Science and Evil
Southgate, CCB
Date: 14 June 2018
Book chapter
Publisher
Routledge
Publisher DOI
Abstract
This essay will consider first how scientific developments have enhanced
the human capacity for evil. I will concentrate on instances where
advances in science directly led to enhanced possibilities for weaponry.
My key examples will be chemical warfare in World War I and atomic
bombs in World War II. The second part of the essay ...
This essay will consider first how scientific developments have enhanced
the human capacity for evil. I will concentrate on instances where
advances in science directly led to enhanced possibilities for weaponry.
My key examples will be chemical warfare in World War I and atomic
bombs in World War II. The second part of the essay will reflect on
instances where scientific advances aid human understanding of harms.
Here I will mention the discovery of anthropogenic climate change, and
then discuss in more detail the way Darwinian thinking heightens our
understanding of the theological challenges of both moral and natural
evil. My conclusion is that the impact of the sciences is very diverse and
ambiguous, highly dependent on context, but that its disclosures about the character of the natural world are of great value both practically and in
my own discipline of philosophical theology.
Classics, Ancient History, Religion and Theology
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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