基督教想象中的自然主义:近代早期英国的天意与因果关系

Peter N. Jordan
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Jordan's PhD advisor, Peter Harrison, who oversaw the dissertation from which this book developed, has left his mark on this topic for the last three decades in books such as The Bible, Protestantism, and the Rise of Natural Science (1998), The Fall of Man and the Foundations of Science (2007), as well as The Territories of Science and Religion (2015). As a consequence Jordan's guiding assumption, that Christian thought created a context within which early modern science was explained, is not anything novel. What is unique is his recognition that early modern theology was not entirely static or homogenous in its relationship to science. By focusing on shifting ideas of the Christian doctrine of providence, what Jordan highlights is the way in which certain thinkers accommodated the doctrine of providence to embrace new scientific developments, such as mechanism and atomism. As a result, this work reminds us that the area of early modern science and religion, while well studied, still has areas of investigation that may bear important fruit. *The book itself, which contains an introduction, conclusion, and five chapters, is organized into four parts. The first part introduces his analytical term of \"providential naturalism,\" by which he means a perspective on the natural world that integrates Christian commitments to providence and explanations of the natural world. It is because he is analyzing the doctrine of providence that his selection of English Protestants makes sense. As he explains in chapter two, English Protestants developed a well-structured formulation of providence, which explained the wide variety of ways in which God acted within the world, activities which could contain--though were not entirely constrained by--the natural world. The important implication of this, which Jordan explores later in the work, is that the newer developments of science, which did not fit the expected patterns of Aristotelianism, and hence of the expectations of how the natural world should function, could nevertheless find an articulation within a world that was believed to be fundamentally controlled and shaped by God. *The second part provides important contextualization for the development of the theories of providence. In a work looking to interrelate theology and science, this section is particularly interesting because it serves as a reminder that the doctrine of providence itself was influenced by unanticipated aspects. The topics he addresses here are chance-based games, such as dice and lots, as well as prodigies. Both games and prodigies provided frequent opportunities for early moderns to develop their definitions of providence. Games of chance became popular in the early modern period; they raised all sorts of questions about how providence related to the natural world, and whether all outcomes, including games of chance, were necessarily providential. *Similar questions about the boundaries of providence show up in John Spencer's thoughts on prodigies, which Jordan analyzes in chapter four. Spencer, a clergyman at the University of Cambridge, became quite critical of the large number of prodigies that were believed to occur on a routine basis within the world. In Spencer's estimation, while it is indeed the case that nature communicates the will of God, the supernatural existence of prodigies occurs less frequently than many of his contemporaries assumed. As a consequence Spencer, who assumes that God maintains an ordered universe, is slow to ascribe divine inspiration to prodigies; instead, he looks toward ways in which presumed prodigies could be interpreted with natural explanations. *The third part applies the question of providence to some of the more prominent new developments within science--that of atomism and theories of the earth. As he notes, oftentimes these new scientific developments are heralded as a shift toward a mechanistic and deterministic cosmos. What Jordan contends, however, is that this was not necessarily the case. For instance, with regard to atomism, Jordan analyzes the Epicurean Walter Charleton and shows how Charleton simultaneously upheld atomism and God's providence. Among many important points, Jordan highlights Charleton's view that God providentially moved atoms in creation to establish an order to the universe which operated according to the patterns that God desired. The task of the natural philosopher, then, was to interpret God's ordered universe. A similar emphasis of establishing God's providence in the created order is noticeable in Thomas Burnet's explanation of creation, in which Burnet minimizes the miraculous nature of creation, opting instead to emphasize the providential foresight which God had from the beginning. *In the final part Jordan offers his conclusions. It is here that one clearly recognizes the merit of Jordan's work, as he articulates a significance for the study that locates it not merely within the world of the seventeenth