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Chapter 1 - Posing the problem

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

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Summary

Lord Gifford's brief

“I wish the lecturers to treat their subject as a strictly natural science, the greatest of all possible sciences, indeed, in one sense, the only science, that of Infinite Being, without reference to or reliance upon any supposed special exceptional or so-called miraculous revelation. I wish it considered just as astronomy or chemistry is.”

This is Lord Gifford's statement in the deed of foundation of his lectures in 1885. Much water has flowed under the bridge since then, and we can no longer take for granted either the character of “natural science” or of “revelation” in the sense in which these concepts were understood in Gifford's time. We therefore make no excuse (and believe it to be within the spirit of his foundation) that this book concentrates on the problem of what it is to be a “science,” and what kind of continuity, if any, exists between the knowledge of “nature,” of “persons,” or of “society,” and the possibility of knowledge of God.

We speak of “knowledge,” but our difficulty today in addressing Lord Gifford's brief is that the theory of knowledge (epistemology) has come to mean almost exclusively the methodology of the natural sciences and, more recently and belatedly, the social sciences, to the exclusion of any possibility of knowing extraspatiotemporal reality, if such can be said to exist. Our culture leads us to believe in a natural space–time reality that is explored and increasingly discovered to us in natural science.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1986

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