Banner Advertise

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

[vinnomot] An Illusion of Harmony: troubled relationship between science and religion


 An wonderful book by Turkish author Taner Edis which exposes a troublesome way Islam
is trying to integrate science and its ill consequence on scientific minds of Muslim countries.



An Illusion of Harmony
book cover

Islamic Studies

Home

To order this book, please select one:
Amazon.com
Barnes and Noble




watermark
Science and Religion in Islam
....
Taner Edis
....
"One of the few recent books that truly illuminates the troubled relationship between science and religion....a rich mix of intellectual history, philosophical reasoning and personal insight."

-New Scientist


�Taner Edis makes a compelling case that classical Islamic thought cannot accommodate a modern scientific culture whose basis is experimentation, quantification, and prediction. He exposes the vacuity of faith-based science using a range of examples. But Edis does not rule out an eventual reinterpretation of Muslim theology that will, as in other world religions, eventually allow science and Islam to go their own separate ways.�

Pervez Hoodbhoy, Professor of Physics
Quaid-e-Azam University, Islamabad
Author of Islam and Science: Religious Orthodoxy and
the Battle for Rationality


�In a cultural arena dominated by polemics, Tanner Edis, a historically sensitive Turkish-American physicist, stands out as a voice of reason. I don�t know of a better introduction to science and religion in Islam than An Illusion of Harmony.�
Ronald L. Numbers, author of The Creationists:
From Scientific Creationism to Intelligent Design


Current discussions in the West on the relation of science and religion focus mainly on science�s uneasy relationship with the traditional Judeo-Christian view of life. But a parallel controversy exists in the Muslim world regarding ways to integrate science with Islam. As physicist Taner Edis shows in this fascinating glimpse into contemporary Muslim culture, a good deal of popular writing in Muslim societies attempts to address such perplexing questions as:
  • Is Islam a �scientific religion�?
  • Were the discoveries of modern science foreshadowed in the Quran?
  • Are intelligent design conjectures more appealing to the Muslim perspective than Darwinian explanations?
Edis examines the range of Muslim thinking about science and Islam, from blatantly pseudoscientific fantasies to comparatively sophisticated efforts to �Islamize science.� From the world�s strongest creationist movements to bizarre science-in-the-Quran apologetics, popular Muslim approaches promote a view of natural science as a mere fact-collecting activity that coexists in near-perfect harmony with literal-minded faith. Since Muslims are keenly aware that science and technology have been the keys to Western success, they are eager to harness science to achieve a Muslim version of modernity. Yet at the same time, they are reluctant to allow science to become independent of religion and are suspicious of Western secularization.

Edis examines all of these conflicting trends, revealing the difficulties facing Muslim societies trying to adapt to the modern technological world. His discussions of both the parallels and the differences between Western and Muslim attempts to harmonize science and religion make for a unique and intriguing contribution to this continuing debate.

Taner Edis (Kirksville, MO), born and raised in Turkey, is an associate professor of physics at Truman State University and the author of The Ghost in the Universe: God in Light of Modern Science and Science and Nonbelief, among other publications.

....

__._,_.___
Recent Activity
Visit Your Group
Yahoo! News

Kevin Sites

Get coverage of

world crises.

Yahoo! Finance

It's Now Personal

Guides, news,

advice & more.

Y! Messenger

Files to share?

Send up to 1GB of

files in an IM.

.

__,_._,___