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**“Science presupposes the trustworthy, intelligent structure of matter, the ‘design’ of creation.” **Pope Benedict XVIYou vatican astronomer and your pope disagree.
**“Science presupposes the trustworthy, intelligent structure of matter, the ‘design’ of creation.” **Pope Benedict XVIYou vatican astronomer and your pope disagree.
Only those who put themselves under Church authority.Moral relativism? It used to be good for the church to tell people what they can and can’t say under threat of imprisonment, but now it is bad???
Not moral relativism, but a change in times and administrative procedures. The Church does not claim to be infallible in matters of administration/discipline. Never has/never will. Only in matters of doctrine with regard to faith and morals. These cases have to do with administration, responsibility, authority, and obedience. Historical context is necessary to understand all this, too. A big mistake the unlearned make is to always view everything through 21st century American culture eyes. They refuse to take into consideration historical context, whereby they would understand that this is how everyone ran things (or worse) back in that day and age. And, by doing so, they make wrong conclusions.Moral relativism? It used to be good for the church to tell people what they can and can’t say under threat of imprisonment, but now it is bad???
Why is design in quotes?**“Science presupposes the trustworthy, intelligent structure of matter, the ‘design’ of creation.” **Pope Benedict XVI
It sounds like you believe people really ought to have freedom of speech and that scientists ought not have to get their facts approved by the church before publishing, but then you also want to say that the church behaved properly. Sounds like you are back sliding into moral relativism to me.Not moral relativism, but a change in times and administrative procedures. The Church does not claim to be infallible in matters of administration/discipline. Never has/never will. Only in matters of doctrine with regard to faith and morals. These cases have to do with administration, responsibility, authority, and obedience. Historical context is necessary to understand all this, too. A big mistake the unlearned make is to always view everything through 21st century American culture eyes. They refuse to take into consideration historical context, whereby they would understand that this is how everyone ran things (or worse) back in that day and age. And, by doing so, they make wrong conclusions.
Actually, I do not know.Why is design in quotes?
Morality does not evolve. There are certain foundational principles that have always existed. What evolved to start World War II, the most destructive war in human history? It ended with the most destructive bomb in human history.It sounds like you believe people really ought to have freedom of speech and that scientists ought not have to get their facts approved by the church before publishing, but then you also want to say that the church behaved properly. Sounds like you are back sliding into moral relativism to me.
Sure you have to consider the context. But understanding why it happened isn’t the same as saying that it ought to have happened. I understand why it happened. It happened because people then did not have the same values we have now. They had not evolved morally to the degree we have today. We have learned some things about morality just as we better understand pretty much everything else since then. One of the things that we have learned is that people ought to be able to say that the sun revolves around the earth or vice versa without fear of imprisonment.
Deciding whether or not to imprison someone and force them to recant is not a mere “administrative concern.” It is a moral concern. Did the church get it right or not? Either the Church has a special way of getting morals right all through history or it is just a contingent product of its historical context like every other institution. Which is it?
Best,
Leela
The Swan’s Song of Galileo’s Myth“Spectacularly wrong” is a good summation. Although the trial and sentencing of Galileo was much less terrible than most anti-Catholics make it out to be (too often, I still read of how the Church “executed” Galileo!), he did not actually do anything wrong. The charge was that he violated a cardinal’s edict to teach heliocentrism as a theory-not-a-fact, but the charge was never substantiated. It looks like a purely political move orchestrated by the anti-Barberini Spanish cardinals in the aftermath of some bad politics between Rome and the French.
“eppur si muove”Galileos arrest was for heresy; not for what he taught. Copernican Heliocentric ideas had been circulating before the Birth of Galileo; and was in fact approved of by Pope Clement VII.
Galileo was nothing more than an arrogant man who taught theory as fact; and an unscientific oaf. It is fortunate the Church exersised charity and forgiveness on this poor man; and only awarded him house arrest.
You are completely wrong on this one. The difference between Galileo’s work and the work of Copernicus is that Galileo provided evidence that was unavailable to Copernicus and those before him. The reason is that Galileo was the first to use telescope for his observation. This evidence - most importantly the phases of Venus was in direct contradiction with the Aristotelian model that the Church held.Galileo’s problem was that he couldn’t prove his theory and published it as fact, even after being warned not to do so. Had he published it as theory, as those before him, he wouldn’t have gotten in trouble.
Not today------in those days it could.Do you think the Church ought to be telling scientists when it is okay to publish?
I was always surpised what Feyerabend said. I alos happen to agree with it.The Swan’s Song of Galileo’s Myth
One can see that Galileo, even though warned by a Pope, a Saint, a Cardinal and various eminent scholars, persisted in assuming the role of reforming exegesis. With this extremely arrogant attitude, he in effect provoked the condemnation of his theological pretensions.
Instead of a serious scholar and precise scientist, Galileo presented himself as a rebel theologian applying the method of the free-examination that Luther had fabricated some 50 years before. Actually, he quite deserved the condemnation he received. 14. A. Favaro, Opere di Galileo, vol. 12, p. 146, apud M. Vigano, “Galileo ieri e oggi,” p. 381.
