U
utunumsint
Guest
I have been going through some lectures on Bacon, Descartes, and Galileo. I also happened to read this article. edwardfeser.blogspot.ca/2012/05/natural-theology-natural-science-and.html#more I found this quote very interesting:
Throw in Galileo’s semi Pythagorean mathematical mysticism as another source of this move to the quantifiable, and you move further along this trajectory - with amazing results, but clearly built on metaphysical assumptions.
Descarte is the third on my list who consciously rejected the Aristotelian tradition.
It is amazing to me that these early modern philosophers form the unconscious basis for the assumptions made in modern science. Without in any way endorsing a rejection of modern science, wouldn’t it be good to make these assumptions more widely known so that people can realize that their uncritical held beliefs have alternatives that may even be complimentary or provide added depths to their world views?
God bless,
Ut
Looking at Bacon’s Novum Organum, I can see the beginnings of the science, explicitly in its rejection of Aristotelian natural philosophy. But his grounds for this rejection were purely practical. Don’t get me wrong, that rejection needed to happen for the sake of science itself. Science needed to throw off the old garbage science from Aristotle. The focus on experimentation has yielded amazing results and clearly the move to focusing science on the quantifiable, predictable, and controllable has been a benefit to the world. But again, as I have already stated, and the article states, this was done in a very uncritical way.[Francis Bacon’s] goal of “mastering and possessing” nature necessarily focused scientists on just those aspects of nature that could be predicted and controlled; and this required Descartes’ quantitative, mathematical approach. Baconian science thus ensured that Nature would be “quantifiable, predictable, and controllable” by defining nature as quantifiable, predictable, and controllable.
Throw in Galileo’s semi Pythagorean mathematical mysticism as another source of this move to the quantifiable, and you move further along this trajectory - with amazing results, but clearly built on metaphysical assumptions.
Descarte is the third on my list who consciously rejected the Aristotelian tradition.
It is amazing to me that these early modern philosophers form the unconscious basis for the assumptions made in modern science. Without in any way endorsing a rejection of modern science, wouldn’t it be good to make these assumptions more widely known so that people can realize that their uncritical held beliefs have alternatives that may even be complimentary or provide added depths to their world views?
God bless,
Ut