Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
The article asks about the epistemological implications of Open Science from a theological and computer science perspective. The focus is on the technical dimension of Open Science: To locate theology, it is determined whether and how theology can be understood as a data-based science and what the relationship between data-based and hermeneutical methods is. Three specific characteristics of open scientific practice then come into view: Open science thrives on interdisciplinary collaboration, methodological transparency, and a process-oriented science concept. In the use case of Open Access publications, concrete challenges of Open Science are identified before, and finally, basic questions of open theology are outlined in terms of scientific theory and ethics.
Oorschot et al. (Thu,) studied this question.