Difference between revisions of "The Role of Revelation in the Act of Science"

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Reprinted in ''Proceedings of the NPA'', V3, N1, pp. 95, 111, 130.  An "act of science' is the birth of any new idea, or set of coupled ideas, contributing to the advance of science. Today no role is granted to 'revelation', as disclosure by God, in an act of science. Science and secularization have worked together to establish this idea that science and divine work must be antimonies. This has led to a crisis in modern physics.
 
Reprinted in ''Proceedings of the NPA'', V3, N1, pp. 95, 111, 130.  An "act of science' is the birth of any new idea, or set of coupled ideas, contributing to the advance of science. Today no role is granted to 'revelation', as disclosure by God, in an act of science. Science and secularization have worked together to establish this idea that science and divine work must be antimonies. This has led to a crisis in modern physics.
  
[[Category:Scientific Paper]]
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[[Category:Scientific Paper|role revelation act science]]

Latest revision as of 11:25, 1 January 2017

Scientific Paper
Title The Role of Revelation in the Act of Science
Author(s) Alex Ceapa
Keywords revelation, hand of God
Published 2006
Journal Galilean Electrodynamics
Volume 18
Number SI-2
Pages 22

Abstract

Reprinted in Proceedings of the NPA, V3, N1, pp. 95, 111, 130. An "act of science' is the birth of any new idea, or set of coupled ideas, contributing to the advance of science. Today no role is granted to 'revelation', as disclosure by God, in an act of science. Science and secularization have worked together to establish this idea that science and divine work must be antimonies. This has led to a crisis in modern physics.