1. Introduction: does information matter?; Paul Davies and Niels Henrik Gregersen; Part I. History: 2. From matter to materialism … and (almost) back Ernan McMullin; 3. Unsolved dilemmas: the concept of matter in the history of philosophy and in contemporary physics Philip Clayton; Part II. Physics: 4. Universe from bit Paul Davies; 5. The computational universe Seth Lloyd; 6. Minds and values in the quantum universe Henry Pierce Stapp; Part III. Biology: 7. The concept of information in biology John Maynard Smith; 8. Levels of information: Shannon-Bolzmann-Darwin Terrence W. Deacon; 9. Information and communication in living matter Bernd-Olaf Küppers; 10. Semiotic freedom: an emerging force Jesper Hoffmeyer; 11. Care on earth: generating informed concern Holmes Rolston; Part IV. Philosophy and Theology: 12. The sciences of complexity - a new theological resource? Arthur Peacocke; 13. God as the ultimate informational principle Keith Ward; 14. Information, theology and the universe John F. Haught; 15. God, matter, and information: towards a Stoicizing Logos christology Niels Henrik Gregersen; 16. What is the 'spiritual body'? Michael Welker; Index.
From quantum to biological and digital, here eminent scientists, philosophers and theologians chart various aspects of information.
Paul Davies is Director of the Beyond Center for Fundamental Concepts in Science and Co-Director of the Cosmology Initiative, both at Arizona State University. He is a passionate science communicator, and has won several awards for his work, including the 2002 Michael Faraday Prize from the Royal Society for promoting science to the public. Niels Henrik Gregersen is Professor of Systematic Theology and Co-Director of the Centre of Naturalism and Christian Semantics, both at the University of Copenhagen. He has won several international research awards, including one from the John Templeton Foundation for work on the constructive interface between science and religion.
'This is the anthology we have been waiting for … seminal papers
deal with matter through the history of Greek thought,
seventeenth-century materialism and twentieth-century
dematerialism, the need for a new scientific world view in the
light of the quantum nature of the universe, and the storage and
transmission of information in biological systems with the new
knowledge of their genomes and development … Philosophers,
theologians and scientists all have their say, wrestling with the
theme of God as the ultimate informational and structuring
principle in the universe.' Professor Sir Brian Heap, President,
European Academies Science Advisory Board, German Academy of
Sciences
'… Davies is without a doubt one of the best popular-science
writers in the world … if you want to know more about this novel
take on reality, then I highly recommend Davies and Gregersen's
erudite and entertaining collection.' Vlatko Vedral, Physics World
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