you can get it here: https://amzn.to/30Ab9wE
I like to read everything about the brain. I like to read about neuroscience and new discoveries in this mysterious part of our body. When I saw this title in Crossway it captured my attention because it is not common for this publisher this kind of content, but am all in. I am always nervous about authors I don´t know but I like to get to know them. I think every Christian counselor must keep reading about this kind of topics when they are available. It is interesting to read about a lot of philosopher ideas, and also many views of the mind and other concerns about mind and body. Human nature is amazing.
Description
"I highly recommend this treasure of learning."
—J. P. Moreland
—J. P. Moreland
ARE HUMAN BEINGS MORE THAN JUST
THEIR BRAINS?
Dr. Bradley L. Sickler Offers a Timely Assessment of the
Human Brain and Cognitive Science from a Distinctly Christian
Perspective
WHEATON, Ill.—Advances in the understanding of the brain have dramatically
increased over the last few decades. This progress has been especially
helpful in treating illnesses and alleviating suffering, but it has also raised
many philosophical and theological issues. One example is that researchers
increasingly present the brain as the totality of a person. But is this a fair
assessment? Are human beings more than just their brains?
Bradley L. Sickler’s new book, God on the Brain: What Cognitive Science
Does (and Does Not) Tell Us about Faith, Human Nature, and the Divine
(Crossway, July 2020) reveals that the discussion about the brain is more
complex than what can be explained by science alone. “The message from
many quarters is that you are just your brain. Programs on public television,
radio shows on science topics, magazine articles like those just mentioned,
books upon books—all declare a decidedly reductionist, materialist, antispiritual, anti-supernatural perspective that depicts humans as nothing but
complicated machines,” writes Sickler. “[They say] you are not made in the
image of God but are a walking, talking, conscious bag of dirt.”
God on the Brain argues instead that the Christian worldview offers the most
compelling vision of the true nature of humanity. Sickler examines a wide
range of topics in the book, all “contemporary alternatives to traditional
Christian anthropology, mostly driven by work being done in cognitive
science,” including:
• The relationship between science and Christianity and how to
understand the current tension between the two
• How modern brain science tries to describe and quantify religious
experiences
• Challenges to belief in the soul
• Implications for human freedom, reason, and morality
Through its exploration of these ideas, God on the Brain will help readers
navigate questions about the brain, religion, and science, to “confidently
maintain an orthodox, biblical view of human nature and the trustworthiness
of Christian belief.”
Pub Date: 21 Jul 2020
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