Global Information Lookup Global Information

The Penultimate Curiosity information


AuthorsRoger Wagner and Andrew Briggs
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish, Spanish
GenreHistory of science
PublisherOxford University Press
Publication date
February 2016
Media typePrint (Hardcover)
Pages496
ISBN978-0-19-874795-6

The Penultimate Curiosity: How science swims in the slipstream of ultimate questions is a book jointly written by English author and artist Roger Wagner and English scientist Andrew Briggs, which sets out to answer one of the most important, vexed, and profound questions about the development of human thought: ‘What lies at the root of the long entanglement between science and religion?’

In a prologue Wagner and Briggs begin by describing the entrances to the University Museum in Oxford and the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge. On the former there is a sculpture of an angel, on the latter a quotation from psalm 111: ‘the works of the Lord are great sought out of all them that have pleasure therein’. Their book, they suggest, is an attempt to answer the question of how this sculpture and inscription got there. Rather than directly addressing the question of whether science and religion are compatible, Wagner and Briggs examine the nature of the relationship between them.

Their first move is to consider the connection between the earliest evidences of human religion and early evidences of interest in the natural world. Drawing on recent discoveries of cave art and developments in the cognitive science of religion, they suggest that when the need to make sense of the world as a whole (‘ultimate curiosity’) began to become central to maintaining the coherence of human communities, this created a kind of slipstream in which various kinds of interest in the natural world (penultimate curiosities) were able to travel. They further suggest that particular configurations of this ‘slipstream’ (particular ways of making sense of the world) have been especially conducive to motivating an interest in the natural world.

Their second move is then to follow the way that particular religious ideas have shaped and motivated scientific thinking. They describe the way that the development in Greek religious thought of the idea of a divine arche – a source or principle – giving a rational coherence to the universe, influenced Greek scientific thinking for almost a thousand years. They then go on to describe the interaction between Greek thinking and early Jewish and Christian thought. Their focus here is on the Alexandrian Christian philosopher John Philoponus, and his argument that the heavens and the earth are made of the same materials and may be governed by the same principle.

From there Wagner and Briggs go on to follow these ideas through Islamic and medieval Christian thought, and it is in respect of the latter that another theme begins to emerge. Their original slipstreaming metaphor suggested that religious ideas could motivate scientific thinking. However, when science is made to answer religious questions or vice versa confusion can result, as when slipstreaming cyclists in the Tour de France have a clash of wheels producing a chute or pile up. Galileo's persecution is cited as an example of this kind of chute, and when the speed of scientific advance increases, they suggest, these kinds of chutes can become more frequent.

Thus while describing how emerging features of religious thought, like the reformation insistence on examining the words (and also the works) of God for yourself, fed into the development of experimental science, they also describe how the weaponisation of science in the battle for intellectual credibility produced some of the modern tensions between scientific and religious ideas.

In an excursus towards the end of the book Wagner and Briggs trace the origins of a particular configuration that they call ‘the religious idea of penultimacy’[1] in the Biblical idea of a creator God who cannot be identified with his creation; and explore what the cuneiform texts that began to be discovered and translated in the 19th century, reveal about them.

The final section of the book describes how these ideas influenced two men: Henry Acland who was responsible for the sculpture at the Oxford University Museum, and James Clerk Maxwell who was responsible for the inscription at Cambridge.

A concluding epilogue brings the story up to date, arguing that contemporary attempts to use science to discredit religion are themselves evidence of ‘the entrenched need of human beings to make sense of the whole depth of their experience’, and are ‘rooted in the cognitive capacities that…first gave rise to homo religiosus’.[2]

  1. ^ Wagner and Briggs. The Penultimate Curiosity. p. 319.
  2. ^ Wagner and Briggs. The Penultimate Curiosity. p. 440.

and 17 Related for: The Penultimate Curiosity information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8404 seconds.)

The Penultimate Curiosity

Last Update:

The Penultimate Curiosity: How science swims in the slipstream of ultimate questions is a book jointly written by English author and artist Roger Wagner...

Word Count : 1136

Andrew Briggs

Last Update:

years the artist Roger Wagner and Briggs lived in the same house, which ultimately led to them co-authoring a book, The Penultimate Curiosity: How science...

Word Count : 1357

Christian Topography

Last Update:

Andrew (2016). The Penultimate Curiosity: How Science Swims in the Slipstream of Ultimate Questions. Oxford University Press. pp. 119–122. The Christian Topography...

Word Count : 1226

Giovanni Francesco Sagredo

Last Update:

Roger Wagner; Andrew Briggs (25 February 2016). The Penultimate Curiosity: How Science Swims in the Slipstream of Ultimate Questions. Oxford University...

Word Count : 1792

Filippo Salviati

Last Update:

2018. Roger Wagner; Andrew Briggs (2016-02-25). The Penultimate Curiosity: How Science Swims in the Slipstream of Ultimate Questions. Oxford University...

Word Count : 1393

The Oriental Mode of Destruction

Last Update:

Vulture gave the episode a 4 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "The penultimate episode opens with a series of quick cuts. Hardly any of the shots linger...

Word Count : 1255

List of Petticoat Junction episodes

Last Update:

However, with the departure of Kate following the third episode of season 6, the show's ratings declined continuously. Another reason was the show's new...

Word Count : 136

School of Lies

Last Update:

wrote "One of the few loopholes about the show has to be how different storylines are stitched and not every explanation quenches your curiosity. You’d want...

Word Count : 1393

Farouk of Egypt

Last Update:

1920 – 18 March 1965) was the tenth ruler of Egypt from the Muhammad Ali dynasty and the penultimate King of Egypt and the Sudan, succeeding his father...

Word Count : 21205

List of people with the most children

Last Update:

July 2023. "Anomalies and curiosities of medicine: being an encyclopedic collection of rare and extraordinary cases, and of the most striking instances...

Word Count : 4574

The Blue Planet

Last Update:

2001 in the United Kingdom. It is narrated by David Attenborough. Described as "the first ever comprehensive series on the natural history of the world's...

Word Count : 1888

Christopher Phillips

Last Update:

called Phillips the "Johnny Appleseed of Philosophy." Phillips's latest book A Child at Heart: Unlocking Your Creativity, Curiosity and Reason at Every...

Word Count : 1082

Phil Daniels

Last Update:

The Cross (Phil Daniels + The Cross) (1979) Singles "Kill Another Night" (Phil Daniels + The Cross) (1979) "Penultimate Person" (Phil Daniels + The Cross)...

Word Count : 2178

The Life of Mammals

Last Update:

The Life of Mammals is a nature documentary series written and presented by David Attenborough, first transmitted in the United Kingdom from 20 November...

Word Count : 1209

Yohanan ben Zakkai

Last Update:

his penultimate words, according to the Talmudic record, to reduce the risk of ritual contamination conveyed by a corpse: Put the vessels out of the house...

Word Count : 2453

Order of Assassins

Last Update:

and then before the whole court, who listened to them with eager curiosity and astonishment, they gave a circumstantial account of the scenes to which...

Word Count : 13523

Tabaluga

Last Update:

accidentally singes himself by triggering an eruption out of curiosity. He gets thrown to the webs of black widow spider Tarantula, whom he talks with about...

Word Count : 2207

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net