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    • Publisher:
      Cambridge University Press
      Publication date:
      13 July 2017
      10 July 2017
      ISBN:
      9781316493366
      9781107141148
      9781316506387
      Dimensions:
      (228 x 152 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.67kg, 392 Pages
      Dimensions:
      (228 x 152 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.58kg, 392 Pages
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    Book description

    Over the past centuries the pendulum has constantly swung between an emphasis on the role of either nature or nurture in shaping human destiny, a pendulum often energised by ideological considerations. In recent decades the flourishing of developmental biology, genomics, epigenetics and our increased understanding of neuronal plasticity have all helped to subvert such dichotomous notions. Nevertheless, the media still report the discovery of a gene 'for' this or that behaviour, and the field of behavioural genetics continues to extend its reach into the social sciences, reporting the heritability of such human traits as religiosity and political affiliation. There are many continuing challenges to notions of human freedom and moral responsibility, with consequent implications for social flourishing, the legal system and religious beliefs. In this book, Denis Alexander critically examines these challenges, concluding that genuine free will, often influenced by genetic variation, emerges from an integrated view of human personhood derived from contemporary biology.

    Awards

    Honourable mention, 2018 PROSE Award, Theology and Religious Studies

    Reviews

    'Overall, Genes, Determinism and God is worth reading not just for the detail it provides on developments in genetics, but also for its thought-provoking pointers. Denis Alexander has achieved considerably more than his goal at the start of removing barriers to religious belief based on incorrect views of genetic determinism.'

    Celia Deane-Drummond Source: The Times Literary Supplement

    'The genetic book of life, it seems, does not in the end offer any shortcuts to the meaning of human existence. Rather, like most sacred texts, it demands careful, patient, sceptical exegesis, which is exactly what Denis Alexander has granted it.'

    Nick Spencer Source: The Tablet

    'All in all, this is a remarkable and highly informative overview.'

    David Lorimer Source: Paradigm Explorer

    'Denis Alexander brings us a feast of the biology of genetics, layered with legal and philosophical implications and garnished with a dollop of theological considerations.'

    Barbara Pfeffer Billauer Source: Metascience

    'Anyone who wants to know the current state of scientific research in genetics, and its relevance to difficult issues about human development, including the vexed issue of sexual orientation, will find in this book a masterly and balanced survey. It comes from someone who is well aware of the enormous implications for theology of current research, and, in particular, its relevance to arguments about free will.'

    Roger Trigg Source: Theology

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