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Vatican should learn from Galileo mess, prelate says
newsdaily ^ | 2009/07/02 | Philip Pullella

Posted on 07/07/2009 8:24:48 AM PDT by JoeProBono

The Catholic Church should not fear scientific progress and possibly repeat the mistake it made when it condemned astronomer Galileo in the 17th century, a Vatican official said on Thursday in a rare self-criticism.

Galileo, who lived from 1564 to 1642, was condemned by the Inquisition in 1633 for asserting that the earth revolved around the sun.

Known as the father of astronomy, he wasn't fully rehabilitated by the Vatican until 1992, nearly 360 years later.

At a news conference presenting a new volume of documents on the Galileo case, Monsignor Sergio Pagano, head of the Vatican's secret archives, said today's Church and Vatican officials can learn from past mistakes and shed their diffidence toward science.

"Can this teach us something today? I certainly think so," he said, in a rare display of self-criticism for the Vatican.

"We should be careful, when we read the Sacred Scriptures and have to deal with scientific questions, to not make the same mistake now that was made then," he said.

"I am thinking of stem cells, I am thinking of eugenics, I am thinking of scientific research in these fields. Sometimes I have the impression that they are condemned with the same preconceptions that were used back then for the Copernican theory," he said.

The Inquisition, which sought out heresies, condemned Galileo for backing a theory of astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus because it clashed with the Bible which said: "God fixed the Earth upon its foundation, not to be moved forever


TOPICS: Astronomy; Religion; Science
KEYWORDS: apologia; apologists; astronomy; science; vatican; xplanets
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1 posted on 07/07/2009 8:24:48 AM PDT by JoeProBono
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To: JoeProBono

Not the Catholic Church but the enviro consensus=science whackos should learn from the Galileo incident.


2 posted on 07/07/2009 8:31:30 AM PDT by Lorianne
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To: JoeProBono

Indeed


3 posted on 07/07/2009 8:31:33 AM PDT by Jagman
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To: Lorianne

Unfortunately, it seems that even the Catholic church seems bent on perpetuating what is essentially anti-clerical propaganda. The is a scholarly literature on the Galileo story that most people would find surprising.


4 posted on 07/07/2009 8:38:08 AM PDT by achilles2000 (Shouting "fire" in a burning building is doing everyone a favor...whether they like it or not)
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To: JoeProBono

>>> At a news conference presenting a new volume of documents on the Galileo case... <<<

Once again, a worthless news story gives almost no detailed information whereby an independent person can follow up on the story. What book? Who are the editors? Time to go to the Vatican Observatory Publications website (if they have one) and see what’s up.


5 posted on 07/07/2009 8:45:37 AM PDT by Poe White Trash
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To: JoeProBono

>>> At a news conference presenting a new volume of documents on the Galileo case... <<<

Once again, a worthless news story gives almost no detailed information whereby an independent person can follow up on the story. What book? Who are the editors? Time to go to the Vatican Observatory Publications website (if they have one) and see what’s up.


6 posted on 07/07/2009 8:45:37 AM PDT by Poe White Trash
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To: achilles2000
Oh sure there were mitigating circumstances. The Pope asked Galileo to write a “balanced” viewpoint and he gave the Pope's positions advocate the name “simplicitus” or ‘the simpleton’.

Galileo was also a big mean jerk about being right when the Church was wrong.

But guess what? Galileo was right. The Church was wrong.

The Earth does move despite the poetic description of the foundations of the Earth being set not to be moved forever (which in context is obviously saying little more than “God made the Earth a safe and stable place for us to live”).

The point of this statement is not to promulgate anti-clerical propaganda; it is to ensure that similar mistakes of scriptural interpretation are not made that put the Church at odds with clearly observable reality; much in keeping with the long standing philosophy put forth by St. Thomas Aquinas.

“The truth of our faith becomes a matter of ridicule among the infidel if any Christian, not blessed with the necessary scientific learning, presents as dogma what scientific scrutiny shows to be false.” St. Thomas Aquinas

7 posted on 07/07/2009 8:53:01 AM PDT by allmendream ("Wealth is EARNED not distributed, so how could it be redistributed?")
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To: JoeProBono

don’t waste our time with more Galileo stuff from a poorly written article.
Philip Pullella is a joke. get him off of FR.


8 posted on 07/07/2009 9:04:40 AM PDT by campaignPete R-CT
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To: campaignPete R-CT
YEAH. What you said!


9 posted on 07/07/2009 9:11:57 AM PDT by JoeProBono (A closed mouth gathers no feet)
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To: allmendream

If he heliocentric view was really “clearly observable reality”, people wouldn’t have been fooled for tens of thousands of years. What is clearly observable is that everything moves around the earth. Unfortunately, that is not reality. Reality was extremely difficult to observe. It depended on things like the retrograde motion of Mercury.

