Posted on 11/23/2005 6:04:12 PM PST by PatrickHenry
Newton, the 17th-century English scientist most famous for describing the laws of gravity and motion, beat Einstein in two polls conducted by eminent London-based scientific academy, the Royal Society.
More than 1,300 members of the public and 345 Royal Society scientists were asked separately which famous scientist made a bigger overall contribution to science, given the state of knowledge during his time, and which made a bigger positive contribution to humankind.
Newton was the winner on all counts, though he beat the German-born Einstein by only 0.2 of a percentage point (50.1 percent to 49.9 percent) in the public poll on who made the bigger contribution to mankind.
The margin was greater among scientists: 60.9 percent for Newton and 39.1 percent for Einstein.
The results were announced ahead of the "Einstein vs. Newton" debate, a public lecture at the Royal Society on Wednesday evening.
"Many people would say that comparing Newton and Einstein is like comparing apples and oranges, but what really matters is that people are appreciating the huge amount that both these physicists achieved, and that their impact on the world stretched far beyond the laboratory and the equation," said Royal Society president Lord Peter May.
Pro-Newton scientists argue he led the transition from an era of superstition and dogma to the modern scientific method.
His greatest work, the "Principia Mathematica", showed that gravity was a universal force that applied to all objects in the universe, finally ruling out the belief that the laws of motion were different for objects on Earth and in the heavens.
Einstein's supporters point out that his celebrated theory of relativity disproved Newton's beliefs on space and time and led to theories about the creation of the universe, black holes and parallel universes.
He also proved mathematically that atoms exist and that light is made of particles called photons, setting the theoretical foundations for nuclear bombs and solar power.
Yup. I realized that after I had posted.
Reflector, not refractor.
Hans Lippershey invented the refractor in 1608.
I like fig-Newtons. I'd vote for Newton too.
1) I never directly answered your question: "...would St. Paul have found someone, someplace, somewhere to market in a his repackaged form of his own vision, to do that, without Jesus." My personal answer is yes. Paul obviously had some kind of psychotic episode on the road to Damascus (or alternatively he just calculated the formation of a novel religious creed) and had he chosen some other aspiring 'messiah' to fill the role that Jesus did in Paul's Mission it would've achieved the same end. The details would be filled in later anyhow. Take the significance of the crucifixion by example: (a) Paul's brilliant manipulation of Deuteronomy so as to depict the crucifixion as a fulfillment and abrogation of the Mosaic law could've been arrived at by any number of other rhetorical contrivances; (b) much of the symbolism of the crucifixion was not embraced by Christians until the 4th century. Before that, it was oftentimes a symbol of disgrace.
2) There is every reason to think that in the absence of Mohammad the Arabs would not have united and mobilized until long after the 650s (much less the 620s when they did mobilize). This does not contradict my own position that religions emerge or evolve to reflect the otherwise prevailing ethos. The Arabs were in the process of Christianizing. From a religious standpoint, the social construction of the lands that later comprised the Caliphate probably would not have been much different if they were Christian than it was under the Muslims.
3) I misunderstood your statement: "It didn't seem to do in the Arabs." You're right, it sure didn't. What I meant when I responded "of course it did in the Arabs" is that the thema military system defeated the Arabs where they faced it, in Anatolia. It's worth keeping in mind that the thema system was more of a defensive military arrangement than an offensive arrangement. For offensive purposes, the Byzantines still relied on the old Roman legionary system with slight modifications, and they also increasingly relied on mercenary forces.
4) It was the Seljuk Turks that defeated the Byzantines at Manzikert in 1071, not the Ottoman Turks as I mistyped. The Ottoman Turks seized Constantinople in 1453.
5) The fact that the Byzantines would've had different generals had they faced the Muslims in 656 rather than 636 would probably alone have sufficed to halt the Muslim advance. As it were, if the Byzantines had set out to find the absolute worse possible geographic position from which to fight in all of Syria they could not have found a worse tactical or strategic position than where they chose in Yarmuk. Most of the Byzantine forces marched like lambs to the slaughter right off the side of a ravine... Otherwise, even had the Byzantines lost the Battle of Yarmuk, they would've regrouped with reinforcements (and cavalry) to fight another day. As it were, their infantry legions were annihilated at Yarmuk.
Moreover, the Monophysites of those provinces were happier (at that time) under Muslim rule than they had been under Orthodox rule.Well, of course. I learned that in grammar school.
I thought you were being serious before. Now, I suspect there might've been a touch of sarcasm... LOL
Well, what I was getting at is this: Egyptians in the 7th century mostly adhered to a Monophysite Christology that held Christ to have only one nature (mono = one and physi = nature, in Greek). This was opposed to the Orthodox Chalcedonian position that Christ is both fully human and fully divine. The Egyptians were inclined toward Eutychian version of Monophysitism, which held that Christ's human element, if he had any, was completed submerged by his divinity ("dissolved like a drop of honey in the sea").
By contrast, many Syrians were Nestorian, which for some enigmatic reason I don't fully understand is oftentimes confused with Monophysitism (although there were also many Syrian Monophysites, but those tended to be Apollinarians or Monothelites, which basically held that although Christ had indeed been human his mind was in full divine union with God's). Anyhow, Nestorians believed that Jesus Christ was two distinct, separate entities: One human and the other divine, so it was indeed the opposite of Monophysitism (which is why the confusion is inexplicable to me).
Nestorianism was basically Neo-Adoptionism, which is the idea that Jesus was a regular man who was so holy as to be adopted by the divine Christ as his emissary. Adoptionism was a view held by many Jewish-Christians before they faded with the rise of rabbinic Judaism. Jewish-Christian ideas were very influential in Antiochene theology and evidently spawned Nestorius' creed.