century, but also today. For, as he explains, the explanations of providential naturalism that he analyzed in the early modern period challenge contemporary notions that science and religion exist as two distinct subjects. Instead, as his book argues, naturalistic explanations flow from an understanding of providence, which depends on who God is and how God maintains the world. As a result, this book will prove useful not merely to specialists in the history of early modern science and religion, but also to those interested in the same questions today. *In a book of such merits, and there are many, it is worth noting one important limitation: the scope of the study. As mentioned above, the question of providence and science proves particularly interesting among English Protestants on account of the importance of the doctrine of providence for this religious group. Yet, the world of early modern science and religion was diverse, and it is important to remember that this book provides a window into only one part of this world, but by no means the entirety of it. So, while the topic of providence proved influential in early modern England, it should be remembered that this line of thought does not necessarily represent all early modern thinking on the topic of science and religion. As a consequence, it is hoped that future research will pursue Jordan's framework across geographical and denominational divides to determine the degree to which his general thesis might be extended even beyond early modern England. *Reviewed by Brent Purkaple, Visiting Assistant Professor of History, Grand Valley State University, Allendale, MI 49401.","PeriodicalId":53927,"journal":{"name":"Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith","volume":"33 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Naturalism in the Christian Imagination: Providence and Causality in Early Modern England\",\"authors\":\"Peter N. Jordan\",\"doi\":\"10.56315/pscf9-23jordan2\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"NATURALISM IN THE CHRISTIAN IMAGINATION: Providence and Causality in Early Modern England by Peter N. Jordan. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2022. 218 pages. Hardcover; $99.95. ISBN: 9781009211987. *How should religious conviction shape scientific thought? This is the question many early moderns asked themselves, and which Peter Jordan explores in his book. In a close analysis of prominent early modern English theologians and scientists, Jordan weaves together a coherent intellectual outlook that provides important commentary on the relationship between science and religion. *Jordan's selection of early modern Protestantism will not be new to those interested in the relationship between science and religion. Jordan's PhD advisor, Peter Harrison, who oversaw the dissertation from which this book developed, has left his mark on this topic for the last three decades in books such as The Bible, Protestantism, and the Rise of Natural Science (1998), The Fall of Man and the Foundations of Science (2007), as well as The Territories of Science and Religion (2015). As a consequence Jordan's guiding assumption, that Christian thought created a context within which early modern science was explained, is not anything novel. What is unique is his recognition that early modern theology was not entirely static or homogenous in its relationship to science. By focusing on shifting ideas of the Christian doctrine of providence, what Jordan highlights is the way in which certain thinkers accommodated the doctrine of providence to embrace new scientific developments, such as mechanism and atomism. As a result, this work reminds us that the area of early modern science and religion, while well studied, still has areas of investigation that may bear important fruit. *The book itself, which contains an introduction, conclusion, and five chapters, is organized into four parts. The first part introduces his analytical term of \\\"providential naturalism,\\\" by which he means a perspective on the natural world that integrates Christian commitments to providence and explanations of the natural world. It is because he is analyzing the doctrine of providence that his selection of English Protestants makes sense. As he explains in chapter two, English Protestants developed a well-structured formulation of providence, which explained the wide variety of ways in which God acted within the world, activities which could contain--though were not entirely constrained by--the natural world. The important implication of this, which Jordan explores later in the work, is that the newer developments of science, which did not fit the expected patterns of Aristotelianism, and hence of the expectations of how the natural world should function, could nevertheless find an articulation within a world that was believed to be fundamentally controlled and shaped by God. *The second part provides important contextualization for the development of the theories of providence. In a work looking to interrelate theology