Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 208
Trim: 5¾ x 8¾
978-0-7425-4264-8 • Hardback • April 2005 • $24.95 • (£18.99)
Kevin Sharpe is a professor in the Graduate College of Union Institute and University in Cincinnati, Ohio. He is a member of the Harris Manchester College, Oxford University, and co-directs the Oxford Institute for Science and Spirit. Originally from New Zealand, he now splits his time between Harrington Park, New Jersey, and Oxford, England.
Chapter 1 Happiness and Spiritual Traditions
Chapter 2 Happiness and Contemporary Science
Chapter 3 Interlude 1: An Unhappy Conflagration
Chapter 4 Love and Spiritual Traditions
Chapter 5 Love and Contemporary Science
Chapter 6 Interlude 2: An Unloving Conflagration
Chapter 7 Evolutionary Psychology: A Science Background
Chapter 8 Evolutionary Psychology: A Spiritual Background
Chapter 9 Interlude 3: Philip Hefner's Conflagration Band-Aid
Chapter 10 Interlude 4: Ted Peter's Conflagration Band-Aid
Chapter 11 Divine Projections
Chapter 12 Scientific Hypotheses
Chapter 13 Interlude 5: Happiness, Love, and the Divine
Kevin Sharpe's new book, Has Science Displaced the Soul? is a stimulating look at some of the most important issues that lie between science and religion. He approaches these issues with the strength of a scientist and with the conviction of a Christian, having things to say of much value about the natural process and about the physical and spiritual nature of human beings—their hopes and their futures. There is much for us all to learn from this work.
— Michael Ruse, Florida State University
Has Science Displaced the Soul? Debating Love & Happiness is a fascinating and very readable description of how love and happiness can be viewed from both the scientific and religious perspectives. By comparing these two approaches, Kevin Sharpe has illustrated the important differences and similarities between science and religion. This book provides a new and exciting synthesis to the issues of love and happiness and lays a foundation for future studies of love and happiness from both the scientific as well as the religious perspective.
— Andrew Newberg M.D., author of How God Changes Your Brain; Professor of Emergency Medicine and Radiology and Director of Research, Myrna Brind Center of Integrative Medicine, Thomas Jefferson University and Hospital
Amid all the triumphal talk in science these days, increasing numbers of individuals have come to believe we are merely the sum total of our genes and DNA. This book is a bold attempt to reconcile clashes such as this that have erupted between science and spiritual thought. Sharpe contends we need contributions from both science and spirituality to understand our place in the cosmos. Highly provocative, there is something herein to challenge everyone.
— Larry Dossey, MD, Author of Healing Beyond the Body, Reinventing Medicine, and Healing Words
It is a reflection of and a tribute to Sharpe's scholarship that he challenges our contemporary and obsolete manner of conceiving the subject. I look forward to Sharpe and Bryant's future elaboration of the Divine and the dialog that they envision between science, values, and spirituality.
— The European Legacy – Toward New Paradigms