Em sua busca pelo bem-estar social, sociólogos e cidadãos comuns têm adotado uma cosmovisão que falha em explicar a natureza de Deus e a depravação da humanidade. Ignorar Deus e o pecado tem resultado em análises equivocadas e soluções ineficazes para as questões sociais. Chegou a hora de repensar o estudo da sociologia, pois essas suposições deficientes manifestamente afetaram a disciplina como um todo.
Reconhecendo que os relacionamentos humanos são derivados dos relacionamentos triúnos que existem dentro da Deidade, Poythress argumenta que as interações sociais devem ser avaliadas através de uma estrutura bíblica que leve a sério o problema do pecado. Assim, ele escreveu este volume convincente para estimular a reconfiguração e transformação de uma cosmovisão que deu errado, ajudando-nos a pensar corretamente sobre os relacionamentos humanos caídos e nossos modelos para entender e melhorá-los.
Redimindo a sociologia defende uma abordagem biblicamente informada que esteja baseada na natureza trinitária de Deus, em sua governança do mundo e em sua redenção realizada em Cristo — um modelo que ajudará a reformar o campo da sociologia, bem como as crenças e comportamentos em nossos próprios relacionamentos.
Vern Sheridan Poythress was born in 1946 in Madera, California, where he lived with his parents Ransom H. Poythress and Carola N. Poythress and his older brother Kenneth R. Poythress. After teaching mathematics for a year at Fresno State College (now California State University at Fresno), he became a student at Westminster Theological Seminary, where he earned an M.Div. (1974) and a Th.M. in apologetics (1974). He received an M.Litt. in New Testament from University of Cambridge (1977) and a Th.D. in New Testament from the University of Stellenbosch, Stellenbosch, South Africa (1981).
He has been teaching in New Testament at Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia since 1976. In 1981 he was ordained as a teaching elder in the Reformed Presbyterian Church Evangelical Synod, which has now merged with the Presbyterian Church in America.
More information about his teaching at Westminster can be found at the Westminster Seminary website.
Dr. Poythress studied linguistics and Bible translation at the Summer Institute of Linguistics in Norman Oklahoma in 1971 and 1972, and taught linguistics at the Summer Institute of Linguistics in the summers of 1974, 1975, and 1977. He has published books on Christian philosophy of science, theological method, dispensationalism, biblical law, hermeneutics, Bible translation, and Revelation. A list of publications is found on this website.
Dr. Poythress married his wife Diane in 1983, and they have two children, Ransom and Justin. He has side interests in science fiction, string figures, volleyball, and computers.
The family lived on a farm until he was five years old. When he was nine years old he made a public commitment to Christ and was baptized in Chowchilla First Baptist Church, Chowchilla, California. The family later moved to Fresno, California, and he graduated from Bullard High School in Fresno.
He earned a B.S. in mathematics from California Institute of Technology (1966) and a Ph.D. in mathematics from Harvard University (1970).
Dr. Vern Poythress continues his program to recapture the borrowed capital of common grace in human scientific disciplines. Very curious about the apologetic effect of this book.
Poythress starts with what he believes the foundations of sociology should be. For him, the foundations for sociology are found where the foundations of morality are, in God. "If sociology evades the issue of absolute morality, no basis is left for evaluating a society from outside as good or evil at a particular point, except by using the standards of some other society." Then, through this foundation, he engages with the strengths and weaknesses of popular approaches to sociology.
This is a good book that is solidly grounded in Scripture. While I have no criticisms of the content, I felt at times that it could have been condensed. Some of the points had previously been made in Poythress' book on language - which is excellent book. I also felt that the appendices could have been incorporated and integrated into the main content of the book. So it's worth a read and will stimulate thought but I would skim some sections.