Abstract

It is often said that philosophy in the seventeenth century returned from a Christian otherworldliness to a pagan engagement, theoretically and practically, with material nature. This process is often described as one of secularization, and the splitting off of science from natural philosophy and metaphysics is a traditional figure in accounts of the emergence of the modern. At the same time, the historiographical assumption that early modern science had religious and philosophical foundations has informed such classics as E. A. Burtt'sMetaphysical Foundations of Natural Science(1932), Gerd Buchdahl'sMetaphysics and the Philosophy of Science(1969), and Amos Funkenstein'sTheology and the Scientific Imagination(1986). A recent collection testifies to continuing interest in the theme of a positive relationship between theology and science.

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