Showing posts with label academia.edu Turin Shroud. Show all posts
Showing posts with label academia.edu Turin Shroud. Show all posts

Friday, August 30, 2013

Quantum Physics and the Shroud of Turin

 
Although the author demonstrates how science and reason can get us to the threshold of understanding great religious events and realities, he shows that a leap of faith is still required to take us all the way to God.

 
 

Although the author demonstrates how science and reason can get us to the threshold of understanding great religious events and realities, he shows that a leap of faith is still required to take us all the way to God.

Although the author demonstrates how science and reason can get us to the threshold of understanding great religious events and realities, he shows that a leap of faith is still required to take us all the way to God.

NASHVILLE, TN (Catholic Online) - Millions of Christians around the world believe the Shroud of Turin to be the actual linen burial cloth that wrapped the broken and battered body of the historical Jesus of Nazareth after His crucifixion, a hypothesis that has been extensively investigated by both scientific and religious experts.

Does the Shroud of Turin, on display in Turin, Italy's cathedral right now, offer scientific evidence of the Resurrection? Can an interpretation of the Resurrection through cutting edge physics research correspond with a traditional Christian understanding? Is the Shroud, therefore, somehow a portal to another dimension, heaven perhaps?

The Shroud Codex, by Jerome Corsi, Ph. D. suggests so. Corsi, inspired and informed by his lifelong interest in the Shroud of Turin, draws scientific speculation on advances in quantum physics and intrigues in religious mysticism - namely stigmata, relics, and near-death experiences - together, until they meet in the Shroud of Turin in a literary fiction Venn approach.

A brilliant quantum physicist leaves science on a religious quest and enters the Catholic priesthood. After a near death experience leaves him with the belief he has a cosmic role to play in history for both science and religion, he begins displaying stigmata that mimic exactly the bloody image left on the herringbone linen weave of the Shroud of Turin.

Atheists and believers in both the scientific and religious communities investigate the reality of the physicist-turned-priest's claims. Is he traveling through time by way of multiple dimensions to literally experience aspects of Christ's crucifixion and resurrection, as he claims his stigmata, cutting edge physics, and the Shroud reveal? Or do his stigmata testify, rather, to severe psychiatric disturbance?

As a sharer in Corsi's interest in both the Shroud of Turin and quantum mechanics, I was particularly interested in how he would bring his scientific and religious themes together through them, and what new information I might discover about the Shroud and particle physics through the story. The images of the Shroud, information on the scientific investigations done on it in the 70's and since, and the arguments for and against authenticity were significantly explored in the book, at least they were to my satisfaction as a reader.

I was disappointed in the treatment offered on quantum mechanics as a scientific explanation for the soul's survival into an afterlife and the Resurrection of Christ, the protagonist's stigmata and related experiences, and the probabilities of our living in a multi-dimensional universe.

The scant discussion left me wondering if Corsi really understood what he and quantum physics seem to suggest about them, or if he was worried his audience would not understand such seemingly convoluted "realities" if he delved too far into them. Either way, I was left wanting more information from that angle, but the author provided extra resources in the back of the book that I will happily explore.

I was also somewhat disappointed in the author's fiction writing style, but as his professional brilliance, background, and success lie more in political nonfiction, that does not really surprise me. Corsi is a Harvard educated political scientist and the author several #1 New York Times bestsellers, including The Obama Nation: Leftist Politics and the Cult of Personality.

Non-fiction writers often have difficulty writing fiction, and this story suffered from some of the typical pitfalls. I found the whole situation with Anne Cassidy, the contemporary Mary figure, forced and improbable, as well as other, less significant aspects of the story somewhat flat and unbelievable.

However, the book's pace was brisk, the themes were thought-provoking, I learned quite a bit about the Shroud of Turin through reading The Shroud Codex, and the author's knowledge, interest and love for the Shroud were evident in the story. Together, these were enough to make me pleased I read it.

If his intention was to explore how faith and science can be mutually supportive, I believe Corsi succeeded. Although the author demonstrates that science and reason can get us to the threshold of understanding great religious events and realities like Creation, Resurrection, afterlife, stigmata and the like, he preserves the mystery and necessity of faith by showing that they can never take us all the way to God, who is immaterial and waits to encounter us in extraordinary ways that will always require a leap of faith.

