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Purchase Benefits
Introduction | p. 1 |
The Religious Background and Contexts of the Late Victorian Controversies | p. 7 |
The Pre-1860 Background | p. 7 |
The Controversy over the Ethics of Belief | p. 13 |
The Agnostic Controversies after 1850 | p. 20 |
God and the World-The Reign of Law: Design, Providence, and Teleology | p. 32 |
The Background Prior to 1860 | p. 32 |
The Context of the Argument from Design after 1860 | p. 39 |
Scientific Naturalism: Natural Law and Orthodox Theology Irreconcilable | p. 41 |
The Unitary Vision of Providence and the Reign of Natural Law: Varieties of Mediation | p. 44 |
Scottish Ideas of Providential Evolution and the Reign of Law | p. 49 |
Christian Darwinism: Design and Teleology | p. 62 |
God and the World-The Reign of Law: Providence, Evil, and Theodicy | p. 69 |
The Reign of Law and Theodicy before Darwin | p. 69 |
The Paleyian Theodicy and Darwin | p. 72 |
The Christian Darwinistic Theodicy | p. 76 |
The Christian Darwinian Theodicy | p. 81 |
The Theodicies of James Martineau and J. R. Illingworth | p. 86 |
The Theodicy of the Personal Idealists | p. 91 |
The Theodicy of F. R. Tennant and James Ward | p. 96 |
Providence and Theodicy at the Turn of the Century | p. 100 |
God and the World: The Reign of Law and Miracle | p. 106 |
The Early Victorian Setting | p. 106 |
The Legacy of J. S. Mill: Baden Powell on Miracles | p. 109 |
J. B. Mozley's Bampton Lectures On Miracles as a Turning Point | p. 114 |
Miracles in the Debates of the Metaphysical Society | p. 121 |
The Broad Church View: Miracle and the Zeitgeist | p. 126 |
A Way between J. B. Mozley and Matthew Arnold: B. F. Westcott | p. 131 |
Miracle and the Lux Mundi Theologians | p. 135 |
J. M. Thompson's Miracles in the New Testament and Bishop Gore's Challenge to Criticism | p. 138 |
Professor Sanday and the Winds of Change | p. 145 |
Humanity's Place in Nature-The Challenge to Christian Anthropology: Human Origins, the Fall, and Sin | p. 150 |
The Background to 1860 | p. 150 |
Darwin on the Descent and Future of Mankind | p. 156 |
Darwin and the Theistic "Darwinians" | p. 164 |
The Premature Death of Adam: Evolution and the Reconceiving of the Doctrines of the Fall and Sin | p. 174 |
Humanity's Place in Nature-The Challenge to Christian Anthropology: Mind, Free Will, and the Foundation of Morals | p. 192 |
The Science of Mind: Controversy over the Brain, Mind, and Free Will | p. 192 |
Some "Irresolute" Materialists | p. 195 |
The Response of Idealists and Realists | p. 201 |
The Later Critiques: James Ward to William James | p. 210 |
Herbert Spencer and the Evolutionary Foundation of Morals | p. 218 |
The New Science of Religion: Christianity's Relation to Other Faiths | p. 230 |
The Background | p. 230 |
The New Context after 1860 | p. 234 |
The British Pioneers in the New "Science of Religion": Some Suggestive Theological Implications | p. 237 |
The Consolidation of the Science of Religion in Britain and Its Influence on Christian Theology | p. 256 |
Types of Religious Response to the Science of Religion, 1870-1910 | p. 261 |
Some Concluding Remarks | p. 279 |
References | p. 281 |
Index | p. 299 |
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