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Physique, Soul, and Human Life: The Nature of Humanity within the Bible (Research in Theological Interpretation)

Original price was: $30.00.Current price is: $19.93.

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Are people composed of a cloth physique and an immaterial soul? This view is often held by Christians, but it has been undermined by latest developments in neuroscience. Exploring what Scripture and theology educate about points resembling being within the divine picture, the significance of neighborhood, sin, free will, salvation, and the afterlife, Joel Inexperienced argues {that a} dualistic view of the human particular person is inconsistent with each science and Scripture. This wide-ranging dialogue is certain to impress a lot thought and debate.

Bestselling books have explored the connection between physique, thoughts, and soul. Now Joel Inexperienced offers us with a biblical perspective on these points.

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New Testomony Commentaries

Previous Testomony Commentaries

Catholic Commentaries

Touchstone Texts

Bible Survey Textbooks

Theology Introductions

Common Textbooks

Catholic Sacraments Sequence

Writer ‏ : ‎ Baker Tutorial (July 1, 2008)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 238 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0801035953
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0801035951
Merchandise Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.31 kilos
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.5 x 0.6 x 8.5 inches

Prospects say

Prospects discover the e-book mental and attention-grabbing. It raises essential questions concerning the physique, soul, neuroscience, and human id. They describe it as readable with an incredible vocabulary and lengthy sentence construction.

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11 reviews for Physique, Soul, and Human Life: The Nature of Humanity within the Bible (Research in Theological Interpretation)

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  1. Paul D. Adams

    Important Contributions for the Dualist to Consider
    Without question, Green’s book is a key source when considering a robust biblical anthropology. Although one may not align with the thesis of Christian physicalism (that humans are made up of one integrated whole), readers will surely be informed by the depth of analysis and the even-handed treatment he offers in relation to the alternative view of Christian dualism — the notion that humans are made up of two ontologically distinct parts, material and immaterial or body and soul.One section in the book that especially intrigued me involved the mechanics and nature of change or personal transformation; namely, “persons and not parts of persons” are transformed (p 115). Green would likely put forth that when persons experience change, the brain changes and vice versa. This is not to reduce persons to mere brain states, neurons, or what have you, but it is to say that brains are involved and indeed impacted by behavior and vice versa. Persons are units or one integrated whole, not merely a composite of blended though distinct parts, thus change or transformation affects and effects the whole person.Illustrating that “neural transformation in response to environmental factors” intersect, he appeals to the now famous and fascinating study of the London taxi-drivers to show that “day-to-day activities induce changes in the morphology of the brain” (p 116). This factor alone has been teased out in relation to spiritual transformation by the formidable N. T. Wright (see my “Habituation and Life in the Spirit“).Not only does the brain participate in our transformation but so also does our social conditioning have a significant impact. Green states that our genetic makeup biases our dispositions and character so that “the neuronal systems and pathways responsible for much of what we think, feel, believe, and do are shaped by learning,” in which he takes “learning” to be social in nature. He writes: “If [or rather “Since] the neurobiological systems that shape how we think, feel, believe, and behave are forever being sculpted in the context of our social experiences, then in a profound sense we must speak of personal (trans)formation in relational terms. Our autobiographical selves are formed within a nest of relationships, a community (p 116).Because of this ebb and flow of incoming information via social interaction and experiences and the continual evolving of the brain in response to these stimuli, we seem unable to “unambiguously interpret” the world-an-sich (world as it is). Our interpretive capacity continually changes and is handicapped, as it were, causing a “deficit” of all the necessary information we need to see the world as it is. Consequently, our “cortical networks fill in. They make their best guess, given incomplete information.” And so, we “find a human face in the full moon, recognize Beethoven playing his piano in a cloud formation…or prejudicially categorize people by any number of criteria” (p 117). This process is what is known as imagination formation whereby a conceptual schema is constructed from which we interpret our world and our experiences.As a result, the mechanics of worldview formation are born. Green states: “Our hermeneutical equipment, then, is formed at the synaptic level, is capable of reformation, and is even now providing the conceptual schemes or imaginative structures by which we make sense of the world around us. My “perception” of the world is based in a network of ever-forming assumptions about my environment, and in a series of well-tested assumptions, shared by others with whom I associate, about “the way the world works.” Ambiguous data may present different hypotheses, but my mind disambiguates that data according to what I have learned to expect. That is, embodied human life performs like a cultural, neuro-hermeneutic system, locating (and, thus, making sense of) current realities in relation to our grasp of the past and expectations of the future (p 118).This is large on so many levels. But without spending more time on unpacking implications (the book adequately puts forth some), one other most important agency is utilized in personal transformation and in our identity construction. This agency Green labels “narrative formation.” Where “lesions to the neural network responsible for the generation of narrative” is found on a human brain, persons appear to “suffer a loss in their grasp of their own identities.” In fact, “so pivotal is narrative to the formation of identity, including the formation and articulation of beliefs, that in the absence of memory humans will create stories by which to make sense of their present situation” (p 120). Coordinately, “brain lesion studies have demonstrated that damage to the emotion-processing center of the brain impedes real-life rationality and decision-making” (p 121).If my take approximates Green’s findings, then we can say that conversion to the Christian faith is not an intellectual enterprise alone nor an emotional one. It does not just happen inside me. Instead, conversion is a physiological, relational, emotional, intellectual, moral, and environmental event as well as an ongoing process that affects and effects who I am as a whole person. Moreover, my worldview, that interpretive lens whereby I make sense of myself and the environment, is continually being shaped and reshaped by the social nexus in which I find myself, by those pathways carved in my neuro-biological correlates, and by a narrative that I and others write to define who I am in relation to myself and in relation to the world-as-it-is. Put differently, worldview is not merely a conceptual construct filled with presuppositions isolated from the entire existential experience of the human who holds it.This is a fine read, raises important questions not typical of tradition, dualist views. Tolle lege!