15. A. Favaro, Opere di Galileo, vol. 2, p. 155, apud E. Vacandard, entry Galilée, Dictionaire de Theologie Catholique, vol. 6, col. 1061.
16. Ibid., col. 1062. A just condemnation recognized by many
The Holy Inquisition, therefore, acted correctly in condemning Galileo. That action was consistent with its mission of guarding the integrity of the Catholic Faith. It was justly defending the Catholic Theology and Philosophy attacked by Galileo Galilei.
In a speech delivered in Parma, Italy, March 15, 1990, even Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger endorsed the opinion of philosopher P. Feyerabend against Galileo. Ratzinger stated: “At the time of Galileo the Church remained much more faithful to reason than Galileo himself. The process against Galileo was reasonable and just” (17).
I would guess that it was emphasizing the word, and also indicating that the word has several meanings.Actually, I do not know.
Fear and anger are the two easiest emotions to evoke in people. In the secular world, that is called politics. Sound bites. Angry rhetoric. Loud proclamations.Sadly, even though the truth about Galileo and the Church is well known, widely available via the Internet and reliable sources, the fashionable ‘retroversions’ and the distortions and outright lies are trotted out, over and over, because in today’s ‘soundbite’ world quantity and shrillness and invective matter more than quality and dignity and actual logical reasoning.
And so, despite the careful, reasoned, and ‘sourced’ comments brought up so capably by other posters, the shrill sneers and the calculated rhetoric and above all the interminable lies will go on, because ‘everybody knows’ how ‘wicked’ the Church was.
Obviously the ''Catholic Church is anti-scientist and tortured Galileo for telling the ‘truth’ crowd has a vested interest in keeping the flames ‘fanned’. Heaven forfend that there might be ‘another side’ to the story. Heaven forfend that the Catholic Church might not be the ‘ogre’, nor Galileo the ‘put upon innocent’. Because if the Catholic Church is not completely foul, then we might have to actually consider its teachings as equally ‘valid’ to nonCatholic teachings instead of dismissing them contemptuously because of “all the AWFUL things the Catholic Church has done like torturing Galileo”.
One wonders why it appears that some nonCatholics can’t simply address why they don’t believe Catholic teachings without trying to ‘demonize’ the Church itself. One wonders what these people are afraid of, that they can’t even consider the Church’s teachings, or even a given event in history, without slamming the Church as an institution and attempting to render it so morally reprehensible that any of its teachings are automatically dismissed out of hand.
On second thought, one doesn’t need to wonder WHY some nonCatholics choose to spread such slander and libel about the Church at all. . .
I think leela was asking as to who put it in quotes. I copied it that way and I am not sure if the translators put it there because the Pope emphasized it some way. It is a good question.I would guess that it was emphasizing the word, and also indicating that the word has several meanings.
Design = purpose
Design = organize, structure
Design = determined plan
Design = pattern
The Pope would not want the term to mean “determined” in a way that destroys free-will and the requirements of Justice.
So, he says ‘design’ meaning that we need to be careful about what the word means.
That’s my guess, anyway.
One can see that Galileo, even though warned by a Pope, a Saint, a Cardinal and various eminent scholars, persisted in assuming the role of reforming exegesis. With this extremely arrogant attitude, he in effect provoked the condemnation of his theological pretensions.
Instead of a serious scholar and precise scientist, Galileo presented himself as a rebel theologian applying the method of the free-examination that Luther had fabricated some 50 years before. Actually, he quite deserved the condemnation he received.
Is there an English version of your “here”? Or did I do the granny thing of clicking the wrong key?The problem is that this article – and I did go over to the article and read the whole thing – does not actually show Galileo doing any of the things he was accused of doing.
Yes, caution was demanded (rightly) by Cardinal Bellarmine. Yes, the dangers that could arise from bad exegesis in light of heliocentrism were real and grave. Yes, Galileo was enjoined to teach heliocentrism as a theory, not a fact, until such time as the conflicts in Aristotleanism/Thomism could be worked out (which was happening quickly, because the science was clear even in Rome). Guimarães’s article makes a wonderful case for why all these things are important and delicate issues, separate from science, and carefully shows the instructions Galileo received to tread lightly in his public teaching.
But there’s no evidence, in Guimarães’s article anyway, that Galileo violated any of those instructions! Guimarães cites one quotation about “psuedo-philosophy” that’s apparently been ripped out of its original context (I can’t find the original context, either; the citation is woefully unclear), and makes a broad, all-encompassing gesture in the direction of one enormous letter, without any particular claim for me to check. (That letter is here, by the way.) I glanced over the letter, but found nothing proving or even strongly indicating a violation of the edict by Galileo.
This is bad scholarship. More importantly, it is bad prosecution. The Inquisition, like Guimarães, had some great charges and some great arguments, but, as far as I can find, no evidence that their charges or arguments had any connection to what Galileo was actually doing! He should not have been found guilty. The Catholic Church invented the modern judicial process, after all; it’s embarrassing that we failed to follow it in the most prominent case that ever came before our courts.
It was a messy affair, and the Enlightenment caricature of the trial is grossly unfair to all concerned, but the men of the Church did not ultimately do the right thing here. I’m glad for the apology.