to external.
Therefore, in past times famous scholars could write: "When Aquinas asks whether sacred doctrine is one science, his affirmative answer refers to the fact that there is a single faculty or habit involved. His contemporary, the Franciscan theologian Bonaventure (1221–74), was to say that theological science was a habit that had as its chief end “that we become good.” The “subtle doctor,” John Duns Scotus (ca. 1265–1308), later wrote that the “science” of theology perfects the intellect and promotes the love of God: “The intellect perfected by the habit of theology apprehends God as one who should be loved.” (17)
Obviously, nothing like today's understanding.
1. The Territories of Science and Religion
2. The Cosmos and the Religious Quest
3. Signs and Causes
4. Science and the Origins of “Religion”
5. Utility and Progress
6. Professing Science
Harrison explains these words (religio and scientia) use in Greek philosophy, then in Augustine's mix of Platonic and Christian thought, then Aquinas' addition of Aristotle and Moslem teachings, then in the Newtonian/Scientific Revolution are addressed each in turn. The modern use is shown to only surface in the nineteenth century. Very carefully done.
The first chapter explains: “Forgetting—I would go so far as to say historical error—is a crucial factor in the creation of a nation.”. . .While we are all aware of the manner in which the idea of a nation involves founding myths of various kinds, and through them, the positive construction of a particular ideal, we are here reminded that founding myths also require a kind of negation—an amnesia about what came before, and a forgetting of historical realities that might challenge the integrity of our new conception.''
''Indeed, Karl Deutsch’s similarly unflattering definition of a nation—“a group of people united by a mistaken view about the past and a hatred of their neighbours”—is not an altogether unfitting description for those who in recent times have sought to foment hostility between science and religion." (19)
"This first chapter has provided some reasons for thinking that the creation of the modern boundaries of these concepts has also been accompanied by a kind of historical amnesia. In the chapters to come, I hope to expose some of the myths that inform our present categories, and to offer further details of an alternative, and largely forgotten history—a history that, once called to mind, may help us reconfigure the relationship between the entities that we now call “science” and “religion.” " (20)
One myth revised by Harrison is the origin of the 30 year war in Europe. The accepted view is - it was a "religious" war that created the modern state system. Harrison comments:
"Indeed, it is not a complete distortion to reverse the received understanding of these wars and say that the formation of the modern state was their cause, and the modern notion of religion a consequence." (98)
Another myth is the idea that science (as we now think of it) has always existed and is continually progressing though time.
"Modern science, then, emerges from a threefold process: first, a new identity—the scientist—is forged for its practitioners; second, it is claimed that the sciences share a distinctive method, one that excludes reference to religious and moral considerations; and, third, following on from this, the character of this new science is consolidated by drawing sharp boundaries and positing the existence of contrast cases—science and pseudo-science, science and technology, science and the humanities and, most important for our purposes, science and religion.''
How was this done?
''This last development was accompanied by the construction of a mythical past in which the newly crafted boundaries of the disciplines assume an ahistorical timelessness, and tales of a perennial conflict between science and religion are fashioned to reinforce the contemporary lines of demarcation." (160)
History rewritten or invented, to justify a exalted place for scientists and science.
Another theme Harrison presents is that the dispute between creation/evolution hides a deeper conflict:
"In some of its more popular guises, science is presented as possessing the philosophical or religious gravitas that had characterized natural philosophy and natural theology. Once, the cosmos had been a source of meaning and value. Now, following the consolidation of evolutionary theory in the first half of the twentieth century, it is nature viewed through an evolutionary lens that is most often conscripted for this role. Hints of these ambitions were already evident in the portentous closing lines of Darwin’s Origin:
"There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed by the Creator into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved." " (178)
Notice that Darwin borrows the honor and trust in Newton and physics (gravity) to lend it to his new theory, providing it value that it really does not have.
Harrison provides an example of a commitment to "myth building".
Harrison is indicating that this form of "science" is not conflicting with religion - it is religion!
This book provides numerous opportunities to revise previous beliefs. I think Harrison presents strong evidence and arguments that support his conclusions. Easy to read.
One outstanding feature is the 200 pages of notes, bibliography and index. The notes and index are connected to the text in the kindle edition. Works great.
This work is written for scholars. Nevertheless, it is easy to read, albeit with an educated vocabulary. Can change the thinking on these well known topics. Worth the time.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 1, 2015I have always found the so called war between science and religion of great interest. Some other books and articles I have read touched on some of Harrison's themes but none with such carefully argues details. This is really a Must Read for anyone serious about the relationship between science and religion.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 27, 2017There is a myth of historical contention and antagonism between "science" and "religion," but it really wasn't until the last few centuries that the heated antagonism rose up. Harrison points out that historically these two disciplines coexisted and worked together to increase knowledge and wisdom. While it is not a perfect text, he does make some very good points discussing the history of these disciplines and ideologies. I highly recommend this text to any and all who are involved in discussions and debates in these areas, so that we can better articulate our positions, and maybe be more civil in our discussions.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2016Ground-breaking would be one good metaphor. Futuristic would be another that immediately comes to mind.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 29, 2020I gave this book three stars because I think the writer is a fool, but his book is such a perfect illustration of Chesterton's aphorism that it serves a laudable purpose. After the usual bloviating of a contemporary college professor of humanities citing sources and repeating a thesis ad nauseam, it becomes clear how unhinged philosophy becomes when realism is abandoned. The writer is concerned purely with wordplay about ideas and beliefs that he clearly assumes have no empirical referents. That is, the unstated assumption of the book is that religion, faith, science and magic are all mental and sociological constructs. The question of whether one or another might be true, and the Aristotelian law of the excluded middle, do not seem to appear anywhere in this mindset.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 9, 2017This book is very good on the historical development of what we now call religion and science. However, the ending was not as satisfying as I was led to believe. The final chapter is almost wistful in its love of the past and frustration with present. An excellent follow up book would be Alastair McIntyre’s “after virtue.”
- Reviewed in the United States on September 28, 2015Compelling evidence that calls out the mythological conflict between the relatively modern categories of religion and science. Harrison's project is well indexed and thought out. It provides a much needed voice in the ongoing struggle to correct long held false assumptions about the history of Christianity's relationship with science.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 16, 2017Badly produced Kindle version. Why is it that so many publishers cannot produce full justification texts?
Top reviews from other countries
- nathanReviewed in the United Kingdom on October 11, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Very good all round!
- RWLMReviewed in the United Kingdom on February 10, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars A fine book.
Learned, lucid, and compelling. A fine book.