This is weird, I came to look at the discussion on the Gospels but this has taken it’s place??
Joseph
Check out this series by Dr. Tom E Woods on how the Catholic Church has helped to build western civilization and created the foundation for western science.
youtube.com/watch?v=nVUkbUVMxXI
During the middle ages, Christians believed that God ordered the universe to be intelligible through human reason. They emphasized Wisdom 11:21 “God has ordered all things according to weight, measure, and number”.
Compare with this of pantheistic metaphysics that say all is one, we are all part of God, matter is an illusion, we are all part of each other, and pantheism DENIES the law of noncontradiction. They believe contradictory things can be true.
Compare with Islam. Muslims believe it is an insult to Allah to think you have figured out a scientific law of the universe. Allah can just change his will and these physical laws are arbitrary. Allah’s will can not be contained by physical laws, he can change the physical laws whenever he wants. Today Islamic science is pretty stagnant although there has been contributions to the applied sciences like optics medicine.
Why did the Christians progress in the sciences SO MUCH while all other nations stayed the same? Starting with the Cathedral school at Chartres, the Christians insist with Wisdom 11:21 that God made the universe intelligible to human reason and we are fulfilling our God given gift of reason by understanding the world. This remains a heavy focus all throughout the middle ages, meanwhile other civilizations are remaining almost scientifically stagnant.
Here are some quotes from some scholars at Chartres and historian Thomas Goldstein,
It is through reason that we are human. For if we turn our backs on the amazing rational beauty of the World we live in, we should indeed deserve to be driven therefrom, like a guest unappreciative of the house into which he has been received.
— Adelard of Bath, Quaestiones naturales (from Chartres)
I take nothing away from God. He is author of all things, evil excepted. But the nature with which He endowed his creatures accomplishes a whole scheme of operations, and these too turn to his glory since it is he who created this very nature-
Scholar at Chartres
In a period of fifteen to twenty years, around the middle of the twelfth century, a handful of men were consciously striving to launch the evolution of western science, and undertook every major step that was needed to achieve that end-
Thomas Goldstein
The Jesuit Priests brought Western Science to places like China, India and many other places. This means many countries around the globe enjoy a scientific community thanks to the charity of the Jesuit priests.
Christianity also gave us the western university as we know it today.
Here are just a few of the Christian scientists who made huge progress in science.
Father Athanasius Kircher- Father of Egyptology, he studied Egypt before the Rosetta stone was found. Known by many as the “Master of 100 Arts”. He did a lot of work in Chemistry that helped to refute Alchemy
Father Roger Boscovic- Known to many as the father of atomic theory. Werner Heisenberg (from Heisenberg’s uncertainty theroy) wrote a paper praising Boscovic’s work. Boscovic is called “the greatest genius Yugoslavia ever produced”.
Father Francesco Grimaldi- first discovered and named the phenomena of the diffraction of light
Father John Battista Riccoli- first person to calculate how fast a freely falling body hits the ground. He worked with Grimaldi to create the celenograph (a map of the physical features of the moon).
St. Albert the Great- This was St. Thomas Aquinas’s professor in college. this quote is from the Dictionary of Scientific Bibliography- “Proficient in all branches of science, was one of the most famous precursors of modern science in the middle ages”
Those are just a few of the many important Christian scientists from the middle ages.
Here’s a quote from an agnostic Historian, Will Durant
" The basic cause of cultural retrogression was not Christianity but barbarism; not religion but war. The human inundations ruined or impoverished cities, monasteries, libraries, schools, and made impossible the life of the scholar or scientist. Perhaps the destruction would have been worse had not the church maintained some measure of order in a crumbling civilization"
Historian Lowrie Daly, Historian
“The church was the only institution in Europe that showed consistent interest in the preservation and cultivation of knowledge”
Flick ( an anti catholic historian)
“The monks not only established the schools, and were schoolmasters in them, but aslo laid the foundations for universities. They were the thinkers and philosophers of the day and shaped the political and religious thought. To them, both collectively and individually, was due the continuity of thought and civilization of the ancient world with the later middle ages and with the modern period.”