About This Book
The author contends that a profound crisis separates religion and exact natural science and urges rejection of mechanistic principles in favor of recognizing two foundational scientific facts—the developmental process and the conservation of a unified force or polarity—as axiomatically necessary. He argues these ideas carry decisive epistemological and religious implications. Interwoven with this theoretical program is a defense of a geocentric cosmology and a critique of heliocentrism, supported by exchanges with contemporary specialists. The work also examines the rise of monistic religious movements, debates over religious instruction in schools, and the cultural consequences of reconciling scientific and spiritual perspectives.
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