Eugene Marion Klaaren

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eugene Marion Klaaren (1937-October 17, 2015) was a historian and professor of religion. He held a BA from Hope College, an MA from Emory University, a BD from Western Theological Seminary, and a PHD from Harvard University. He then became an Emeritus Professor of Wesleyan University. His book Religious Origins of Modern Science: Belief in Creation in Seventeenth-Century Thought (Eerdmans, 1977) remains "an important one. It is written in a scholarly and fairly dense style but is also accessible to non-specialists."[1] His Religious Origins book is based on his PhD thesis: "Belief in creation and the rise of modern science a study in the representative natural philosophy and theology of Robert Boyle and other seventeenth century figures" (1970).[2] Klaaren died in 2015. [3]

Selected works[]

  • Religious origins of modern science : belief in creation in seventeenth-century thought (1977)
  • Dooyeweerd's criticism of Kant (1960)

References[]

  1. ^ Science and Religion in the English Speaking World, 1600-1727 – A Bibliographic Guide to the Secondary Literature, Richard S. Boorks & David K. Himrod, Scarecrow Press, 2001, ISBN 0-8108-4011-1, pp. 249–250
  2. ^ WorldCat listing
  3. ^ http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/hollandsentinel/obituary.aspx?pid=176158228

External links[]


Retrieved from ""