The church simply said, “Can you prove it? If you can’t prove it, don’t state it as fact, because we don’t want to reinterpret scripture for every half-baked theory.” Galileo was unwilling to follow this simple request.


10 posted on 07/07/2009 9:23:41 AM PDT by stop_fascism (Georgism is Capitalism's best, last hope)
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To: stop_fascism
Neither should Galileo have had to respect the Church's “request” backed by the dictates of Law.

When religious authority thinks they can control what a scientist can and cannot publish they have stepped out of their domain and into the realm of tyranny of the worst sort.

After Kepler's work the idiocy of epicycles within epicycles was washed away by the clear principle that all observations were much more consistent with the Earth circling the Sun.

Galileo's direct observation of the moons of Jupiter clearly circling Jupiter and not the Earth showed that the notion that all celestial bodies orbit the Earth was incorrect.

The definitive data was already in when the Church took its immoral stand on the wrong side of reality.

11 posted on 07/07/2009 9:31:21 AM PDT by allmendream ("Wealth is EARNED not distributed, so how could it be redistributed?")
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To: allmendream

You’re being anachronistic.

People who can handle the math nowadays know that Galileo was right and the geocentrists were wrong, but it wasn’t so clear back in the early 17th century. Some of Galileo’s proofs were wrong (the tides); the star parallax question was a big hurdle to the heliocentrists that was not resolved until much later when better instruments were available; Tycho’s non-Copernican system still had adherents who were respected “astronomers.”

>>> The point of this statement is not to promulgate anti-clerical propaganda; it is to ensure that similar mistakes of scriptural interpretation are not made that put the Church at odds with clearly observable reality; much in keeping with the long standing philosophy put forth by St. Thomas Aquinas. <<<

Well, Galileo quoted the Bible, along with Augustine and others, throughout his later writings (cf. his various letters, esp. his letter to Christina of Lorraine). I think that the issue here should be NOT how to correctly interpret Holy Scripture, but how to disentangle the Church and the Academy so that your academic opponents can’t attack your position on the basis of non-academic evidence or criteria (here, on the basis of Scripture). Galileo’s Aristotelian opponents laid out a Scriptural “tar baby” for him, and the rest was history.

Of course, all of this is old news. The issue now is not disentangling Church and the Academy (unless you live in a Muslim country), which has been done, it’s how the Academy deals with State and Big Business influence.


12 posted on 07/07/2009 9:55:43 AM PDT by Poe White Trash
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To: allmendream

You’re viewing the controversy with the advantage of 400 years of hindsight. Imagine going 400 years into the future. What do you think humans in that day (if there are any) would think of our physicist’s interest in string theory? Either the pros or cons would likely be denounced as blind fools.

As modern men, we are repelled by religious authorities meddling in science. By removing science from the oversight of religion, we have been treated to modern marvels like nuclear and biological weapons, cloning, and eugenics.


13 posted on 07/07/2009 10:05:38 AM PDT by stop_fascism (Georgism is Capitalism's best, last hope)
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To: allmendream

>>> When religious authority thinks they can control what a scientist can and cannot publish they have stepped out of their domain and into the realm of tyranny of the worst sort. <<<

I think that part of the Catholic beef here has to do with the excessive attention given to the case of Galileo when state and secular academic authorities have much more recently harrassed scientists: e.g., the persecution of Louis Pasteur, the Lysenko Affair, global warming, etc.

To be fair, it does seem like special pleading when present-day reporters strain at the gnat of a censorious religious authority long dead in the West and yet overlook the 500 pound Nation-state gorillas that have much more recently pounded many a scientist into oblivion.


14 posted on 07/07/2009 10:07:33 AM PDT by Poe White Trash
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To: allmendream; wintertime

The Aquinas quote has no application in this case. Interestingly, it was Aquinas’ furthering of Aristotelianism in the universities that has a great deal to do with laying the groundwork for the Galileo controversy.

What follows is long, but as a Protestant I am weary of the propagation of the Galileo nonsense (the same is true of the “Flat Earth” myth relating to Columbus). The Vatican needs to stop apologizing for the Crusades, Galileo, and other things. It all reeks of moral and intellectual cowardice.

1. Heliocentrism wasn’t Galileo’s theory. It was the theory of Nicolaus Copernicus, who died 20 years before Galileo was born. So, we should ask why Galileo was cast as the hero in a melodrama about Heliocentrism and science versus Christianity.

The truth is that there never was a genuine dispute between heliocentrism and Christianity, and the so-called persecution of Galileo had mostly to do with his big mouth. Let me explain.

