Abstract

The author argues that the Christian world view, rooted in the biblical revelation of the transcendent almighty God, is incompatible with the currently still popular concept of science, which presupposes a world view whose roots lie embedded in Greek ontology. Tracing the prominent role of determinism as embodied in the concept of Anangke in Greek ontology, it is shown that A ristotle's breakthrough in acknowledging change and teleology was mere appearance and that his world view was still enchained to the determinism of traditional ontology. It was Duns Scotus who exposed the determinism inherent in A ristotle's System and who broke free from these schackles by conceding the p ossibility of synchronic contingency. The medieval absorption of Greek ontology into Christianity firmly entrenched Greek notions in Western thought. Con­ sequently science viewed creation as a closed, causally determined sys­tem. While modern physics has opened up a new vision of the universe, the traditional (outmoded) scientific outlook is rampant and many of its presuppositions and models are projected on theology in order to safe­ guard theology's scientific character. In this way theology largely forfeits its true task.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call