God, Nature, and the Cause: Essays on Islam and Science
Author: Basil Altaie
Publisher: Islamic
and Strategic Studies Institute(ISSI) & Kalam Research Media (KRM)
ISBN: 9789671497203
Price: RM88.00
Pages: 224pp
Weight: 0.440kg
The
philosophical conflict of religion and science is one of the most compelling
and controversial issues today. Many intellectuals, scholars and philosophers
from the West representing Christian and Jewish philosophical traditions have
addressed this burning question but little has been heard from their
counterparts in the Muslim tradition. What do Muslims have to say on the
subject, and what is the relationship between modern scientific developments
and Muslim belief? What is the Islamic tradition of Kalam, and does it have
anything to contribute to modern science and philosophy? These are some of the
critical questions addressed by Basil Altaie in his latest book God, Nature,
and the Cause: Essays on Islam and Science.
Altaie,
physicist and philosopher rooted in classical Islamic theology, argues that the
Kalam tradition--Islam's deepest philosophical expression--provides a number of
insights that can create a greater understanding of modern physics, and
reconcile the apparent clash between science and religion. In this riveting set
of essays, Altaie takes us from the early circles of Mu'tazili and Ash'ari
Kalam, to the universities of Western Europe, in a critical survey that engages
thinkers like Al-Ash'ari, Al-Ghazali, Ibn Sina, Aristotle, Newton, Einstein,
Stephen Hawking, Laplace, SchrOdinger, and others. This is an unprecedented and
fascinating study, available in English for the first time through Kalam
Research & Media.
This book
provides an important resource for practitioners of philosophy, science, and
theology, and offers an invaluable and timely contribution on Islam and its
interaction with modern science.