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A hospitable universe : addressing ethical and spiritual concerns in light of recent scientific discoveries / by Rodolfo Gambini, with the collaboration of Jorge Pullin.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Gambini, Rodolfo, author.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Science--Social aspects.
- Science.
- Religion and science.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (308 pages) : illustrations
- Edition:
- 1st ed.
- Place of Publication:
- Exeter, England : Imprint Academic, 2018.
- Summary:
- This book argues that new developments in the sciences, in particular twentieth-century physics and twenty-first-century biology, suggest revising several pessimistic outlooks for the development of a scientific understanding of the relationship of humans with the universe - in particular, implications for the development of a natural religiousness. In the new vision a universe which is friendly to life and consciousness naturally emerges.
- Contents:
- Cover
- Contents
- Front matter
- Title page
- Publisher information
- Body matter
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Naturalism, physicalism, emergence
- 2.1 Naturalism
- 2.2 Physicalism
- 2.3 Epistemological reductionism and ontological emergence
- 2.4 Religious naturalism
- Part I: A quick tour of contemporary physics
- 3 Birth and zenith of mechanism
- 3.1 Introduction
- 3.2 The impact of classical mechanics on the thought of the 17th and 18th centuries
- 3.3 The birth of modern cosmology
- 3.4 Cartesian mechanism
- 4 The downfall of the mechanist paradigm
- 4.1 Introduction
- 4.2 The electric and magnetic field
- 4.3 Electromagnetism
- 4.4 Electromagnetic waves
- 4.5 The electromagnetism of Faraday and Maxwell
- 4.6 Electromagnetic properties of light
- 4.7 Interference
- 4.8 Atomism
- 4.9 Conclusions
- 5 The scenario becomes an actor: space-time as a form of matter
- 5.1 Special relativity
- 5.1.1 Relativity of simultaneity and lapses of time
- 5.1.2 Neither space nor time: space-time
- 5.2 General relativity
- 5.2.1 Origins
- 5.3 Basic ideas of general relativity
- 5.4 Conclusions
- 6 A first tour through the quantum world
- 6.1 Introduction
- 6.1.1 Waves or corpuscles?
- 6.1.2 The uncertainty principle
- 6.1.3 Wavefunctions and wave mechanics
- 6.2 The fundamental rules of quantum mechanics
- 6.2.1 Polarized photons
- 6.2.2 Spinning particles
- 6.2.3 The probabilistic nature of quantum mechanics
- 6.2.4 The basic concepts of quantum mechanics
- systems, states and events
- 6.2.5 Conclusion
- 7 A surprise and a mystery of quantum mechanics: entangled systems and measurements
- 7.1 Non locality and entanglement in quantum systems
- 7.1.1 Composite system of two particles in independent proper states
- 7.1.2 Composite system of two entangled particles.
- 7.1.3 Non-locality, the EPR experiment and Bell's inequalities
- 7.1.4 The meaning of quantum states: no cloning and teleportation
- 7.2 The problem of quantum measurements
- 8 Towards a complete unification of the conceptual frameworks, including all forms of matter
- 8.1 Introduction
- 8.2 Quantizing electromagnetism
- 8.2.1 Recovering the classical behavior of fields: coherent states
- 8.2.2 Quantum field theory
- 8.2.3 The vacuum state and virtual particles
- 8.2.4 Interacting fields and infinities
- 8.3 The issue of unifying quantum mechanics and gravity
- 8.3.1 Towards a complete physical description of the world: quantum gravity, loops and strings
- 8.3.2 Loop quantum gravity
- 8.3.3 Superstrings
- 8.3.4 Conclusions
- Part II Quantum Physics and emergence
- 9 The problem of the interpretation of quantum mechanics and scientific realism
- 9.1 Introduction
- 9.2 Quantum mechanics and its interpretations
- 9.3 The derivation of an ontology from physics
- 9.3.1 Quantum mechanics and the crisis in the ontology of classical physics
- 9.3.2 Bohr interpretation
- 9.4 An ontology of states and events for quantum mechanics
- 9.5 Interpretations that admit an event ontology
- 9.5.1 Events in the Many Worlds Interpretation
- 9.5.2 Events in Modal Interpretations
- 9.5.3 The (real time) Montevideo Interpretation of quantum mechanics
- 10 Emergence and non reductive physicalism
- 10.1 Emergence in terms of an event ontology
- 10.1.1 Ontologically new properties
- 10.1.2 Downward causation
- 10.1.3 Summary
- Part III The centrality of life
- 11 Darwinism and the centrality of life
- 11.1 The issue of the origin of life
- 11.2 Darwinism
- 11.3 From neo-Darwinism to evolution in the era of genome
- 11.4 Can one talk about progress in evolution?
- 11.5 Mechanism, Darwinism and 21st century science.
- 12 Ontology of events and consciousness
- 12.1 Back to consciousness
- 12.2 What do we mean by consciousness?
- 12.3 The problem of consciousness and quantum theory
- 12.4 The mind-body problem and the quantum ontology
- 12.4.1 Objects and substances
- 12.4.2 Properties and events
- 12.4.3 The mind-body problem
- 13 Cosmology: the genesis of a bio-friendly universe
- 13.1 Synopsis of the evolution of the Universe
- 13.2 The dark universe
- 13.3 Inflation
- 13.4 The Anthropic Principle
- 13.5 A bio-friendly Universe
- 14 The Multiverse and beyond
- Part IV Religious Naturalism
- 15 The scientific roots of nihilism and its overcoming
- 15.1 Introduction
- 15.2 Nihilism in 19th century science
- 15.3 Revision of nihilism from the perspective of contemporary science
- 16 Monism vs. pluralism: natural religiousness and its historical roots
- 16.1 Introduction
- 16.2 Spinoza's conception
- 16.3 Whitehead's conception
- 16.4 Quantum physics and the ontological pluralism of actualities
- 16.5 Ontological monism of potentialities
- 17 Emotions, ethics and free will
- 17.1 Introduction
- 17.2 Emotions as the internal aspect of states
- 17.3 Freedom of the will versus random choices.
- 18 Creativity and God
- 18.1 Creativity
- 18.2 God
- 18.2.1 Finite or infinite Universe
- 18.2.2 What do we mean by the state of the Universe?
- 18.2.3 Eternity and temporality
- 18.2.4 God and the Universe are Increate
- 18.2.5 Natural theism
- 18.2.6 Mortality
- 19 Conclusions
- Back matter
- Bibliography.
- Notes:
- Description based on print version record.
- ISBN:
- 1-84540-976-0
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