2021
DOI: 10.1111/zygo.12679
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Atheism, Atoms, and the Activity of God: Science and Religion in Early Boyle Lectures, 1692–1707

Abstract: The last‐half of seventeenth‐century England witnessed an increasing number of works published questioning the traditional notions of God's work of creation and providence. Ascribing agency to matter, motion, chance, and fortune, thinkers ranging from Hobbes, Spinoza, modern‐Epicureans, and other presented a challenge to the Anglican defenders of social and ecclesiastical order. By examining the genesis of the Boyle Lectures that began in 1692 with a bequest from Robert Boyle, we can see that while the Lecture… Show more

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