ABSTRACT

This volume situates itself within the context of the rapidly growing interdisciplinary field that is dedicated to the study of the complex interactions between science and religion. It presents an innovative approach insofar as it addresses the Eurocentrism that is still prevalent in this field. At the same time it reveals how science develops in the space that emerges between the ‘local’ and the ‘global’. The volume examines a range of themes central to the interaction between science and religion: ‘Eastern’ thought within ‘Western’ science and religion and vice versa, and revisits thinkers who sought to integrate ‘Eastern’ and ‘Western’ thinking. It studies Zen Buddhism and its relation to psychotherapy, Islamic science, Vedantic science, atheism in India, and Darwinism, offering in turn new perspectives on a variety of approaches to nature.

Part of the Science and Technology Studies series, this volume brings together original perspectives from major scholars from across disciplines and will be of great interest to scholars and students of science and technology studies, history of science, philosophy of science, religious studies, and sociology.

chapter |29 pages

Introduction

chapter |18 pages

Science International (Beyond the West)

The ups and downs of trans-cultural science

chapter |17 pages

Ancient Indian Philosophy Meets Modern Western Science

Discussions of causality and consciousness in the colonial Indian academy*

chapter |18 pages

Being Religious, Being Scientific

Science, religion and atheism in contemporary India

chapter |16 pages

Betwixt Science and Religion – East and West

Jesuits in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century southern India

chapter |27 pages

How Scientific was Islamic Science?

A case study in the alchemy of al-Razi

chapter |13 pages

Western Influences on Greek Scholars

The scientific education of Greek Orthodox during the seventeenth century