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  2. Donny Butkus

    Neuroscience and Human Identity.
    accessible. readable. anyone interested in neuroscience, neurobiology, theology and the question of human identity and the possibility of bodily resurrection should read this book.

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  3. Amazon Customer

    Inspires deep thinking as to what it means to be human and a Christian
    I found this book fascinating, and I continued to think about many of the concepts he presented, including identity being rooted in community, not in our individuality, free will and sin, the source of holiness and physical temptations. You will need a big vocabulary, or a dictionary handy, but notwithstanding that, it is a great read for anyone wanting to learn more about the interplay between our bodies and our minds, viewed through both lenses of neuroscience and Christian theology.

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  4. BRIAN WALTER

    Three Stars
    ok

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  5. Ronald E. Jutzy

    Great thoughts on Creation, Life, Death and Science
    An excellent review and fresh perspective on life, death, creation and science; showing the coherence of all perspectives. Uniquely qualified as a neuroscientist as well as a solid Biblical scholar, Joel Green rethinks the Biblical references to the meanings of life and death. He clarifies particularly the state of the dead-in-Christ; reinterpreting, in the light of modern linguistic understandings, the references to the relationship of body and soul (unity) and their unlikely separation in death. He also describes thoughts on the immortal body of Jesus and the significance of resurrection into a new body. Excellent science and theology in harmony.

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  6. Genny

    The author has an amazing vocabulary and likes long sentence structure
    This is a very hard read. I’m a professor of biochemistry (not theology or philosophy). I had a hard time getting through the first third of this book. The first third is a frenetic overview of other philosopher’s views and writings and is probably only coherent to those steeped in the field. I often asked myself ‘what is even being explained here’ or ‘what argument is being addressed by whom and does the author agree?’ It was a slog. The author has an amazing vocabulary and likes long sentence structure. As a result, I had to re-read each paragraph at least one or two times before I knew what was being discussed. If you are an academic in the field of philosophy of the mind perhaps you can digest this with ease. But for me it was an expensive book that I could not fully access. It got more relevant to me (as a biochemist) in the later half, but it remained a challenge to comprehend.

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  7. pifer

    interesting
    This book brings into light some very interesting points about the body, the soul, and what happens when we die.

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  8. Sergiu

    Not much of an argument for monism
    I expected to find arguments for monism in reading this book. What I found though was the author trying to cast doubt on substance dualism rather than argue actively for monism. His interpretations are usually just slightly skewed and his conclusions don’t always follow from his premises.

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  9. Jenny Hall

    This was a difficult book to read but very interesting, not sure I will take to much away from it.

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  10. TOMASZ MAMELKA

    Just one word: very good!!!

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  11. Roy J Squires

    Good quality read

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    Physique, Soul, and Human Life: The Nature of Humanity within the Bible (Research in Theological Interpretation)
    Physique, Soul, and Human Life: The Nature of Humanity within the Bible (Research in Theological Interpretation)

    Original price was: $30.00.Current price is: $19.93.

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