rossum:
…it was about an incorrect interpretation of “Holy Writ” as held by the Holy Office of the Catholic Church at that time.
rossum
I’m not denying that. The court authorities were wrong to put this in religious terms during condemnation, however, the point remains that the Church didn’t have an issue with
science. The issue was with Galileo putting forward his view without evidence, and without the ability to answer Aristotle’s reasons for a geocentric view. (As I stated in my first post) The problem was not with science or discovery, it was with Galileo’s lack of evidence. He was allowed to discuss it as theory, but not put it forward as truth without first providing evidence to support his claim. That’s the same standard we hold modern scientists to.
Again, the court was wrong to brand him a heretic, I wouldn’t deny that; but his heresy was against accepted interpretations of Biblical texts, not against any actual Dogmatic teaching of the Church.
Bear in mind that Galileo’s use of the word Doctrine relates to the Latin root’s meaning of teaching / instruction; and does not necessarily mean that it relates back to an actual dogma of the Church.