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The Sacred Depths of Nature: Excerpts

Zygon 35 (3):567-586 (2000)

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  1. Introduction.Jerome A. Stone - 2003 - Zygon 38 (1):85-87.
    The papers in this section were given as a panel on Religious Naturalism at the American Academy of Religion in Denver in November 2001. The panelists included Jerome Stone, Gordon Kaufman, Ursula Goodenough, Charley Hardwick, and Donald Crosby. This introduction briefly describes the panelists, lists three questions the panelists were asked to consider, and names other current and past religious naturalists.
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  • Stage-two secularity and the future of theology-and-science.Gregory R. Peterson - 2010 - Zygon 45 (2):506-516.
    Charles Taylor has recently provided an in-depth exploration of secularity, with a central characteristic being the understanding that religious commitment is optional. This essay extends this analysis, considering the possibility that American society may be entering a second stage of secularity, one in which the possibility of religious commitment ceases to be an option at all for many. The possible implications of such a development are considered for the theology-and-science dialogue.
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  • Re‐Envisioning Hope: Anthropogenic Climate Change, Learned Ignorance, and Religious Naturalism.Carol Wayne White - 2018 - Zygon 53 (2):570-585.
    In this essay, I introduce religious naturalism as one contemporary religious response to anthropogenic climate change; in so doing, I offer a concept of hope associated with the beauty of ignorance, of not knowing ourselves in the usual manner. Reframing humans as natural processes in relationship with other forms of nature, religious naturalism encourages humans’ processes of transformative engagement with each other and with the more‐than‐human worlds that constitute our existence. Hope in this context is anticipating what possibilities may occur (...)
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  • Natural Law: A Good Idea That Does Not Work Very Well.James R. Thobaben - 2016 - Christian Bioethics 22 (2):213-237.
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  • Why Big Bang is so Accepted and Popular: Some Contributions of a Thematic Analysis.João Barbosa - 2021 - Axiomathes (3):1-26.
    Some important and decisive observations allowed a widespread and almost unquestionable acceptance of the big bang cosmology, but we can admit and search other factors that have contributed and continue to contribute to the enormous acceptance and great popularity of this cosmological conception, not only inside but also outside of cosmology and even in numerous no scientific contexts. To find some of those factors, a case study was undertaken based on thematic analysis, an analytical tool which is based on the (...)
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  • Dancing with Karl Peters.Gregory R. Peterson - 2005 - Zygon 40 (3):691-700.
    Dancing with the Sacred by Karl Peters provides a coherent and at times moving portrait of the religious naturalist position. I highlight three broad issues that are raised by the kind of religious naturalism that Peters develops: (1) the meaning of the term natural, (2) the nature of God in Peters's naturalistic framework, and (3) the question of eschatology. In each area, I believe that Peters's work raises many questions that need to be addressed and also provides openings for further (...)
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  • Theory and practice: Neural buddhism, ethics, and cultural captivity.Philip Hefner - 2008 - Zygon 43 (3):535-539.
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  • Why Big Bang is so Accepted and Popular: Some Contributions of a Thematic Analysis.João Barbosa - 2022 - Axiomathes 32 (3):433-458.
    Some important and decisive observations allowed a widespread and almost unquestionable acceptance of the big bang cosmology, but we can admit and search other factors that have contributed and continue to contribute to the enormous acceptance and great popularity of this cosmological conception, not only inside but also outside of cosmology and even in numerous no scientific contexts. To find some of those factors, a case study was undertaken based on thematic analysis, an analytical tool which is based on the (...)
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  • The Primordial Forms of Autopoiesis: It Is Self-Assemblage All the Way Down.Vincent Colapietro - 2017 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 31 (1):190-206.
    Short of the universe in its entirety, there is not any whole that is not also a part, frequently in a dynamic, integral sense. Arthur Koestler coined the word holon to designate any part-whole. Even those parts that are seemingly mere constituents of some whole are themselves wholes to some extent. They have an integrity and identity of their own, even if their existence is apparently reducible to that of a constituent of a whole. If we take the multicellular organism (...)
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