<p>The present volume of <em>Reformation &amp; Scholasticism</em> completes the second trilogy of Dooyeweerd's writings with a specific focus upon his philosophy of nature. Unique to this work is the development of his new theory which he called enkaptic interlacements. This theory was an attempt to show how various types of entities exhibit inter-relational connections when combined into new forms that express an enkaptic unity without eclipsing the internal sovereignty of the several entities. The relationship between atom and molecule and that between the non-living components of the cell body and their enkaptic binding in the living organism serve as an introduction to Dooyeweerd's anthropology in which he distinguishes between four enkaptically bounded sub-structures namely the physico-chemical substructure the biotic sub-structure the sensory sub-structure and the qualifying though in itself unqualified act-structure. The problem of creation and the genesis of humankind surfaced briefly before the final - alas unfinished - chapter analyzes the place of humankind in the cosmos characterized as a central anthropological problem. Although Dooyeweerd's involvement in finalizing his Encyclopedia of the Science of Law prevented him from completing his work it remains a valuable contribution to a much needed reformation of anthropology.</p>
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