Skadi #301
And I’m sorry I know that over time the church has funded lots of science but the Chinese were building the Great Wall centuries before Christ, and the seeds of modern math and science are based on pagan philosophers and medicine and math from the golden age of Islam. To claim it developed “in christian europe and nowhere else” is so proposterous that as a history teacher i honestly cant even… realy respond to that. im sorry thats a rediculous claim. The church may have supported science in later years but they still locked away people like Capernicus (and yet the world turned) and others who’s theories disagreed with their interpritation of scripture. Science is not the result of the church or Christianity, they have both helped and hindered it at various times and its foundations go back far before Christ.
#307
take it up with the man who lived his remaining days in house arrest for saying the earth revolves around the sun.
Since the Church has been impugned re Her teaching and unscientific attitudes attributed to Her, the reality needs to be reemphasized.
Galileo was wrong in his interpretation of the Bible. He was wrong in his physics. From Ockham through Copernicus, the development of the heliocentric model of the solar system was the product of the universities – that most Catholic innovation. From the start, the medieval Christian university was a place created and run by scholars devoted entirely to knowledge. Buridan, Oresme, Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo, Bacon, Newton, all developed empirical science from Catholic theology. The system of Copernicus was never denounced.
“It is the consensus among contemporary historians, philosophers, and sociologists of science that real science arose only once: in Europe. It is instructive that China, Islam, India, ancient Greece, and Rome all had a highly developed alchemy. But only in Europe did alchemy develop into chemistry. By the same token, many societies developed elaborate systems of astrology, but only in Europe did astrology lead to astronomy. And these transformations took place at a time when folklore has it that a fanatical Christianity was imposing a general ignorance on Europe — the so-called Dark Ages.”
“The earlier technical innovations of Greco-Roman times, of Islam, of imperial China, let alone those of pre-historic times, do not constitute science and are better described as lore, skills, wisdom, techniques, crafts, technologies, engineering, learning, or simply knowledge.” (
For the Glory of God, Rodney Stark, Princeton University Press, 2003, p 125).
In
Science and Creation Father Stanley Jaki lists seven great cultures in which science suffered a “stillbirth” – Arabic, Babylonian, Chinese, Egyptian, Greek, Hindu, and Maya – they did not have the Catholic conception of the divine. Fr Jaki emphasises that “nature had to be de-animized” for science to be born. (
Creation and Scientific Creativity, Paul Haffner, Christendom Press, 1991, p 41).
“During the twelfth century in Latin Europe those aspects of Judeo-Christian thought which emphasized the idea of creation out of nothing and the distance between God and the world, in certain contexts and with certain men, had the effect of eliminating all semi-divine entities from the realm of nature.”
Re Galileo and science, “John Henry Cardinal Newman, the celebrated 19th-century convert from Anglicanism, found it revealing that this is practically the only example that ever comes to mind." (See:
How The Catholic Church Built Western Civilization, Dr Thomas E Woods, Regnery, 2005, p 67, 93).