The co-op bookstore for avid readers
Book Cover for: Magisteria: The Entangled Histories of Science & Religion, Nicholas Spencer

Magisteria: The Entangled Histories of Science & Religion

Nicholas Spencer

Science and religion have always been at each other's throats, right?

Most things you 'know' about science and religion are myths or half-truths that grew up in the last years of the nineteenth century and remain widespread today.

'A deeply researched history of the interplay between the two ways of understanding the world.' ECONOMIST, BEST BOOKS OF 2023

The true history of science and religion is a human one. It's about the role of religion in inspiring, and strangling, science before the scientific revolution. It's about the sincere but eccentric faith and the quiet, creeping doubts of the most brilliant scientists in history - Galileo, Newton, Faraday, Darwin, Maxwell, Einstein. Above all it's about the question of what it means to be human and who gets to say - a question that is more urgent in the twenty-first century than ever before.

From eighth-century Baghdad to the frontiers of AI today, via medieval Europe, nineteenth-century India and Soviet Russia, Magisteria sheds new light on this complex historical landscape. Rejecting the thesis that science and religion are inevitably at war, Nicholas Spencer illuminates a compelling and troubled relationship that has definitively shaped human history.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Oneworld Publications
  • Publish Date: May 16th, 2023
  • Pages: 480
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 9.30in - 6.40in - 1.80in - 1.60lb
  • EAN: 9780861544615
  • Categories: World - GeneralSocial HistoryCivilization

More books to explore

Book Cover for: The Song of the Cell: An Exploration of Medicine and the New Human, Siddhartha Mukherjee
Book Cover for: Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind, Yuval Noah Harari
Book Cover for: Index, A History of the: A Bookish Adventure from Medieval Manuscripts to the Digital Age, Dennis Duncan
Book Cover for: The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity, David Graeber
Book Cover for: Humankind: A Hopeful History, Rutger Bregman
Book Cover for: Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies, Jared Diamond
Book Cover for: The World: A Family History of Humanity, Simon Sebag Montefiore
Book Cover for: The Age of Wood: Our Most Useful Material and the Construction of Civilization, Roland Ennos
Book Cover for: The Rise and Fall of Adam and Eve, Stephen Greenblatt
Book Cover for: Indians: A Brief History of a Civilization, Namit Arora
Book Cover for: Cuisine and Empire: Cooking in World History Volume 43, Rachel Laudan
Book Cover for: Land: How the Hunger for Ownership Shaped the Modern World, Simon Winchester
Book Cover for: Nomads: The Wanderers Who Shaped Our World, Anthony Sattin
Book Cover for: Music: A Subversive History, Ted Gioia
Book Cover for: Empire of the Sum: The Rise and Reign of the Pocket Calculator, Keith Houston

About the Author

Spencer, Nicholas: - Nicholas Spencer is Senior Fellow at Theos, a Fellow of the International Society for Science and Religion and a Visiting Research Fellow at Goldsmiths, University of London. He is the author of a number of books including Darwin and God, The Evolution of the West and Atheists. He has presented a BBC Radio 4 series on The Secret History of Science and Religion, and has written for the Guardian, Telegraph, Independent, New Statesman, Prospect and more. He lives in London.

More books by Nicholas Spencer

Book Cover for: Magisteria: The Entangled Histories of Science & Religion, Nicholas Spencer
Book Cover for: After Utopia: The Rise of Critical Space in Twentieth-Century American Fiction, Nicholas Spencer

Praise for this book

'With patience, balance and deep learning, Spencer... dismantles the myths that have accumulated around Galileo Galilei, Charles Darwin and other scientific figures... Filled with wit and wisdom.' --Philip Ball, TLS
'Magisterial and brilliant.' --Professor John Milbank
'Spencer knows his history of science. He recounts the set pieces of any such story - the trial of Galileo, Huxley vs Wilberforce, the Scopes monkey trial - with bravura.' --Spectator
'This page-turner of a book compellingly tracks the relation between science and religion, eternally bickering siblings, across two millennia. The ironies of the collaborations and oppositions between the two are brilliantly set out. You don't have to have religious belief to recognise that science doesn't always have the right answers. The real question: who has the authority to make statements about the natural world? Nicholas Spencer well shows that this authority - formerly in the hands of religious authorities, now usually scientific ones - has been effortfully constructed and disagreed over across time.' --Chris Wickham, author of The Inheritance of Rome
'Highly readable... Spencer convincingly shows how, until the modern period, religion largely supported the sciences of the day.' --Financial Times
'Books that attempt to encompass the whole history of science and religion within a single volume are rare. This is one of them, and it is a good one... clearly written, with plenty of humour... this superb volume... is likely to become the standard work on the subject for the general reader for many years to come, and deservedly so.' --Tablet
'Spencer's historical portrait is erudite and wide-ranging...[a] necessary [book].' --Literary Review
'This book, though, is surely [Spencer's] magnum opus. It is astonishingly wide-ranging... and richly informed... So much complex history, theology and science could be heavy. What lightens the book is its clarity and the effervescent writing.' --The Sunday Times
'Fascinating... prepare to read something genuinely fresh in what can be an extremely hackneyed debate.' --New Scientist
'Easily the best exploration of the complex relation between science and religion I have ever read. As exemplary in his even-handedness as in his patient research... I suspect it will become the classic work on its subject.' --Iain McGilchrist, author of The Master and his Emissary
'[Spencer] has a lot of interesting things to say about how exactly the often fraught relationship between science and faith has fared over the centuries... Mr. Spencer carefully reconstructs what actually happened. It's interesting to read how the stories have become simplified and exaggerated over time... Mr. Spencer's most important corrective is to show that Galileo's theory raised scientific and theological questions that had not been answered at the time... a fascinating tour through a history of a difficult relationship, the fate of which is still unclear.' --Wall Street Journal
'This sweeping and comprehensive look at the "war" between religion and science lays it bare as a nineteenth-century myth. Studying God's Works - what we call "science" - was historically as important to Christianity as studying his Word. The battles we've mythologised - from the ancient mathematician Hypatia's murder by a Christian mob, to Galileo kneeling before the Inquisition, to the 1925 Scopes "monkey" trial - were not about ideology, but authority. A compelling act of myth-busting.' --Nancy Marie Brown, author of The Abacus and the Cross
'Illuminating... Even (or especially) those readers inclined to disagree with him will find his narrative refreshing... [Spencer] is one of Britain's most astute observers of religious affairs... He offers an engaging tour of the intersection of religious and scientific history... Mr Spencer insightfully revisits the dust-ups involving Galileo, Darwin and John Scopes (prosecuted in Tennessee in 1925 for teaching evolution). He traces the interaction of the two disciplines in often fascinating detail.' --Economist
'Tremendous... [Spencer's] survey of more than two millennia to the present day is consistently well-informed, witty and merciless to those wanting easy headlines. Every journalist would benefit from reading this substantial but very useful text, but all its readers will emerge better informed--and perhaps even saner.' --Diarmaid Macculloch, Prospect
'Nicholas Spencer is always worth reading. In this new book he brilliantly synthesises a mass of scholarly research to provide an authoritative, lucid and, at times, surprising account of the historical relations between Western science and religion. This is easily the most comprehensive and accessible history of these two "magisteria" presently available.' --Peter Harrison, author of The Territories of Science and Religion