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Roman Catholicism and Modern Science

A History

Roman Catholicism and Modern Science

A History

This item is a print on demand title and will be dispatched in 1-3 weeks.

Paperback / softback

£26.99

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN: 9780826429261
Number of Pages: 376
Published: 21/11/2007
In the popular imagination, historical relations between the Roman Catholic Church and modern science are best epitomized in the case of Galileo Galilei. Condemned in 1633 for advancing the theory of a moving earth and a stationary sun, he was only exonerated in 1992. Yet apart from relatively few and specialized studies, there have been no extensive historical treatments of Catholic attitudes toward science after Galileo.While Galileo's heliocentric universe had challenged the "inerrancy" of the Bible, Darwin's theory challenged the direct and immediate creation of the first humans. Through O'Leary's cast of characters - popes from Pius IX to John Paul II, polemicists like Thomas Henry Huxley and Irish physicist John Tyndall, Catholic apologists and scientists like St. George Jackson Mivart - we get a clear picture of the back and forth volleys between representatives of the scientific and ecclesiastical establishments as well as within each of those establishments. Besides evolution, a wide range of other issues receives attention, including agnosticism, biblical criticism, the philosophy and professionalization of science, contraception, "in vitro" fertilization, gene therapy, experimentation on embryos and organ transplantation. O'Leary explains the intricacies of all of these issues clearly and fairly, though their ultimate resolution may take decades to achieve.
Introduction; 1. From Galileo to Darwin; 2. Religion and Science in Victorian Britain; 3. A Church Under Siege; 4. Defensive Strategies; 5. Suppression of the Mivartian Hypothesis; 6. Anti-Modernism; 7. Catholicism and Science in the Interwar Years; 8. Pope Pius XII and the New Theology; 9. Science, Faith, and the Second Vatican Council; 10. Pope John Paul II's Philosophy of Science and Faith.

Dr Don O'Leary

Don O'Leary is professionally qualified in the disciplines of science and history and is currently employed in scientific research at the Biosciences Institute at University College Cork.

"...how admirably comprehensive, detailed and balanced a survey this is." Michael Hoskin, The Tablet "Roman Catholicism and Modern Science is a fascinating and reliable account... It makes an important contribution to modern church history as well as to the present dialogue of science and religion." America"