Loren Eiseley: Religious scientist

Zygon 19 (1):29-41 (1984)
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Abstract

Loren Eiseley is known both as a scientist and an essayist/poet. The disillusionment with science and technology among many in the late 1950s and the search for new values in the 1960s help account for Eiseley's significance as a writer. He appears to offer a solution to mankind's contemporary disillusionment by reminding that science has limits and that intuitive, nonscientific insight is valid, especially when it is complementary to scientific knowledge. The thesis of this essay is that in content and style Eiseley writes as a religious writer in the sense that he reaffirms what is necessary for humankind to be happy and even to be “saved.”

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References found in this work

The Varieties of Religious Experience: A Study in Human Nature.William James - 1929 - New York: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Matthew Bradley.
The Idea of the Holy.R. Otto - 1958 - Oxford University Press USA.
The Varieties of Religious Experience.William James - 1903 - Philosophical Review 12 (1):62-67.
Religion in the making: Lowell lectures 1926.Alfred North Whitehead - 1926 - New York: Fordham University Press.

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