2. As I mentioned heliocentrism was Copernicus’s theory, and Copernicus was Catholic cleric (canon lawyer) who enjoyed the support of the cardinal of Capua and Pope Paul III. His book On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres, 1543, circulated at little or no cost for 70 years. So, as Philip Sampson points out, Copernicus was unsuitable as a hero in a little play about the persecution of science by Christianity, but Galileo would do, however, because he was tried in connection with his teaching that the sun is the center of the universe.

3. In fact, the conflict over heliocentrism had very little to do with the Bible or Christian theology. It was instead a conflict with the Aristotelian science of the day that was the scientific orthodoxy in the universities. In particular, heliocentrism was directly opposed to the Ptolomaic model of astronomy that had been developed initially in the 2nd century based on Aristotle’s ideas. Ptolomy found that Aristotle’s model of the sun and stars revolving around the earth on their crystal spheres could be made to fit the known facts quite well. As more information about celestial movements came to be known over the centuries, the Ptolomaic system generally proved adaptable and capable of providing accurate predictions.

4. By the 16th Century, enough problems had accumulated with Ptolomy’s system that Copernicus sought to develop a heliocentric model. That model adopted the ancient Pythagorean/Aristarcus hypothesis that the sun is the center of the universe, rather than the earth, as the Aristotelians claimed.

5. In the final analysis, Copernicus’s model proved more complicated than Ptolomy’s, in part because Copernicus assumed that the planets’ orbits were circles. Moreover, the available observational tests at that time provided absolutely no empirical basis for preferring heliocentrism over Ptolomy’s model. In fact, even during Galileo’s lifetime there was insufficient evidence to establish that the earth revolves around the sun. So, contrary to your claim, Galileo wasn’t right in any scientific sense - he was making claims he could not support with evidence.

6. Another of the myths regarding Copernicus is that he delayed publishing his heliocentric theory because he feared punishment by the church and when he did finally publish in 1543 the Inquisition condemned it as heretical.

7. While Copernicus did delay, it had nothing to do with fear of the church or the Inquisition. Instead, Copernicus delayed because he feared ridicule from other astronomers, and in that he wasn’t disappointed. Nevertheless, as noted, the book circulated without incident for 70 years.

8. Galileo enters the picture as a 50 year-old enthusiast for heliocentrism who, like Copernicus, delayed publishing his views on heliocentrism because he, too, feared academic ridicule. In any event, he began publishing his views in the popular press asserting without reservation that the Copernican theory is true and that the Aristotelians were wrong. For their part, the Aristotelians viewed Galileo as a crank on the fringes of this issue who was advancing an ancient Pythagorean/Aristarchean view that had been discredited by Aristotle.

9. Rather than being harried and harassed by the church, Galileo had up to this point enjoyed cordial relations with the church. He had been celebrated by cardinals, had an audience with Pope Paul V, and befriended by the future Pope Urban VIII who, in 1620, wrote an ode in Galileo’s honor.

10. Because of the kerfuffle over Galileo’s popular writings on heliocentrism, Robert Cardinal Bellarmine, a distinguished scholar, was asked to look into the matter. After the inquiry, Galileo was not condemned, but rather was told the obvious: the evidence does not support the assertions Galileo had been making about heliocentrism. This also resulted in a reexamination of Copernicus’s book, which was suspended in 1616 for 4 years, and then reissued with minor changes to make clear that heliocentrism was only a hypothesis. For his part, Bellarmine thought heliocentrism made “excellent good sense as a hypothesis.”

11. Here the matter would have remained but for Galileo’s ego. In 1632, at roughly the age of 70, Galileo again went to the popular press with a work called a “ Dialogue Concerning the Chief World Systems”. The Dialogue was framed as a debate between two protagonists – an advocate of heliocentrism and an Aristotelian. Galileo named the Aristotelian “Simplicio”, which was a word play on the name of an early commentator on Aristotle and the word for simpleton or stupid. Needless to say, Galileo was debating with himself and winning big. But this wasn’t enough. He also put in the mouth of “stupid” a favorite argument for the Ptomelmaic system of his admirer, Pope Urban VIII and ridiculed it.

12. Needless to say, His Holiness was not amused, and Galileo was summoned to a hearing in 1633. Galileo was forced to abjure heliocentrism. But far from being tortured and kept in a prison cell, he was given his own rooms and servants while he was detained. He was then sent home with his pensions from the church intact.