In any case, both Monophysite and Nestorian Christologies were regarded as the worse type of heresy by the Orthodox overlords, who mistreated the natives accordingly. When they found that the Muslims were (initially) much more tolerant of heterodox Christian views (obviously, since the Muslims didn't care which version of Christianity their Christian subjects followed) they were not at all inclined to return to the persecution of the Orthodox Byzantines.
One thing that the Muslims did achieve was to sweep away much of the variety in Christian thought, since most all of the opposition to what became Orthodoxy and Catholicism was centered in the regions that the Muslims conquered. Things were relatively orderly after that until Martin Luther came along, not counting the whole Albigensian unpleasantry (and they were more Manichaean than Christian).
sorry must have been a freudian slip
1) Chalcedonians are termed after the Council of Chalcedon that was convened in 451 to condemn the Monophysite heresy. It basically reaffirmed the paradoxical non sequiturs of the unitary dual nature of Christ and of tritheist monotheism that have become orthodox Christianity (which includes both Roman Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy).
2) Manichaeism was a dualist religious creed perhaps best described as falling in that class of religions (such as Daoism and Zoroastrianism) that view the divine realm as equally balanced between the force of good and the force of evil (though they arrive at this by varying rationales). The founder, Mani, regarded himself as a Christian, but Manichaeism is so far removed from the what became the 'mainstream' of Christian theology that it is almost always referred to as if it's a separate religion, rather than a Christian heresy. That may be accurate, since it was essentially a synthesis of Christian, Persian, and Buddhist concepts.
3) A key distinction of Manichaeans is that most of them embraced the concept of the phenomenal world (Earth and humanity) as an evil realm. This was a very Gnostic concept, although Christians in general tend to agree, just more ambivalently. It's also a very Buddhist concept, and perhaps foremost a Buddhist concept because some scholars argue that Basilides and Valentinus (who were the founders of the most 'recognizably Gnostic' creeds) were influenced by Buddhist thought. However, it's worth noting that Manichaeism is thought to have more in common with Marcionism than with Valentinism. Marcion's heresy was the (very reasonable) notion that the Old Testament god was vindictively evil and obviously different than the benevolently good God described by Christ. Anyhow, the most extreme Manichaeans even considered childbirth (and procreative sex) evil because it perpetuated the alleged evil of the material realm.
4) The great opponent of the Manichees was St Augustine, who had himself been a Manichee hedonist in his youth, but conveniently saw the light once he had his fill of debauchery (see The City of God). After St. Augustine, Manichaean were revived amongst the Paulicians of Anatolia and the Priscillianists of Iberia. Priscillian was basically a hard-core mystical ascetic (for which he became the first of many, many Christians to be executed for heresy). By contrast, the Paulicians rejected the Church hierarchy and the orthopraxy of Christian conduct.
Historically, the very same two responses always emerge from any creed (such as Gnosticism, Buddhism, or Manichaeism) that regards the phenomenal world as evil: (a) the encratite response holds that salvation is to be found by strict asceticism; that since the world and human nature is evil, one must refrain from behaving human; (b) the antinomian response holds that since the phenomenal world (and especially the human body) is evil, that it doesn't matter what one does with one's body, because only the soul matters. Oftentimes, the idea is that sensory experiences of whatever kind aid the soul in achieving enlightenment and transcendence.
They are just two extremes of the weird tendency of humanity to abhor and debase itself.
5) Getting back to the point, the Albigensian Catharists of Aquitaine Spain were the heirs of the Priscillian heresy, and therefore indirectly Manichaean (and therefore indirectly Marcionite). As for the Paulician heresy, its last gasp was amongst the Bogomil heresy of the Slavs (which to be exact was a synthesis of Armenian and Slavonic gnosticism). In any event, the core tenet of the Albigensian creed was that the material world is evil, created by the "demiurge" god of the Old Testament ("demiurge" means the 'fashioner' or 'designer' of the universe, since only an evil, fallen god would fashion such an evil, fallen realm). Albigensians believed in reincarnation and that the way to escape the cycle of rebirth was by absolute asceticism, which is why they were called Catharists (which means 'cleansers'). Although, bear in mind that their moral system was upside down by more familiar standards (they had less of a problem with homosex, by example, since it did not result in childbirth, than with procreative sex, especially nonmarital fornication).
So, to explain my comment before, the Albigensians were branded as evil heretics and (since they were also very wealthy) Pope Innocent III invoked a Crusade and then an Inquisition against them in the 13th century and they were obliterated.
I hope that helps clear things up!
Correction: Aquitaine France, not Spain.
What crossover beliefs are there with Buddhist?
In particular, the reincarnation concepts of Manichaeism are thought to have been derived from Buddhist precept. Mani described Jesus, Zoroaster, and Buddha as prophets, and depicted himself as the last of the line with the most complete revelation (much as Mohammad would do later). Mani appears to have been raised in Persia as a Christian, or at least heavily influenced by Christians. Sometime after his "visions" began, he traveled on a spiritual journey to India, where he was evidently influenced by Buddhist thought. Manichaeism basically took Christian Gnostic metaphysics, including the concept of the Elect, and combined that with Persian dualism and Buddhist reincarnation/enlightenment.
My knowledge of all of this is close to the null set. Thanks for taking the time with me. It is interesting how worked folks get over how many angels dance on the head of a pin. But then, the real game, as always, among the leaders, is power. Splinter groups tend to disrupt, and thus must be contained or eliminated as convenient, or necessary. These days, religion is not really the road to power, except in the Muslim world. That I suspect in part is why Muslims provoke such angst. They remind us of where we once were, a place that now we view with confusion, fascination, and horror.
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