The cul-de-sac of causal thinking: a challenge to build a non-causal theology

The nascent theory of emergence is not only a plausible model for the course of natural and biological processes, but also of developments at an interpersonal and social level. In order to apply it to theology, I propose a non-causal approach to the discipline. In this article non-causal presupposes a non-linear, non-deterministic causality. Brief excerpts from the classical view of causality highlight the problems it entails. The quantification of reality following the rise of statistical science introduced all the elements that were to feature in the eventual theory of emergence: chance, probability, chaos, multiplicity (which nonetheless translated into regularity, and the notion of normativity associated with the mean and the dispersion of variables around it. The control principle is criticised, and preference is given to the concepts of freedom and spontaneity. The article concludes with some applications of a non-causal theology.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: du Toit,Cornel W
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: The Church History Society of Southern Africa 2013
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1017-04992013000100002
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