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World views yesterday and today - What will remain and what will be laughed at tomorrow?
Band 2: Lectures & Insights
Geistes-, Sozial- & Kulturwissenschaften
Paperback
56 Seiten
ISBN-13: 9783936624472
Verlag: van Laack GmbH
Erscheinungsdatum: 08.07.2020
Sprache: Englisch
erhältlich als:
5,00 €
inkl. MwSt. / portofrei
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Mehr InfosOur world, the entire universe, simply everything of which
we are only a small but nevertheless important part of
an incredibly large whole, certainly stems from one single source!
From time immemorial we have been asking
metaphysical questions, such as:
How can there be a creative intelligence?
Is there a God or whatever we want to call "him+her+it"?
Is there a spirit, a "spiritual dimension"?
And, of course, does our life end with death?
Has an individual a free will? What is our "Self"?
Was our universe really created by a Big Bang?
These questions and many more will probably occupy
all of our minds somehow at some time or other.
Natural sciences and religions have often given us diverse,
in many cases even mutually excluding arguments.
Natural sciences and related fields
currently still mainly adhere to notions
which are reduced to materialism (naturalism).
In these notions "God" or a "brain-independent spirit" have just
as little place as our "Self" and an at least basic "free will",
not to speak of a belief in a survival of death
which is at best smiled at as "naïve romanticism".
Based on a recent lecture, the author, physician and university professor
once again suggests in this book, that such notions reduced
solely to materialism are antiquated.
we are only a small but nevertheless important part of
an incredibly large whole, certainly stems from one single source!
From time immemorial we have been asking
metaphysical questions, such as:
How can there be a creative intelligence?
Is there a God or whatever we want to call "him+her+it"?
Is there a spirit, a "spiritual dimension"?
And, of course, does our life end with death?
Has an individual a free will? What is our "Self"?
Was our universe really created by a Big Bang?
These questions and many more will probably occupy
all of our minds somehow at some time or other.
Natural sciences and religions have often given us diverse,
in many cases even mutually excluding arguments.
Natural sciences and related fields
currently still mainly adhere to notions
which are reduced to materialism (naturalism).
In these notions "God" or a "brain-independent spirit" have just
as little place as our "Self" and an at least basic "free will",
not to speak of a belief in a survival of death
which is at best smiled at as "naïve romanticism".
Based on a recent lecture, the author, physician and university professor
once again suggests in this book, that such notions reduced
solely to materialism are antiquated.
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