Sidebar


Login

  • Forgot Login?
  • Sign up

Resources

  • IBCSR Research Review
    • About
    • Issues
    • Online Database
  • ExploringMyReligion.org
  • ScienceOnReligion.org
  • Journal: Religion, Brain & Behavior
    • Journal Information
  • Research Project Portals
    • Simulating Religion Project
    • Modeling Religion Project
    • Neuroscience and Religious Cognition Project
    • Quantifying Religious Experience Project
    • Spirituality and Health Causation Project
    • Cognitive Style and Religious Attitudes Project
    • Spectrums Project
    • Sex Differences and Religion Project
    • Comparative Cultural Systems Project Portal
  • Professional Opportunities
IBCSR
  • Home
  • Publications
    • Journal: Religion, Brain & Behavior
    • IBCSR Research Review
  • Activities
    • Boston SSR Colloquium
    • Activities
    • Past Activities
  • Media
    • Videos
  • About Us
    • Basic Information
    • What Does "Bio-Cultural" Mean?
    • Reflection on the Institute's Vision
    • Our Mission
    • Contact Us
  • Membership

Economics, Science and Religion Project

Economics, Science and Religion Project: Introduction

econideolExisting accounts of the religion-and-science relationship—most notably the typology developed by Ian Barbour in the 1980s—tend to construe “religion” and “science” as sharply separated realms battling for cultural supremacy, working for détente, or perhaps striving for reconciliation. Such accounts take for granted and reinforce the culturally dualistic view that "religion" is one thing and "science" another. The basic and contrary premise of the present project is that what can broadly be called the "religious impulse" and the "scientific impulse" are two intertwined and interdependent dimensions of human inquiry.

The first major task of the project is to argue that nowhere is this intertwining and interdependence more evident and usefully examined than in the practice of economics as an academic discipline. In what ways ought the theories put forward by economists be regarded as “scientific”? And to what degree do these theories depend upon ideas about the nature of time, human existence, and the material world that are properly seen as religious or even theological in nature?

The project's second major task is to leverage its investigation of the practices of economics for the sake of developing a nondualistic account of the human person as simultaneously homo scientificus and homo religiosus. This involves undertaking a corresponding reconceptualization of the relationship between science and religion in the Euro-American, post-Enlightenment context.

The Economics, Science and Religion Project was initiated by 2013-2014 Institute Research Associate Dr. Kirk Wegter-McNelly. More information about Kirk is available here.

Latest

  • Privacy Statement
  • Boston Colloquium on Scientific Study of Religion
  • IBCSR Research Review Issues
  • The cognitive science of religion
  • What is modeling?

Popular

  • IBCSR and High-Level Education
  • IBCSR Directors
  • IBCSR Research Associates
  • IBCSR Post-Doctoral Fellows
  • Religion, Brain & Behavior Information

Bibliographies

The Spirituality, Medicine & Health Bibliography uses a rich categorization scheme and annotations. Free for everyone.

 
  • You are here:  
  • Home
  • Publications
  • About the Institute
  • Media Room
  • News
  • IBCSR Awarded Major Grant from John Templeton Foundation
feed-image RSS Feed
Bootstrap is a front-end framework of Twitter, Inc. Code licensed under MIT License. Font Awesome font licensed under SIL OFL 1.1.