Man and the Universe
The physicist Sir Oliver Lodge (1851–1940) made significant contributions to the study of electrons, electromagnetic waves, X-rays, radio and telegraphy, earning him the Rumford Medal, the Faraday Medal and, in 1902, a knighthood. In addition to serving as President of the Physical Society, Lodge succeeded F. W. H. Myers as President of the Society for Psychical Research, an organisation devoted to the study of paranormal phenomena. In this work, first published in 1908, Lodge discusses the controversy between science and faith, showing how the self-sufficient laws of 'orthodox science' may be reconciled with the divinely ordered universe of 'orthodox religion'. Immensely popular from the moment of its publication, the book reached its twenty-first printing in 1928. This sixth edition of 1909 conveys the full scope of Lodge's ambitious project, including his treatments of evolutionary science, church reform and the immortality of the soul.
Product details
December 2011Paperback
9781108040815
372 pages
216 × 140 × 21 mm
0.47kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Section 1. Science and Faith:
- 1. The outstanding controversy between science and faith
- 2. The reconciliation between science and faith
- 3. Religion, science, and miracle
- Section 2. Corporate Worship and Service:
- 4. The alleged indifference of laymen to religion
- 5. Some suggestions towards reform
- 6. Union and breadth
- 7. A reformed church as an engine of progress
- Section 3. The Immortality of the Soul:
- 8. The transitory and the permanent
- 9. The permanence of personality
- Section 4. Science and Christianity:
- 10. Suggestions towards the re-interpretation of Christian doctrine
- 11. Sin, suffering, and wrath
- 12. The material element in Christianity
- 13. The divine element in Christianity
- Glossary of technical terms and statement of mechanical laws
- Index.