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The Brain and Consciousness in Theological Anthropology

Par : Type de matériel : TexteTexteLangue : français Détails de publication : 2004. Ressources en ligne : Abrégé : Modem neuroscience, notably the recent discoveries of research on the brain, increasingly call for a radical change in their positions and philosophical conclusions, which are particularly distant from the theological anthropology of Christianity, which depended for many centuries on a duelist philosophical conception of the union between body and soul. In this essay, A. Ganoczy wishes first of all to present the results of research on the brain that result in a materialist conception for some, and for others a non-materialist description of the human person. The two camps agreed to place themselves in a strictly evolutionist context. Using the work and writings of J.-P. Changeux and Gerhard Vollmer for the first camp, John C. Eccles and Antonio R. Damasio for the second camp, A. G. examines the theses and hypotheses of these scientists who did not hesitate to go beyond the evident boundaries of their competencies to establish a new anthropology, without even having an openly, methodologically interdisciplinary outlook.
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Modem neuroscience, notably the recent discoveries of research on the brain, increasingly call for a radical change in their positions and philosophical conclusions, which are particularly distant from the theological anthropology of Christianity, which depended for many centuries on a duelist philosophical conception of the union between body and soul. In this essay, A. Ganoczy wishes first of all to present the results of research on the brain that result in a materialist conception for some, and for others a non-materialist description of the human person. The two camps agreed to place themselves in a strictly evolutionist context. Using the work and writings of J.-P. Changeux and Gerhard Vollmer for the first camp, John C. Eccles and Antonio R. Damasio for the second camp, A. G. examines the theses and hypotheses of these scientists who did not hesitate to go beyond the evident boundaries of their competencies to establish a new anthropology, without even having an openly, methodologically interdisciplinary outlook.

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