and science, this section is particularly interesting because it serves as a reminder that the doctrine of providence itself was influenced by unanticipated aspects. The topics he addresses here are chance-based games, such as dice and lots, as well as prodigies. Both games and prodigies provided frequent opportunities for early moderns to develop their definitions of providence. Games of chance became popular in the early modern period; they raised all sorts of questions about how providence related to the natural world, and whether all outcomes, including games of chance, were necessarily providential. *Similar questions about the boundaries of providence show up in John Spencer's thoughts on prodigies, which Jordan analyzes in chapter four. Spencer, a clergyman at the University of Cambridge, became quite critical of the large number of prodigies that were believed to occur on a routine basis within the world. In Spencer's estimation, while it is indeed the case that nature communicates the will of God, the supernatural existence of prodigies occurs less frequently than many of his contemporaries assumed. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

《基督教想象中的自然主义:近代早期英国的天意与因果关系》,彼得·n·乔丹著。剑桥,英国:剑桥大学出版社,2022。218页。精装书;99.95美元。ISBN: 9781009211987。*宗教信仰应该如何塑造科学思想?这是许多早期现代人问自己的问题,也是彼得·乔丹在他的书中探讨的问题。在对早期现代英国著名神学家和科学家的深入分析中,乔丹将一个连贯的知识分子观点编织在一起,为科学与宗教之间的关系提供了重要的评论。*对于那些对科学与宗教之间的关系感兴趣的人来说,乔丹选择的早期现代新教并不新鲜。乔丹的博士导师彼得·哈里森(Peter Harrison)监督了这本书的论文,在过去的三十年里,他在《圣经、新教和自然科学的兴起》(1998年)、《人类的堕落和科学的基础》(2007年)以及《科学与宗教的疆域》(2015年)等书中对这一主题留下了自己的印记。因此,乔丹的指导假设,即基督教思想创造了一个解释早期现代科学的背景,并不是什么新鲜事。他的独特之处在于,他认识到早期现代神学与科学的关系并不完全是静态的或同质的。通过关注基督教天意论思想的转变,乔丹强调了某些思想家如何适应天意论,以接受新的科学发展,如机械论和原子论。因此,这项工作提醒我们,早期现代科学和宗教领域虽然研究得很好,但仍有可能产生重要成果的调查领域。*这本书本身由引言、结论和五章组成,分为四个部分。第一部分介绍了他的分析术语“天意自然主义”,他指的是一种对自然世界的看法,将基督教对天意的承诺和对自然世界的解释结合在一起。正是因为他在分析上帝的教义,他选择英国新教徒才有意义。正如他在第二章中解释的那样,英国新教徒发展了一套结构良好的天意体系,这解释了上帝在世界上各种各样的行为方式,这些行为可以包含自然世界,尽管不完全受自然世界的约束。Jordan稍后在著作中探讨的重要含义是,科学的新发展,虽然不符合亚里士多德主义的预期模式,因此也不符合自然世界应该如何运作的预期,但仍然可以在一个被认为从根本上由上帝控制和塑造的世界中找到一种联系。第二部分为天意理论的发展提供了重要的语境。在一本试图将神学和科学联系起来的著作中,这一部分特别有趣,因为它提醒我们,天意的教义本身受到了意想不到的方面的影响。他在这里讨论的主题是基于机会的游戏,如骰子和抽签,以及神童。游戏和神童都为早期现代人提供了发展他们对天意的定义的机会。机率游戏在近代早期开始流行;他们提出了各种各样的问题,关于天意与自然世界的关系,以及是否所有的结果,包括机会游戏,都必然是天意。*关于天意界限的类似问题也出现在约翰·斯宾塞对神童的思考中,乔丹在第四章对此进行了分析。斯宾塞是剑桥大学的一名牧师,他对世界上大量的神童被认为是日常发生的现象持批评态度。在斯宾塞的估计,虽然这是确实的情况下,大自然沟通上帝的意志,超自然的存在的奇才发生的频率比他同时代的许多人认为。因此,斯宾塞,谁认为上帝维持一个有序的宇宙,是缓慢归因于神童神圣的灵感;相反,他寻找可以用自然解释来解释假定的天才的方法。*第三部分将上帝的问题应用于科学中一些比较突出的新发展——原子论和地球理论。正如他所指出的,这些新的科学发展往往预示着向机械论和决定论的宇宙的转变。然而,乔丹认为事实并非如此。例如,关于原子论,乔丹分析了伊壁鸠鲁派的沃尔特·查尔顿,并展示了查尔顿如何同时支持原子论和上帝的天意。
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Naturalism in the Christian Imagination: Providence and Causality in Early Modern England
NATURALISM IN THE CHRISTIAN IMAGINATION: Providence and Causality in Early Modern England by Peter N. Jordan. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2022. 218 pages. Hardcover; $99.95. ISBN: 9781009211987. *How should religious conviction shape scientific thought? This is the question many early moderns asked themselves, and which Peter Jordan explores in his book. In a close analysis of prominent early modern English theologians and scientists, Jordan weaves together a coherent intellectual outlook that provides important commentary on the relationship between science and religion. *Jordan's selection of early modern Protestantism will not be new to those interested in the relationship between science and religion. Jordan's PhD advisor, Peter Harrison, who oversaw the dissertation from which this book developed, has left his mark on this topic for the last three decades in books such as The Bible, Protestantism, and the Rise of Natural Science (1998), The Fall of Man and the Foundations of Science (2007), as well as The Territories of Science and Religion (2015). As a consequence Jordan's guiding assumption, that Christian thought created a context within which early modern science was explained, is not anything novel. What is unique is his recognition that early modern theology was not entirely static or homogenous in its relationship to science. By focusing on shifting ideas of the Christian doctrine of providence, what Jordan highlights is the way in which certain thinkers accommodated the doctrine of providence to embrace new scientific developments, such as mechanism and atomism. As a result, this work reminds us that the area of early modern science and religion, while well studied, still has areas of investigation that may bear important fruit. *The book itself, which contains an introduction, conclusion, and five chapters, is organized into four parts. The first part introduces his analytical term of "providential naturalism," by which he means a perspective on the natural world that integrates Christian commitments to providence and explanations of the natural world. It is because he is analyzing the doctrine of providence that his selection of English Protestants makes sense. As he explains in chapter two, English Protestants developed a well-structured formulation of providence, which