The
problem, I suspect, lies in assuming the homogeneity of space and time and the
homogeneous universality of the laws of nature (a spacetime equivalent of
Humes dead folk stay dead). In place
of the concept of an undifferentiated unity of nature, I propose one of a
differentiated unity, combined with heterogeneous laws. In short, without a view of nature as
heaven and earth it is hard to understand the transformation of nature in the
new heavens and new earth. This
implies that even the discussions of creation and cosmology may be
problemmatic, although they have seemed highly positive in the literature so
far. The point here is that, though
modern science took the concepts of rationality and contingency from the ex
nihilo tradition to build a philosophy of nature in which Newtonian and
Einsteinian cosmology have flourished, it did not appropriate the concepts of
the goodness and purpose which the ex nihilo tradition also offered,
nor, and more importantly, did it accept the traditional distinction between
heaven and earth however that is understood philosophically. Finally, as
Pannenberg as pointed out, it did not take the Boethian notion of time as
duration, opting instead for the Augustinian concept of the dimensionless
present and incorporating it into the parametric notion of time that underlies
the calculus, the manifold-metric view of spacetime, and in general, modern
physics.REF LAKE COMO PAPER
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