13. BTW, Galileo lived and died a Christian, and was buried in the Basilca of Santa Croce.

14. What can we say of Galileo and the Controversy? 1. Made enormous contributions to science – founded kinematics and is said to be the father of physics. 2. Like anyone, he was not infallible or free of personal prejudice. Even though, in a much revised version, heliocentrism was right, Galileo was wrong on the facts.

For all of his brilliance, Galileo was far from being a model of a man who would follow the evidence wherever it might lead. In fact, he was a bit eccentric. Galileo dismissed as a “useless fiction” the idea, held by his contemporary Johannes Kepler, that the moon caused the tides. I believe he also thought comets were optical illusions. Galileo refused to accept Kepler’s elliptical orbits of the planets, considering the circle the “perfect” shape for planetary orbits.

He was a brilliant man whose ego also led him astray from time to time – which is to say he was quite human. His problem with the pope was occasioned by a dispute over heliocentrism, but it had nothing really to do with an intrinsic conflict between religion and science. On this point, the church was more rational than Galileo given the available evidence, and Galileo would probably have also been called to account if instead of ridiculing the Pope’s views on astronomy he had written a tract ridiculing the pope’s personal hygiene or the way he dressed.

15. Like the Columbus myth, the Galileo story was developed by 19th century writers friendly to the French Enlightenment as part of their campaign against the Catholic Church. In the 19th Century the scope of the Galileo myth was expanded to include Protestants as villains as well. As this mendacious embellishment developed, Calvin was alleged to have attacked Copernicus even before the Catholic Church. Bertrand Russell, without citation, claimed that Calvin rejected heliocentrism by citing Psalm 93:1 (the world is also stablished so that it cannot be moved) and exclaiming “Who would venture to place the authority of Copernicus above that of the Holy Spirit?” Later historians of science such as Thomas Kuhn would claim that this passage appears in Calvin’s commentary on Genesis.

The difficulty is that Calvin probably had not even heard of Copernicus, and no such passage is in his commentary. Instead, it appears that the passage is a late 19th Century fabrication – perhaps by Andrew Dickson White, the first president of Cornell – that was intended to propagate the myth of the enduring warfare between science and theology.

16. What purpose does the Galileo myth – I should say, the Galileo lie – serve? The Galileo story is driven by the desire to promote the view that Christianity and science are necessarily opposed to one another. It is meant to create a false contrast between a modern world that enjoys science and technological progress while, by contrast, religion is based on faith rather than reason and leads to superstition rather than science, to authoritarian repression rather than to democracy. Thus, the real purpose of this lie, like the Columbus lie that I merely mentioned, is to bolster the cultural and political power of secular elites.

While thee is a lot that could be said about both the Galileo myth and the Columbus “flat earth” myth, to good sources are the books by Jeffrey Burton Russell and Philip J. Sampson on these topics.


15 posted on 07/07/2009 10:10:28 AM PDT by achilles2000 (Shouting "fire" in a burning building is doing everyone a favor...whether they like it or not)
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To: achilles2000

Good show!

As for the Protestants, it seems that even the supposed anti-Copernicanism of Luther is based upon pretty flimsy textual evidence (as opposed to Calvin, where there is no textual evidence).

I’ve found Fantoli’s _Galileo_ to be an excellent source of information on the whole controversy. As for the “Flat Earth” myth, you might find Rudolf Simek’s _Heaven and Earth in the Middle Ages_ useful.


16 posted on 07/07/2009 10:53:06 AM PDT by Poe White Trash
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To: achilles2000

Thank you for the informative post.


17 posted on 07/07/2009 11:57:48 AM PDT by wintertime (People are not stupid! Good ideas win!)
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To: stop_fascism

Yes, and modern marvels like molecular medicines, antibiotics, instantaneous communication and the computer.

If you are against progress then putting religious “oversight” (i.e. the ability to imprison those who promote ideas you disagree with) over science would be a damn fine way of doing it.


18 posted on 07/07/2009 1:54:35 PM PDT by allmendream ("Wealth is EARNED not distributed, so how could it be redistributed?")
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To: Poe White Trash
As a scientist I am equally against the encroachment of EITHER the state of the church into the realm of scientific discovery.

As a believer in the natural rights of man and freedom of conscience I consider it tyranny of the worst sort for EITHER the church or the state to be deciding what scientists need to be imprisoned for promoting a scientific idea.

19 posted on 07/07/2009 1:58:41 PM PDT by allmendream ("Wealth is EARNED not distributed, so how could it be redistributed?")
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To: allmendream

You fool. Galileo did not have the advantage of 21st century science when he argued that “the earth circles the sun.” But you do, and you remain an ignoramus. Go back to planetary physics 101. The earth does NOT circle around the sun. Fool.


20 posted on 07/07/2009 7:08:38 PM PDT by campaignPete R-CT
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