M
mardukm
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To teach that the sun is the center of the universe is both foolish and false.Proclaiming truth is never foolish nor heretical.
Blessings
To teach that the sun is the center of the universe is both foolish and false.Proclaiming truth is never foolish nor heretical.
To teach that science contradicts Scripture - as Galileo was - is both foolish and heretical.Proclaiming truth is never foolish nor heretical.
Galileo suffered much more than a moratorium. The question is why is such-and-such a topic being placed under a restriction? And what are the consequences of violating such a moratorium? In the case of Galileo, the Church was clearly in error in banning such questions, and many would say erred in the punishment Galileo received.What is wrong and unjust about placing a moratorium on teaching about a topic until the Church has studied the matter more completely?
Blessings
And not true. So of course it’s foolish and false.To teach that the sun is the center of the universe is both foolish and false.
Blessings
Galileo did not teach that science contradicts Scripture. As John Paul II noted, the Church was wrong in Her treatment of Galileo.To teach that science contradicts Scripture - as Galileo was - is both foolish and heretical.
Galileo, wrongly, took the Copernican model as fact, then reasoning that scripture and science cannot be in contradiction, promoted the idea that a new hermeneutic was required. He was correct, and uncontested, about the lack of contradiction, but the call for a new hermeneutic was outside of his authority, and premature: he was wrong about out the science - a fact which was known in his time consolidated opinion against him as he transformed the matter into a political football. At the time, moreover, there was scarcely any sense of “scientific truth”. Galileo was important in starting to change thinking on this matter, but the reduction to “truth” did not and could not happen until Newton: how could we distinguish between mathematical models without an underlying physical theory of gravitation? The criterion of beauty and simplicity was insufficient, it is not scientific and led Galileo into the error of insisting on circular orbits.Galileo did not teach that science contradicts Scripture. As John Paul II noted, the Church was wrong in Her treatment of Galileo.
If you have any references that support such an idea that you claim about Galileo, please share.
Do you mean the Copernican model is not fact?Galileo, wrongly, took the Copernican model as fact,
its.caltech.edu/~nmcenter/sci-cp/sci-9211.htmlAs to JPII’s apology: give us the details, and the details of the finding of the commission that he established. The ban on Galileo’s teaching was lifted about two and a half centuries earlier. What, precisely, was the apology about? One thing for sure, he did not vindicate Galileo’s actions and his thinking in general. Give us the details so that we can try to understand the point of your remark.
Interesting. Much quite good, I think, though clearly parts are subjective and polemical.As for reading: here’s a terrific link.
catholiceducation.org/articles/history/world/wh0005.html
ADDRESS OF JOHN PAUL II THE PARTICIPANTS IN THE PLENARY SESSION. Galileo was important in starting to change thinking on this matter, but the reduction to “truth” did not and could not happen until Newton:
If contemporary culture is marked by a tendency to scientism, the cultural horizon of Galileo was uniform and carried the imprint of a particular philosophical training. This unitary character of culture, which in itself is positive and desirable even today, was one of the causes of the condemnation of Galileo. The majority of the theologians did not perceive the formal distinction between Sacred Scripture and its interpretation, which led them unduly to transpose in doctrine of faith a matter of fact belonging to scientific research.
Do you mean the Copernican model is not fact?
What parts are clearly subjective and polemical?Interesting. Much quite good, I think, though clearly parts are subjective and polemical.
Why is that? There really wasn’t a foundation for this conclusion in the article - even without the “certainly”.I appreciated this quote: “Galileo’s condemnation was certainly unjust,”
Not only was his use of circular orbits and epicycles wrong, he was wrong to put “the sun” as the center of everything (the actual center is the center of mass of the entire system, something we didn’t understand until Newton - which happens to be located somewhere in the Sun, but not in the exact center of it, and in the early universe when the Sun may have had a binary partner the center of mass would have not been).Do you mean the Copernican model is not fact?
Actually Copernicus made a grat stride toward simplification, but the simple version wasn’t right and still required all sorts of epicycles and such to get reasonable agreement between and the model and astronomical obeservations.Not only was his use of circular orbits and epicycles wrong, he was wrong to put “the sun” as the center of everything (the actual center is the center of mass of the entire system, something we didn’t understand until Newton - which happens to be located somewhere in the Sun, but not in the exact center of it, and in the early universe when the Sun may have had a binary partner the center of mass would have not been).
And because Copernicus’ model was so much more complicated than Ptolemy’s and did not really give much better explanatory power than the latter, by the scientific method it was really not the right model.
In the Encyclical by Pius XII, May 1, 1946, DEIPARAE VIRGINIS MARIAE, this Pope points out referencing the following which both seem to indicate Mary died before she was assumed:I really liked Patriarch Bartholomew’s Interpretation.
If the Idea of Original Sin includes mortal death then I believe the Theotokos was subject to it. But a lot of Roman Catholics believe her body was assumed into heaven before she gave her last breath. So that would even negate the corruption of the human form. = /
We all believe in her perpetual virginity and probably her queen-ship in heaven.What is the similarity between East and West beliefs on the conception of the Theotokos?
a. concieved without sin
b. full of grace from conception
Is there anything else?
The word guilt there is not a personal guilt, the word does not correspond to the normal use of the English word guilt, rather means imputed consequences.…
Roman Catholicism, beginning with Augustine, insisted that original sin caused “spiritual death”–the rupture of human relationship with God. Roman Catholicism further teaches that human beings have been corrupted by original sin such that our ability to know and choose the good is severely damaged. Further, Roman Catholicism teaches that every human being after Adam and Eve inherits a state of guilt by the fact of being born in the normal human way.
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The doctrine of the Immaculate Conception teaches that God intervened at the moment of Mary’s conception to free her from original sin, based on the merits Jesus would earn by his death on the Cross, which of course, could only happen if he had a pure human mother. The fancy word is “prolepsis”–God intervened “proleptically.” In the extreme, this isolation of Mary from original sin leads some Roman Catholics to assert that Mary never actually died–since death is a consequence of original sin. When Pope Pius XII defined the Assumption in 1950, he left this question open.
The Orthodox position holds that Mary was born with the normal human capacity for good, was raised by good parents, raised in the sanctified environment of the temple from the age of 3, progressed in holiness and was able to make a free “Yes” to God’s invitation to become the Mother of the Son of God. So liturgical texts call Mary “all pure” “incorrupt” “spotless” and “without stain” without any reference to original sin (as understood by Romans) at all.
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The more fundamental point was not of course elliptical vs. circular orbits. The concern that involved the Church, because of Biblical interpretation, was whether or not the Earth was the center of the universe. Both Copernicus and Galileo claimed and proved that the Earth was not, contrary to what had been assumed by many based on their interpretation of the biblical account. Galileo was not condemned (persecuted) by the Church based on circular vs. other orbits.
If you question is: was the model proposed by Copernicus correct - ie did it correctly summarize the motion of the planets - then no, of course not. He had a great idea, but with a big flaw - circular orbits.