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ID the Future Intelligent Design, Evolution, and Science Podcast
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Winston Ewert: The Ancient Roots of Modern Materialism and Scientism

Episode
2184
With
Andrew McDiarmid
Guest(s)
Winston Ewert
Duration
00:20:24
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Audio File (28.1 mb)
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What can we learn about science and faith from those who lived before the rise of modern science? On this ID The Future, host Andrew McDiarmid welcomes software engineer and intelligent design researcher Winston Ewert to the podcast to discuss his new book The Heavens, The Waters, and the Partridge, a closer look at the interaction between Christianity and science in the thousand years before modern science.

Why pay attention to ancient scientific debates and specifically how early Christian thinkers responded to them? What could possibly be gained from going that far back? As Ewert points out, quite a lot. First, understanding the history of science before the scientific revolution can help us properly contextualize modern debates between faith and reason. Ewert argues that studying obsolete scientific issues—those that are no longer live or partisan—provides a unique advantage: it allows for objective analysis without the heat and passion found in modern controversies. By examining how the early church interacted with the science of its day, we discover that modern challenges to Christianity are often rooted in ancient philosophies like Epicureanism, rather than being entirely new phenomena.

Ewert also argues that we can sharpen our thinking by studying these bygone debates. Ancient and medieval thinkers possessed impressive reasoning powers despite lacking modern technology and data. Ewert suggests that while modern science excels in data collection, it can sometimes lead to intellectual laziness. In other words, our predecessors had to work harder to synthesize limited information into coherent models of the universe. Recognizing the long track record of the church successfully navigating scientific challenges, notes Ewert, can dispel false narratives that Christianity is inherently at odds with discovery. That means a more balanced perspective for engaging in current scientific issues.

This is Part 1 of a two-part conversation. Look for Part 2 next!

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