Whatever Happened to the Soul?: Scientific and Theological Portraits of Human NatureWarren S. Brown, Nancey C. Murphy, H. Newton Malony As science crafts detailed accounts of human nature, what has become of the soul?This collaborative project strives for greater consonance between contemporary science and Christian faith. Outstanding scholars in biology, genetics, neuroscience, cognitive science, philosophy, theology, biblical studies, and ethics join here to offer contemporary accounts of human nature consistent with Christian teaching. Their central theme is a nondualistic account of the human person that does not consider the "soul" an entity separable from the body; scientific statements about the physical nature of human beings are about exactly the same entity as are theological statements concerning the spiritual nature of human beings.For all those interested in fundamental questions of human identity posed by the present context, this volume will provide a fascinating and authoritative resource. |
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Contents
Human Nature Historical Scientific and Religious Issues | 1 |
Ancient Philosophy | 2 |
Early Christian Sources | 4 |
Early Modern Science | 6 |
Philosophy of Mind | 8 |
Recent Science | 11 |
Developments in Theology and Biblical Studies | 19 |
Where Do We Stand? | 24 |
Physicalism and Reductionism | 128 |
Empirical Support for Nonreductive Physicalism | 139 |
A NonreductivePhysicalist Account of Religious Experience | 143 |
Conclusion | 148 |
Bodies That Is Human Lives A ReExamination of Human Nature in the Bible | 149 |
The Human Person and the Scriptures of Israel | 155 |
The Human Person and Hellenism | 159 |
Human Nature in Luke | 163 |
Human Nature One Evolutionists View | 31 |
Humankinds Biological Origins | 33 |
An Evolutionary Account of Ethics | 40 |
The Road Traversed | 48 |
A Genetic View of Human Nature | 49 |
The Formation of a Genetic View | 50 |
Pathways from Genes to Behaviors | 54 |
Genes and Cognitive Abilities | 58 |
Genes and Personality | 62 |
Implications of this Genetic View | 68 |
Brain Mind and Behavior | 73 |
Gaining Perspective | 75 |
The Contemporary Scene | 79 |
What Does It All Imply? | 87 |
Conclusions | 97 |
Cognitive Contributions to Soul | 99 |
Human Cognition Personal Relatedness and an Emergent Soul | 101 |
Critical Cognitive Capacities for Personal Relatedness | 103 |
Conclusion | 125 |
Nonreductive Physicalism Philosophical Issues | 127 |
Human Nature in Paul | 169 |
Implications and Discussion Points | 172 |
On Being Human The Spiritual Saga of a Creaturely Soul | 175 |
Biblical Portraits of Human Nature Terms and Images | 177 |
Points of Clarification with Suggested Conclusions | 182 |
Theological Portraits of Human Nature Old and New | 183 |
Theological Issues and Perspectives | 185 |
SelfIdentity Mortality Resurrection of the Body | 188 |
A Moral Case for Nonreductive Physicalism | 195 |
The Purported Moral Achievements of Dualism | 197 |
Adverse Moral Consequences of Nonmaterial Souls | 203 |
Christian Ethics in Nonreductive Physicalism | 210 |
Conclusion Reconciling Scientific and Biblical Portraits of Human Nature | 213 |
Nonreductive Human Science | 215 |
Physicalist Theology | 223 |
The Practical Value of Nonreductive Physicalism | 227 |
229 | |
245 | |
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