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Sonja Corbitt is a Catholic speaker, Scripture teacher and study author and a contributing author for Catholic Online. This review first appeared on CatholicExchange.com and is used with permission. She is available to speak on the New Feminism, current events and your preferred theme. Visit her at www.pursuingthesummit.com for information and sample videos, or www.pursuingthesummit
 
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Taken from: http://www.catholic.org/national/national_story.php?id=36284

Thursday, August 29, 2013

The Shroud Codex: “stunning mystery of science and faith”.




'The Shroud Codex' is a revelation

Exclusive: David Kupelian addresses stunning intersection of faith, science in new book


Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2010/04/142581/#yvJbrDEHF7mXh3lj.99


Jerome Corsi’s “The Shroud Codex”
There’s just one problem with Dan Brown’s mega-blockbusters “Angels and Demons” and especially “The Da Vinci Code.” Though they’re entertaining, superbly crafted stories, underneath it all there’s always this not-so-subtle intent to inject doubt into believers and nudge them toward the soulless, cynical sophistication of modernity.
Now here comes No. 1 New York Times best-selling author Jerome Corsi with a novel – his first fiction effort – that combines the Vatican, particle physics, atheism, the Shroud of Turin, what appear to be dramatic supernatural events and much more, all into a stunning mystery of science and faith.
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But the difference is that Corsi is taking the reader in the opposite direction than Dan Brown – toward faith, rather than away from it.
Dan Brown invents fictional historical events, like Jesus marrying Mary Magdalene, to provide the scandalous sizzle in his books. In “The Shroud Codex,” however, truth proves once again to be even stranger, more mysterious and more exhilarating than fiction. The Shroud of Turin is one of the most fascinating objects in the entire world and all of history, with some of the most recent and compelling science suggesting it could be – are you ready for this? – a virtual photographic representation of the moment of Jesus Christ’s resurrection.
Try topping that, writers, with some lame fictional plot theme.
Moreover, the plotline of “The Shroud Codex” centers around one of my very favorite premises – that despite the bombast of atheist provocateurs like Richard Dawkins, there is no actual conflict between real spirituality and real science. Both by definition are committed to objective truth. Indeed, the modern schism between faith and science is a historical anomaly. For centuries the world’s greatest scientists, from Copernicus to Galileo to Newton to Pasteur, regarded their scientific explorations as faith-enhancing proof of God’s creative genius.

I was frankly surprised at how good “The Shroud Codex” was. Don’t get me wrong. Jerome Corsi is one of the brainiest people I know, and being the author of two No. 1 best-sellers he obviously can write. But fiction? Every other title he’s written – “The Obama Nation,” “Unfit for Command” (with John O’Neill) and “America for Sale” among them – has been political nonfiction.
But sometimes a well-crafted story, rather than a linear nonfiction treatment, proves most effective at communicating deep things, at penetrating the inner regions of the reader’s mind and provoking serious reflection.
Even Jesus Christ himself saw fit to convey deep truths to people through made-up stories we call parables. No doubt, if there had been a better, more effective way to communicate such vital things to the masses, he would have done so.
One of my literary heroes, C.S. Lewis, long an atheist, came to believe in God and later in Christ because, as a master storyteller himself, he realized, with the help of literary colleagues J.R.R. Tolkien and Hugo Dyson, that God was using a story – in this case a wonderful, transcendent and true story – of Christ and his sacrifice to communicate His ultimate message of love and redemption to the human race.
True, Jerry Corsi is a far cry from God and Jesus, but it turns out he’s still a pretty darn good storyteller, and “The Shroud Codex” is a heck of a story.
Read this book. It will enhance your faith. Like Corsi, I have long been fascinated by the Shroud and believe it to be the actual burial cloth of Jesus Christ. The science of the Shroud – and the fact that even today, modern science cannot duplicate that ancient piece of linen cloth with the haunting and exquisitely detailed, blood-stained image of a crucified man – is truly amazing, and Corsi has captured it and presented it here with great dramatic flair. However, the science of the Shroud in this novel is not fiction, but the mind-boggling reality of a transcendent mystery no one can explain, and many are afraid to try.

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Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2010/04/142581/#yvJbrDEHF7mXh3lj.99