About the Author: Wesley J. Wildman is Associate Professor in the Philosophy, Theology, and Ethics department of Boston University's School of Theology. He directs the multidisciplinary Science, Philosophy, and Religion doctoral program within the university's graduate school. His research and writing focuses on interdisciplinary topics connecting religion with the natural and social sciences. He is the author of Fidelity with Plausibility: Modest Christologies in the Twentieth Century, an interdisciplinary study of plausibility conditions in Christian theology; editor with W. Mark Richardson of the textbook Science and Religion: History, Method, Dialogue; and co-editor with Wentzel van Huyssteen and others of the Encyclopedia of Science and Religion. He is also Cofounder with Patrick McNamara of the Institute for the Biocultural Study of Religion, a research institute devoted to the scientific study of religion.
Reviews: 'Hardly any theologians have taken the time and effort to study the full wide range of our modern – and post-modern – scientific knowledge of human existence, human health and well-being, and human disease and other limitations. Wesley Wildman, however, has done just that; and the astonishing portrait of our human reality that he paints in his new book, Science and Religious Anthropology, completely explodes the archaic language and ideas that still dominate most current religious and theological thinking and speaking about our humanness and its practices and problems. This book is a must read for anyone who is seriously concerned about these matters.'
Gordon Kaufman, Harvard Divinity School, USA
'Wesley J. Wildman is the first mature theologian to apply thorough-going, indeed bravura, literacy in a wide range of sciences to a central theological topic, namely, theological anthropology. In this volume, he brings evolutionary theory in biology and psychology, the neurosciences, cognitive sciences, sociology, anthropology, medicine, sexology, social constructionism, and ecology together with the customary resources of theological anthropology: philosophy, ethics, and theology. The result is an account of human life that shows its multitude of religious "behaviors, beliefs, and experiences" to be grounded in nature, according to the trajectories of contemporary scientific inquiries. Science and Religious Anthropology lays out a fresh theological vision that recontextualizes the debates among church theologians, scientists, and secular humanists attempting to understand human nature and its values. This volume is essential reading for every theologian and for any scientist who thinks about religion.'
Robert Cummings Neville, Boston University, USA, author of On the Scope and Truth of Theology, Religion in Late Modernity, and Realism in Religion.
'... Wildman’s book significantly advances the scientific understanding of religion and religious engagement of the sciences... provides the first installment of what will serve for years to come as the most theologically constructive, philosophically systematic, scientifically competent, methodologically and theoretically sophisticated, and religiously moving model of religious naturalism. … this book now stands as the primary text for all subsequent interdisciplinary scholarship in religious anthropology.' American Journal of Theology and Philosophy
'This is a hugely impressive book, as one would expect of Wesley
Wildman. It displays astonishing energy and vision, great clarity
and precision of thought, and impressively broad scholarship.' Journal of Theological Studies