Stanley L. Jaki
Jesus, Islam, Science
Review September 11, 2001 makes clear the fact that the third millennium will witness a clash between civilizations, to the extent that the cultures of civilizations and cultures are inspired by the cult, which in turn determined by religious beliefs. This can be a hard lesson to accept an increasingly secularized Western world, but can not ignore how the Twin Towers were transformed into so many terrible exclamation points by a handful of Islamic fundamentalists.
is desirable that these criminals reflect the way people listen to only that portion of Muslims who harbors a strong resentment against the West. Having traded Christian morality with immorality secularist, the West is unable to comprehend how big this resentment. And the West, who cares less and less of the Christian dogmas, can not fully understand the significance of the opposition by Muslim faith in the divinity of Jesus
This is a stumbling block for both the ' West as in Islam, in an era characterized by science. Lost in his obsession with science, the West is woefully unaware of the fact that it is the belief in the divinity of Jesus that has made possible the rise of science in the Western world. In his desperate attempt to achieve industrialization, the Muslim world will be forced to pay the respect that is due to the facts of nature. And from what may come to the respect due to the facts of history, none of which is the most monumental of the fact that Jesus is the ultimate challenge in this e-Islam from a Western science that is, even if the West prefers to ignore the real reason why science has been able to be born in the West. The author
Stanley L. Jaki (Gyor August 17, 1924 - Madrid April 7, 2009), Hungarian-born Catholic priest, belonging to the Benedictine order, was "Distinguished Professor" at Seton Hall University in South Orange, New Jersey. He graduated in theology and physics, for forty years he devoted himself entirely to studies of history and philosophy of science. Author of fifty books and over five hundred items, was "Gifford Lecturer at the University of Edinburgh," Fremantle Lecturer at Balliol College, Oxford. He has lectured in major universities in the United States, Europe and Australia. He was an honorary member of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, corrispondant member of the National Academy of Sciences, Letters and Arts of Bordeaux, and was awarded the Lecomte du Nouy in 1970 and the Templeton Prize in 1987. With Faith & Culture Department has published volumes Christ and science, and its messages The Middle - A Treatise on the Truth , Intelligent Design? and Archipelago Church, while in the process of publication are: "The ethical foundations of bioethics" and "Bible and science." Note
short
The clash of civilizations between the West and Islam is the solution of a Science
Topic: Christianity, Islam, Jesus Christ, ecumenism, Science
Collection: Papers 1
Pages 48
Height Width 15 21
Cover Type: brochure stapled
Price: € 6.00 (foreign and courier 16.00)
Jesus, Islam, Science
Review September 11, 2001 makes clear the fact that the third millennium will witness a clash between civilizations, to the extent that the cultures of civilizations and cultures are inspired by the cult, which in turn determined by religious beliefs. This can be a hard lesson to accept an increasingly secularized Western world, but can not ignore how the Twin Towers were transformed into so many terrible exclamation points by a handful of Islamic fundamentalists.
is desirable that these criminals reflect the way people listen to only that portion of Muslims who harbors a strong resentment against the West. Having traded Christian morality with immorality secularist, the West is unable to comprehend how big this resentment. And the West, who cares less and less of the Christian dogmas, can not fully understand the significance of the opposition by Muslim faith in the divinity of Jesus
This is a stumbling block for both the ' West as in Islam, in an era characterized by science. Lost in his obsession with science, the West is woefully unaware of the fact that it is the belief in the divinity of Jesus that has made possible the rise of science in the Western world. In his desperate attempt to achieve industrialization, the Muslim world will be forced to pay the respect that is due to the facts of nature. And from what may come to the respect due to the facts of history, none of which is the most monumental of the fact that Jesus is the ultimate challenge in this e-Islam from a Western science that is, even if the West prefers to ignore the real reason why science has been able to be born in the West. The author
Stanley L. Jaki (Gyor August 17, 1924 - Madrid April 7, 2009), Hungarian-born Catholic priest, belonging to the Benedictine order, was "Distinguished Professor" at Seton Hall University in South Orange, New Jersey. He graduated in theology and physics, for forty years he devoted himself entirely to studies of history and philosophy of science. Author of fifty books and over five hundred items, was "Gifford Lecturer at the University of Edinburgh," Fremantle Lecturer at Balliol College, Oxford. He has lectured in major universities in the United States, Europe and Australia. He was an honorary member of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, corrispondant member of the National Academy of Sciences, Letters and Arts of Bordeaux, and was awarded the Lecomte du Nouy in 1970 and the Templeton Prize in 1987. With Faith & Culture Department has published volumes Christ and science, and its messages The Middle - A Treatise on the Truth , Intelligent Design? and Archipelago Church, while in the process of publication are: "The ethical foundations of bioethics" and "Bible and science." Note
short
The clash of civilizations between the West and Islam is the solution of a Science
Topic: Christianity, Islam, Jesus Christ, ecumenism, Science
Collection: Papers 1
Pages 48
Height Width 15 21
Cover Type: brochure stapled
Price: € 6.00 (foreign and courier 16.00)
ISBN: 978-88-6409-013-9
Buy
0 comments:
Post a Comment