GOD VERSUS TECHNOLOGY? SCIENCE, SECULARITY, AND THE THEOLOGY OF TECHNOLOGY.

About GOD VERSUS TECHNOLOGY? SCIENCE, SECULARITY, AND THE THEOLOGY OF TECHNOLOGY.

Authors Padgett, Alan G.
Date 2005
Publication Zygon: Journal of Religion & Science
Publisher Open Library of Humanities
Vol / Pages Vol. 40 No. 3 pp. 577-584
DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9744.2005.00689.x
URL https://research.ebsco.com/linkprocessor/plink?id=b93d4c32-b51a-36a7-b865-7e593b059351
Language eng

Type: Journal Article

Tags: Ethics, God, Religion & science, Secularism, Technology & religion, Theology

Abstract

In debate with John Caiazza, we clarify the meaning of the terms technology and secular, arguing that technology is not really secular. Only when combined with antireligious secularism do we get the modern techno-secular worldview. Science is not secular in the strong sense, nor does its practice automatically lead to the techno-secular. As a complete worldview, techno-secularism is antireligious, but it also is dehumanizing and destructive of our environment. Religion may provide a transcendent source for a humanizing morality that might move technology in a more ecofriendly, humane direction. The alternative is not a happy one for our posthuman technological future.

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