ABSTRACT

This book critically examines how mathematical modelling shapes and limits a scientific approach to the natural world and affects how society views nature. It questions concepts such as determinism, reversibility, equilibrium, and the isolated system, and challenges the view of physical reality as passive and inert. Dan Bruiger argues that if nature is real, it must transcend human representations. In particular, it can be expected to self-organize in ways that elude a mechanist treatment.This interdisciplinary study addresses several key areas: the "crisis" in modern physics and cosmology; the limits and historical, psychological, and religious roots of mechanistic thought; and the mutual effects of the scientific worldview upon society's relationship to nature. Bruiger demonstrates that there is still little place outside biology for systems that actively self-organize or self-define. Instead of appealing to "multiverses" to resolve the mysteries of fine-tuning, he suggests that cosmologists look toward self-organizing processes. He also states that physics is hampered by its external focus and should become more self-reflective. If scientific understanding can go beyond a stance of prediction and control, it could lead to a relationship with nature more amenable to survival.The Found and the Made fills a void between popular science writing and philosophy. It will appeal to naturalists, environmentalists, science buffs, professionals, and students of cultural history, evolutionary psychology, gender studies, and philosophy of mind.

part One|97 pages

The World as Found

chapter 1|15 pages

What Is Found?

chapter 2|21 pages

What Is Nature?

chapter 3|17 pages

What Is Science?

chapter 4|19 pages

Law, Chance, and Necessity

chapter 5|19 pages

Mathematical and Physical Reality

part Two|53 pages

The World Remade

chapter 6|7 pages

Consciousness and Its Consequences

chapter 8|11 pages

The Rebellion against Nature

chapter 9|10 pages

The Ideal of Perfect Knowledge

chapter 10|13 pages

The Scientific World

part Three|74 pages

Maker’s Knowledge

chapter 11|9 pages

The Book of Nature

chapter 12|17 pages

The Religious Origins of Science

chapter 14|18 pages

Ideality

chapter 15|10 pages

Is Nature Real?

part Four|78 pages

Beyond the Mechanist Faith

chapter 16|9 pages

Is Reality Exhaustible in Thought?

chapter 17|20 pages

Mechanism and Organism

chapter 18|14 pages

Theories of Something

chapter 19|20 pages

The Next Revolution in Physics?

chapter 20|12 pages

The Stance of Unknowing