Posted on 12/04/2003 11:18:40 AM PST by Mr. Silverback
To paraphrase the opening of a popular ESPN show, these four things everyone knows are true: Before Columbuss first voyage, people thought the world was flat. When Copernicus wrote that the Earth revolved around the Sun, his conclusions came out of nowhere. The scientific revolution of the seventeenth century invented science as we know it. And the false beliefs and impediments to science are Christianitys fault.
Theres just one problem: All four statements are false.
As Rodney Stark writes in his new book, For the Glory of God, every educated person of Columbuss time, especially Christian clergy, knew the earth was round. More than 800 years before Columbuss voyage, Bede, the church historian, taught this, as did Hildegard of Bingen and Thomas Aquinas. The title of the most popular medieval text on astronomy was Sphere, not exactly what you would call a book that said the earth was flat.
As for Copernicuss sudden flash of insight, Stark quotes the eminent historian L. Bernard Cohen who called that idea an invention of later historians. Copernicus was taught the essential fundamentals leading to his model by his Scholastic professorsthat is, Christian scholars.
That model was developed gradually by a succession of . . . Scholastic scientists over the previous two centuries. Building upon their work on orbital mechanics, Copernicus added the implicit next step.
Thus, the idea that science was invented in the seventeenth century, when a weakened Christianity could no longer prevent it, as it is said, is false. Long before the famed physicist Isaac Newton, clergy like John of Sacrobosco, the author of Sphere, were doing what can be only called science. The ScholasticsChristiansnot the Enlightenment, invented modern science.
Three hundred years before Newton, a Scholastic cleric named Jean Buridan anticipated Newtons First Law of Motion, that a body in motion will stay in motion unless otherwise impeded. It was Buridan, not an Enlightenment luminary, who first proposed that Earth turns on its axis.
In Starks words, Christian theology was necessary for the rise of science. Science only happened in areas whose worldview was shaped by Christianity, that is, Europe. Many civilizations had alchemy; only Europedeveloped chemistry. Likewise, astrology was practiced everywhere, but only in Europe did it become astronomy.
Thats because Christianity depicted God as a rational, responsive, dependable, and omnipotent being who created a universe with a rational, lawful, stable structure. These beliefs uniquely led to faith in the possibility of science.
So why the Columbus myth? Because, as Stark writes, the claim of an inevitable and bitter warfare between religion and science has, for more than three centuries, been the primary polemical device used in the atheist attack of faith. Opponents of Christianity have used bogus accounts like the ones Ive mentioned not only to discredit Christianity, but also to position themselves as liberators of the human mind and spirit.
Its up to us to set the record straight, and Starks book is a great place to start. I think its time to tell our neighbors that what everyone knows about Christianity and science is just plain wrong.
Was this before they went to The Altar of the Sun?
No more "unproveable" than the statement: American High School graduates know what the First Amendment is." What's your point?
Since it's unproveable, it's foolish for the author to attempt to, at least in part, predicate an argument on it.
"The reason McCain Feingold is a stupid bill is that the First Amendment guarantees freedom of speech. Every high school graduate knows that, so why can't Congress figure it out?"
...would you then say my argument was invalid because I can't prove every single high school grad knows what the 1st Amendment guarantees?
There's a certain point where such nitpicking no longer serves the cause of reason, and I believe you passed that point a few miles back.
Therefore, if we assume that the shadow on the Moon is actually the Earth's shadow, the Earth must be round in all directions, ie a sphere.
This logic is traditionally ascribed to Pythagoras ca 580 BC. Reference
...snip...
While Lutheranism was thus condemning the theory of the earth's movement, other branches of the Protestant Church did not remain behind. Calvin took the lead, in his _Commentary on Genesis_, by condemning all who asserted that the earth is not at the centre of the universe. He clinched the matter by the usual reference to the first verse of the ninety-third Psalm, and asked, "Who will venture to place the authority of Copernicus above that of the Holy Spirit?"
Turretin, Calvin's famous successor, even after Kepler and Newton had virtually completed the theory of Copernicus and Galileo, put forth his compendium of theology, in which he proved, from a multitude of scriptural texts, that the heavens, sun, and moon move about the earth, which stands still in the centre. In England we see similar theological efforts, even after they had become evidently futile. Hutchinson's _Moses's Principia_, Dr. Samuel Pike's _Sacred Philosophy_, the writings of Horne, Bishop Horsley, and President Forbes contain most earnest attacks upon the ideas of Newton, such attacks being based upon Scripture. Dr. John Owen, so famous in the annals of Puritanism, declared the Copernican system a "delusive and arbitrary hypothesis, contrary to Scripture"; and even John Wesley declared the new ideas to "tend toward infidelity."
...snip...
Why the people at large took this view is easily understood when we note the attitude of the guardians of learning, both Catholic and Protestant, in that age. It throws great light upon sundry claims by modern theologians to take charge of public instruction and of the evolution of science. So important was it thought to have "sound learning" guarded and "safe science" taught, that in many of the universities, as late as the end of the seventeenth century, professors were forced to take an oath not to hold the "Pythagorean"--that is, the Copernican--idea as to the movement of the heavenly bodies.
Dan
Biblical Christianity web site
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