Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 264
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7425-6312-4 • Hardback • October 2008 • $26.95 • (£19.99) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
978-0-7425-6313-1 • Paperback • September 2010 • $16.95 • (£12.99)
978-0-7425-6553-1 • eBook • October 2008 • $16.00 • (£11.99)
Dean L. Overman is former senior partner of the international law firm Winston & Strawn. A former Templeton scholar at Oxford University in the fields of information theory, physics, and religion, he has also studied theology at Princeton Theological Seminary and was a visiting scholar at Harvard University. He is the author of A Case Against Accident and Self-Organization.
Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: The question of God's existence: the radical contingency of the universe points toward a necessary being
Chapter 3: Many generations of philosophers have made the mistake of assuming Hume and Kant's objections disposed of the cosmological argument
Chapter 4: A universe with an infinite past would still require a necessary being to sustain its existence
Chapter 5: Because the universe (or multiverse) had a beginning, it is contingent and has a cause for its coming into existence
Chapter 6: The philosophy of nature set forth in this book emphasizes the intelligibility of the universe noted in Einstein's statement: "The most incomprehensible thing about the world is that it is comprehensible." A significant issue in examining the "something" that exists is Why is it intelligible?
Chapter 7: Evolution is not dispositive of the question of why there is something rather than nothing and why the universe is rational and intelligible
Chapter 8: The mystery of information challenges a strict materialism
Chapter 9: The existence of God gives an absolute that is consistent with the real existence of right and wrong
Chapter 10: Evidential force of religious experience: If God is a person, God can be known to only a very limited extent by abstract reasoning and is more fully known by personal acquaintance in an I-Thou relationship with the Wholly Other
Chapter 11: Recorded experiences of encounters with the divine bear witness to a way of knowing that includes Kierkegaard's Kendskab, Buber's I-Thou, Otto's Wholly Other, and Marcel's Mystery
Chapter 12: These nine witnesses testify to another way of knowing that is compatible with the empirical and the metaphysical rational ways of knowing, but is beyond the describable and requires personal participation, commitment, and personal transformation
Chapter 13: Concluding reflections and summary: Theism requires a leap of faith, but it is a leap into the light, not into the dark; theism explains more than Atheism, which also requires a leap of faith
Afterword
Appendix A: The new mathematics of algorithmic information theory is relevant to theories concerning the formation of the first living matter
Appendix B: The limits of mathematics and the limits of reason: Why everyone will always live by faith rather than certainty
Appendix C: The evidence from contemporary physics supports the concepts of personal responsibility and free will
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index
About the Author