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Is Theology a Science?: The Nature of the Scientific Enterprise in the Scientific Theology of Thomas Forsyth Torrance and the Anarchic Epistemology of Paul Feyerabend PDF

311 Pages·2011·1.4 MB·English
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Is Theology a Science? Studies in Systematic Theology Series Editors Stephen Bevans S.V.D, Catholic Theological Union, Chicago Miikka Ruokanen, University of Helsinki and Nanjing Union Theological Seminary Advisory Board Wanda Deifelt, Luther College, Decorah (IA) Veli-Matti Kärkkäinen, Fuller Theological Seminary, Pasadena (CA) Jesse Mugambi, University of Nairobi, Nairobi Rachel Zhu Xiaohong, Fudan University, Shanghai VOLUME 7 Is Theology a Science? The Nature of the Scientific Enterprise in the Scientific Theology of Thomas Forsyth Torrance and the Anarchic Epistemology of Paul Feyerabend By David Munchin LEIDEN • BOSTON LEIDEN • BOSTON 2011 This book is printed on acid-free paper. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Munchin, David. Is theology a science? : the nature of the scientific enterprise in the scientific theology of Thomas Forsyth Torrance and the anarchic epistemology of Paul Feyerabend / by David Munchin. p. cm. -- (Studies in systematic theology ; v. 7) Includes bibliographical references and (p. ) index. ISBN 978-90-04-19459-5 (hardback : alk. paper) 1. Religion and science. 2. Torrance, Thomas F. (Thomas Forsyth), 1913-2007. 3. Theology--Methodology. 4. Feyerabend, Paul, 1924-1994. 5. Science--Philosophy. I. Title. II. Series. BL240.3.M85 2011 201’.65--dc22 2011008582 ISSN 1876-1518 ISBN 978 90 04 19459 5 Copyright 2011 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands. Koninklijke Brill NV incorporates the imprints Brill, Global Oriental, Hotei Publishing, IDC Publishers, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers and VSP. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission from the publisher. Authorization to photocopy items for internal or personal use is granted by Koninklijke Brill NV provided that the appropriate fees are paid directly to The Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Suite 910, Danvers, MA 01923, USA. Fees are subject to change. For Ysmena CONTENTS Preface .........................................................................................................ix Acknowledgements ...................................................................................xi Chapter One Introduction: Context and History ................................1 Contextual Background on the Scientific Status of Theology until Torrance ................................................................9 Barth and Natural Science ..................................................................13 Chapter Two Introducing the Dialogue Partners: Torrance and Feyerabend ....................................................................................18 Thomas Forsyth Torrance ...................................................................18 Paul Feyerabend ...................................................................................20 Feyerabend as Critical Friend to Torrance .......................................36 Chapter Three Torrance: Theology Cohabiting with Natural Science .....................................................................................50 The Theory of General Relativity .......................................................54 Quantum Physics .................................................................................60 Gödel’s Theorem ...................................................................................66 Conclusion ............................................................................................70 Chapter Four Torrance’s Proposal – A New Objectivity ..................75 A New Objectivity ................................................................................75 Similarities and Differences ................................................................84 Conclusion ..........................................................................................113 Chapter Five Feyerabend’s Challenge – ‘Knowledge without Foundations’ .......................................................................................116 Theory and Observation: Counter-Inductivism, Theoretical Pluralism and the Rejection of Empirical Cumulativism .........117 The Incommensurability Thesis .......................................................138 Against Method and Farewell to Reason ........................................143 Destination Relativism ......................................................................146 Voluntarism ........................................................................................148 viii contents Chapter Six Two Excurses ..................................................................153 Hermeneutics and Science ................................................................153 Realism ................................................................................................186 Chapter Seven Coherence and Language ........................................205 Epistemic Coherence and Correspondence ...................................205 Religious and Scientific Language ...................................................209 Coherence in Theology and Scripture – Witnesses to a Single Truth? ................................................................................213 Chapter Eight From Foundations to Spirals ....................................220 Enlightenment Foundationalism and Reductionism ....................220 Progressive Foundationalism and Ordered Strata .........................225 Fluid Axioms ......................................................................................227 Evident to the Senses – The Wrong Foundations ..........................234 Spirals and Iterations – The Search for a New Metaphor of Knowledge ..................................................................................255 Conclusion ..........................................................................................261 Conclusion ..............................................................................................263 Bibliography ............................................................................................283 Index ........................................................................................................295 PREFACE This book began life as doctoral thesis, and therefore is primarily a work of academic scholarship. I am not however a professional aca- demic but a parish priest in the Anglican Church, for whom at one level, work such as this is a diversion, therapy and intellectual stimu- lant. However at a more significant level, it is also an attempt – and hopefully this is not too pretentious a claim – to think hard about the intellectual challenges and resources of the Christian gospel, as part of a ministry that is rooted in the day to day joys, trials and muddle of people’s lives. It is fuelled by a belief that somewhat contrary to present trends, any too permanent or deep divergence between Church and University, will in the long term, only do damage to the standing of the gospel, as well as marking a break in the tradition that numbered thinkers and doctors among the saints. That is not to say that the church will not have profound and searching questions to ask the University – Barth for instance, would certainly have reserved that right to the church – but it must do so as critical friend, and not as a refuge of the disenfranchised, exempting itself from the call to an hon- est and genuine dialogue. This is not simply because the church has much to gain pragmatically from allying itself with scholarship, but for the rather more important reason that ‘truth matters’, even if, as with Feyerabend, we have to wrestle the concept of truth from ironic quote marks. Truth matters not just in the University, but in all human lives – pace Feyerabend, I believe that the search for truth and human flour- ishing are ultimately coincident. The forces ranged against such a search are in the ascendant – scholars are not wholly innocent, but more to blame are the media, advertisers and politicians, who have often found the truth uncomfortable and inconvenient. However, neither has the church been innocent, as pressure grows to ‘package’ a ‘needs-and-wishes-answering’ faith in dangerously simplistic and un-nuanced form. Contemporary culture’s preference for simplistic and antithetical disjunctions – fact and value, fact and opinion, faith and reason – is deeply pervasive and damaging. This book is concerned with a further dichotomy. “To assert that a person, or his idea, is ‘unscientific’ is the

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