Selfish Genes and Christian Ethics
Title | Selfish Genes and Christian Ethics PDF eBook |
Author | Neil Messer |
Publisher | SCM Press |
Pages | 288 |
Release | 2007-03-30 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 0334029961 |
The evolutionary origins of human beings, and in particular the origins of human morality, have always attracted debate and speculation, not just in the academic community but in popular science and the wider general population as well. The arguments and explanations put forward over the years seem to thoroughly catch the popular imagination, but there is the danger that these explanations tend to step outside the bounds of scientific theory and become powerful popular myths instead. In Neil Messer's "Selfish Genes and Christian Ethics", the author is challenging this tendency. Instead, he provides a Christian theological anthropology, which, among other things, aims to give Christians and the churches the confidence to engage with assumptions that evolutionary theory and religious beliefs are untenable. This is a valuable resource for anyone engaged in the study of theology, providing the reader with the ability to consider both the theoretical and the practical questions raised by evolutionary discussions of ethics and morality.
The Selfish Gene
Title | The Selfish Gene PDF eBook |
Author | Richard Dawkins |
Publisher | Oxford University Press, USA |
Pages | 372 |
Release | 1989 |
Genre | Medical |
ISBN | 9780192860927 |
Science need not be dull and bogged down by jargon, as Richard Dawkins proves in this entertaining look at evolution. The themes he takes up are the concepts of altruistic and selfish behaviour; the genetical definition of selfish interest; the evolution of aggressive behaviour; kinshiptheory; sex ratio theory; reciprocal altruism; deceit; and the natural selection of sex differences. 'Should be read, can be read by almost anyone. It describes with great skill a new face of the theory of evolution.' W.D. Hamilton, Science
Dictionary of Scripture and Ethics
Title | Dictionary of Scripture and Ethics PDF eBook |
Author | Joel B. Green |
Publisher | Baker Academic |
Pages | 912 |
Release | 2011-11 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 080103406X |
Leading scholars from the fields of biblical studies and ethics provide a one-stop reference book on the vital relationship between Scripture and ethics.
Love and Christian Ethics
Title | Love and Christian Ethics PDF eBook |
Author | Frederick V. Simmons |
Publisher | Georgetown University Press |
Pages | 409 |
Release | 2016-12-15 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 1626163685 |
At the heart of Christian ethics is the biblical commandment to love God and to love one's neighbor as oneself. But what is the meaning of love? Scholars have wrestled with this question since the recording of the Christian gospels, and in recent decades teachers and students of Christian ethics have engaged in vigorous debates about appropriate interpretations and implications of this critical norm. In Love and Christian Ethics, nearly two dozen leading experts analyze and assess the meaning of love from a wide range of perspectives. Chapters are organized into three areas: influential sources and exponents of Western Christian thought about the ethical significance of love, perennial theoretical questions attending that consideration, and the implications of Christian love for important social realities. Contributors bring a richness of thought and experience to deliver unprecedentedly broad and rigorous analysis of this central tenet of Christian ethics and faith. William Werpehowski provides an afterword on future trajectories for this research. Love and Christian Ethics is sure to become a benchmark resource in the field.
Evolution and Holiness
Title | Evolution and Holiness PDF eBook |
Author | Matthew Nelson Hill |
Publisher | InterVarsity Press |
Pages | 255 |
Release | 2016-02-08 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 0830839070 |
Theology needs to engage what recent developments in the study of evolution mean for how we understand moral behavior. How does the theological concept of holiness connect to contemporary understandings of evolution? In this groundbreaking work, Matthew Hill uses the lens of Wesleyan ethics to offer a fresh assessment of the intersection of evolution and theology.
Altruism and Christian Ethics
Title | Altruism and Christian Ethics PDF eBook |
Author | Colin Grant |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 288 |
Release | 2000-11-16 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 1139430211 |
Separated from its anchorage in religion, ethics has followed the social sciences in seeing human beings as fundamentally characterised by self-interest, so that altruism is either naively idealistic or arrogantly self-sufficient. Colin Grant contends that, as a modern secular concept, altruism is a parody on the self-giving love of Christianity, so that its dismissal represents a social levelling that loses the depths that theology makes intelligible and religion makes possible. The Christian affirmation is that God is characterised by self-giving love (agape), then expected of Christians. Lacking this theological background, the focus on self-interest in sociobiology and economics, and on human realism in the political focus of John Rawls or the feminist sociability of Carol Gilligan, finds altruism naive or a dangerous distraction from real possibilities of mutual support. This book argues that to dispense with altruism is to dispense with God and with the divine transformation of human possibilities.
Redeeming Sin?
Title | Redeeming Sin? PDF eBook |
Author | Ernst M. Conradie |
Publisher | Lexington Books |
Pages | 291 |
Release | 2017-10-11 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 1498542468 |
Can Christian sin-talk be retrieved within the public sphere? In this contribution to ecotheology, Ernst M. Conradie argues that, amid ecological destruction, discourse on sin can contribute to a multidisciplinary depth diagnosis of what has gone wrong in the world. He confronts some major obstacles related to the plausibility of sin-talk in conversation with evolutionary biology, the cognitive sciences, and animal ethology. He defends an Augustinian insistence that social evil, rather than natural evil, is our primary predicament. If the root cause of social evil is sin, then a Christian confession of sin may yet yield good news for the whole earth.