explained the wide variety of ways in which God acted within the world, activities which could contain--though were not entirely constrained by--the natural world. The important implication of this, which Jordan explores later in the work, is that the newer developments of science, which did not fit the expected patterns of Aristotelianism, and hence of the expectations of how the natural world should function, could nevertheless find an articulation within a world that was believed to be fundamentally controlled and shaped by God. *The second part provides important contextualization for the development of the theories of providence. In a work looking to interrelate theology and science, this section is particularly interesting because it serves as a reminder that the doctrine of providence itself was influenced by unanticipated aspects. The topics he addresses here are chance-based games, such as dice and lots, as well as prodigies. Both games and prodigies provided frequent opportunities for early moderns to develop their definitions of providence. Games of chance became popular in the early modern period; they raised all sorts of questions about how providence related to the natural world, and whether all outcomes, including games of chance, were necessarily providential. *Similar questions about the boundaries of providence show up in John Spencer's thoughts on prodigies, which Jordan analyzes in chapter four. Spencer, a clergyman at the University of Cambridge, became quite critical of the large number of prodigies that were believed to occur on a routine basis within the world. In Spencer's estimation, while it is indeed the case that nature communicates the will of God, the supernatural existence of prodigies occurs less frequently than many of his contemporaries assumed. As a consequence Spencer, who assumes that God maintains an ordered universe, is slow to ascribe divine inspiration to prodigies; instead, he looks toward ways in which presumed prodigies could be interpreted with natural explanations. *The third part applies the question of providence to some of the more prominent new developments within science--that of atomism and theories of the earth. As he notes, oftentimes these new scientific developments are heralded as a shift toward a mechanistic and deterministic cosmos. What Jordan contends, however, is that this was not necessarily the case. For instance, with regard to atomism, Jordan analyzes the Epicurean Walter Charleton and shows how Charleton simultaneously upheld atomism and God's providence. Among many important points, Jordan highlights Charleton's view that God providentially moved atoms in creation to establish an order to the universe which operated according to the patterns that God desired. The task of the natural philosopher, then, was to interpret God's ordered universe. A similar emphasis of establishing God's providence in the created order is noticeable in Thomas Burnet's explanation of creation, in which Burnet minimizes the miraculous nature of creation, opting instead to emphasize the providential foresight which God had from the beginning. *In the final part Jordan offers his conclusions. It is here that one clearly recognizes the merit of Jordan's work, as he articulates a significance for the study that locates it not merely within the world of the seventeenth century, but also today. For, as he explains, the explanations of providential naturalism that he analyzed in the early modern period challenge contemporary notions that science and religion exist as two distinct subjects. Instead, as his book argues, naturalistic explanations flow from an understanding of providence, which depends on who God is and how God maintains the world. As a result, this book will prove useful not merely to specialists in the history of early modern science and religion, but also to those interested in the same questions today. *In a book of such merits, and there are many, it is worth noting one important limitation: the scope of the study. As mentioned above, the question of providence and science proves particularly interesting among English Protestants on account of the importance of the doctrine of providence for this religious group. Yet, the world of early modern science and religion was diverse, and it is important to remember that this book provides a window into only one part of this world, but by no means the entirety of it. So, while the topic of providence proved influential in early modern England, it should be remembered that this line of thought does not necessarily represent all early modern thinking on the topic of science and religion. As a consequence, it is hoped that future research will pursue Jordan's framework across geographical and denominational divides to determine the degree to which his general thesis might be extended even beyond early modern England. *Reviewed by Brent Purkaple, Visiting Assistant Professor of History, Grand Valley State University, Allendale, MI 49401.
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