• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: A Richer or a Poorer Naturalism?
  • Contributor: Griffin, David Ray
  • Published: Open Library of the Humanities, 1997
  • Published in: Zygon®, 32 (1997) 4, Seite 593-614
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1111/0591-2385.00114
  • ISSN: 0591-2385; 1467-9744
  • Keywords: Religious studies ; Education ; Cultural Studies
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: Willem Drees endorses not only minimal naturalism, understood as the rejection of supernatural interruptions of the world's normal causal processes, but also maximal naturalism, with its reductionistic materialism. Besides arguing that this reductionistic naturalism provides the best framework for interpreting science, he believes that it is compatible with religion (albeit of a minimalist sort). The “richer” naturalism advocated by Whiteheadians is, accordingly, unnecessary. Drees's position, however, cannot do justice to a number of “hard‐core commonsense notions,” which we inevitably presuppose in practice and thereby in science as well as religion. His naturalism is too poor, in particular, to account for subjectivity, freedom, and mathematical, religious, and moral experience.
  • Access State: Open Access