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Concepts of a Culturally Guided Philosophy of Science
Contributions from Philosophy, Medicine and Science of Psychotherapy©2013 Monographs -
The Idea of Excellence and Human Enhancement
Reconsidering the Debate on Transhumanism in Light of Moral Philosophy and Science©2018 Edited Collection -
Philosophy, Science, and Theology of Mission in the 19th and 20th Centuries
A Missiological Encyclopedia- Part I: The Philosophy and Science of Mission©2002 Others -
Two Dimensions of Time
The Dimensional Theory of Karl Heim- An Ontological Solution to the Problems of Science, Philosophy, and Theology©2003 Monographs -
Beyond structure
The Power and Limitations of Mathematical Thought in Common Sense, Science and Philosophy©1995 Monographs -
Pannenberg, the Positioning of Academic Theology and Philosophy of Science
An Evaluation of his Work in the German Context©2022 Thesis -
History and Philosophy of Science
Heresy, Crossroads, and IntersectionsISSN: 2376-6336
This series invites book proposals that include innovative strategies for pursuing history and philosophy of science. Especially welcome are scholarly works using non-analytic philosophical perspectives to successfully bring to bear on our understanding of how scientific practices are related to the humanities and the social sciences. The series also welcomes exploration of the sciences in relation to gender, culture, society, and the intellectual and social contexts that illuminate the places, the structures of origination, and the patterns of development over generations. Approaches may include focused analyses of thinkers from unorthodox perspectives that can shed new light on the history and philosophy of science, such as Montaigne, Bruno, Galileo, Newton, Pascal, Emerson, Thoreau, Nietzsche, Jung, Freud. Proposals aimed at probing the philosophical intersections between the sciences and other societal practices that can be configured as heretic are also encouraged. These might include the emergence of the psychoanalytic movements in the twentieth century, how the fine arts have impinged on the historical processes that gave rise to the sciences over the last few centuries, how in turn the intellectual frameworks inaugurated by the sciences have been imported into the avant-garde movements that paralleled the advent of industrialized societies, and finally how contemporary scientific domains of knowledge reverberate in deviant social and artistic practices.
9 publications