Astrobiology and Christian Doctrine
Exploring the Implications of Life in the Universe
Author(s): Andrew Davison
🚚 Free UK delivery on books (excluding sale). T&Cs apply.
Free click & collect on all orders.
In recent decades, powerful telescopes have enabled astrophysicists to uncover startling new worlds and solar systems. An epochal moment came in 1995, when a planet – 51 Pegasi b – was located orbiting a star other than our own sun. Since then, thousands of new planets have followed, and the question of life beyond earth has become one of the principal topics in discussions between science and religion. Attention to this topic has a long history in Christian theology, but has rarely been pursued at any depth. Writing with both passion and precision, Andrew Davison brings his extensive knowledge of Christian thought to bear, drawing particularly on the thought of Thomas Aquinas, as well as his training as a scientist. No book to date better prepares the Christian community for responding to evidence of other life, if it is found. And yet, we do not need to wait for that to have happened before this book shows its worth. In thinking about planets, creatures, and ecosystems beyond our planet, Davison already reinvigorates our theology for the earth.
- Presents discussion of central topics in Christian theology in relation to life beyond Earth that are not covered elsewhere
- Explores topics in such a way that each complements the others, so the reader emerges with a broad and connected perspective
- Applies a scholarly approach - resourcing principally from the work of Thomas Aquinas – and includes detailed references