Published date: Monday, September 01, 2003
By: Andrew Cameron
How do mobile phones, microwaves and rock music affect our relationships? A new book explores the impact.
"Who you are among the students is as important as your academic work", wrote one CASE Associate in an encouraging email. Her wise observation is supported by research being carried out by the Relationships Foundation in Cambridge, UK, under the guidance of Dr Michael Schluter. Michael was at New College earlier this year, delivering lectures
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Published date: Monday, September 01, 2003
By: Greg Clarke
Many a doctoral student might identify with Thomas Bunting, the central character of James Wood’s provocative novel, The Book Against God. Seven years into his philosophy Ph.D., Bunting is brought to a standstill by his failing marriage, his inability to tell the truth (he is separated from his pianist wife until she is satisfied that he has stopped lying), his unemployment, and his side project—an enormous atheistic journal known as the BAG, the
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Published date: Monday, September 01, 2003
By: Trevor Cairney
How does a scholar’s faith commitment affect how she or he teaches and researches? Should there be a connection. Trevor Cairney reviews his own career in education through the lens of his Christian faith.
One of the aims of CASE is to challenge Christian scholars to consider more fully the relationship of faith to their scholarship. In doing this CASE encourages the expression of views across a wide range of fields of study that are informed by
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Published date: Monday, September 01, 2003
By: Greg Clarke & Andrew Cameron
Relationships in an era of globalisation.
"Who you are among the students is as important as your academic work", wrote one CASE Associate in an encouraging email. Her wise observation is supported by research being carried out by the Relationships Foundation in Cambridge, UK, under the guidance of Dr Michael Schluter. Michael was at New College earlier this year, delivering lectures and participating in seminars considering the significance of
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Would a global constabulary prevent pre-emptive military strikes?
Published date: Wednesday, June 18, 2003
By: Tom Frame
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Would a global security force make the world safe from terrorism? Anglican Bishop to the Defence Force, Dr Tom Frame, examines the legal, political and ethical issues in international policing.
When I was boy growing up in Wollongong, I trusted in the incorruptibility and impartiality of the NSW Police, and in the dignity and integrity of serving officers. I believe that I was justified in doing so. On the several occasions the police were called
Time: the William Craig interview
Published date: Saturday, January 18, 2003
By: William Lane Craig
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log-in. To find out more about how to become a CASE associate please
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William Craig has published substantial work on the theology and philosophy of time. This short interview summarises his ideas.
In postmodern philosophy, ethics seems to be a major current interest, along with fairly standard religious concerns such as what it means to love your neighbour. Yes, you find the teachers returning to these ideas. Students are more relativistic than professors are, and among the professors, philosophers are the least
Published date: Sunday, December 01, 2002
By: Paul Mills
In a radical paper examining the Old Testament’s teaching on charging interest, economist Paul Mills suggests that the interest-based economy may be morally bankrupt—and offers a surprising alternative vision drawn from Islamic banking.
Summary
Financial disasters are currently everyday occurrences. Many are attributable to the workings of a debt- and interest-based economy. Rather than argue the case for and against the biblical prohibition of
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Published date: Sunday, December 01, 2002
By: Andrew Cameron
How does Just War theory help resolve questions about the moral nature of war? Is it sufficient for our times? Andrew Cameron addressed these questions in the first Case magazine, available here.
Since September 2002, over 30,000 U.S. academics (including some 14,000 faculty) have signed an open letter condemning any U.S. invasion of Iraq. Here in Australia, a number of leading Australian politicians and military officials, including a former
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Filed under : RESOURCES•
Ethics •
Published date: Tuesday, June 18, 2002
By: Kamal Weerakoon
How does the stem cell debate affect the debate about human cloning? And what should be done with all of those frozen embryos?
This paper was prepared by Dr Megan Best, member of the Social Issues Executive, medical doctor and qualified bioethicist. It exposes the method involved to reach the therapeutic benefits science has promised in embryonic stemcell research. Only through human cloning will such benefits be achieved.
April 2002
While
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