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We’ve Been Lied To: Christianity and the Rise of Science
BreakPoint ^ | 4 Dec 03 | Chuck Colson

Posted on 12/04/2003 11:18:40 AM PST by Mr. Silverback

To paraphrase the opening of a popular ESPN show, these four things everyone knows are true: Before Columbus’s first voyage, people thought the world was flat. When Copernicus wrote that the Earth revolved around the Sun, his conclusions came out of nowhere. The “scientific revolution” of the seventeenth century invented science as we know it. And the false beliefs and impediments to science are Christianity’s fault.

There’s just one problem: All four statements are false.

As Rodney Stark writes in his new book, For the Glory of God, “every educated person” of Columbus’s time, especially Christian clergy, “knew the earth was round.” More than 800 years before Columbus’s voyage, Bede, the church historian, taught this, as did Hildegard of Bingen and Thomas Aquinas. The title of the most popular medieval text on astronomy was Sphere, not exactly what you would call a book that said the earth was flat.

As for Copernicus’s sudden flash of insight, Stark quotes the eminent historian L. Bernard Cohen who called that idea “an invention of later historians.” Copernicus “was taught the essential fundamentals leading to his model by his Scholastic professors”—that is, Christian scholars.

That model was “developed gradually by a succession of . . . Scholastic scientists over the previous two centuries.” Building upon their work on orbital mechanics, Copernicus added the “implicit next step.”

Thus, the idea that science was invented in the seventeenth century, “when a weakened Christianity could no longer prevent it,” as it is said, is false. Long before the famed physicist Isaac Newton, clergy like John of Sacrobosco, the author of Sphere, were doing what can be only called science. The Scholastics—Christians—not the Enlightenment, invented modern science.

Three hundred years before Newton, a Scholastic cleric named Jean Buridan anticipated Newton’s First Law of Motion, that a body in motion will stay in motion unless otherwise impeded. It was Buridan, not an Enlightenment luminary, who first proposed that Earth turns on its axis.

In Stark’s words, “Christian theology was necessary for the rise of science.” Science only happened in areas whose worldview was shaped by Christianity, that is, Europe. Many civilizations had alchemy; only Europedeveloped chemistry. Likewise, astrology was practiced everywhere, but only in Europe did it become astronomy.

That’s because Christianity depicted God as a “rational, responsive, dependable, and omnipotent being” who created a universe with a “rational, lawful, stable” structure. These beliefs uniquely led to “faith in the possibility of science.”

So why the Columbus myth? Because, as Stark writes, “the claim of an inevitable and bitter warfare between religion and science has, for more than three centuries, been the primary polemical device used in the atheist attack of faith.” Opponents of Christianity have used bogus accounts like the ones I’ve mentioned not only to discredit Christianity, but also to position themselves as “liberators” of the human mind and spirit.

It’s up to us to set the record straight, and Stark’s book is a great place to start. I think it’s time to tell our neighbors that what everyone knows about Christianity and science is just plain wrong.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: 1saveit4churchdamnit; bookreview; charlescolson; christianity; forthegloryofgod; religion; rodneystark; science
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To: PatrickHenry
C.S.Lewis's book, "The Discarded Image" argues that even though sailors and scientists knew the Earth was spherical, the general public and The Church didn't consider it so. (Perhaps Seven Spanish Angels pushed the planets around.)
81 posted on 12/04/2003 8:36:54 PM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: XeniaSt
GS>But wasn't Newton pretty devout, too?>>>

RBJ>Nope. In point of fact he was a pagan alchemist.

37 posted on 12/04/2003 1:54:21 PM MST by Ronly Bonly Jones


Even a cursory glance at his Biography would yield:

"Issac Newton was a deeply religious man"
>>>

Yes. That doesn't make "the last sorcerer" any less guilty of blasphemy in his alchemical researches. Some of his biographers try to fob off this inconvenient factoid as an "attempt to study the universe using the tools he had on hand," but it was in fact an attempt to use magic to make gold out of trash: an abomination to both scientists and the religious.
82 posted on 12/04/2003 8:52:22 PM PST by Ronly Bonly Jones
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To: XeniaSt
Thank you for the info
83 posted on 12/04/2003 9:45:56 PM PST by GulliverSwift (Howard Dean is the Joker's insane brother.)
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To: E Rocc
..the Church's view that some questions should not even be asked was a stifling force on advancement...

He he he.

E Rocc, Ol' Predictable. Salivatin' like a Pavlov's dog, at every chance to put down Christianity.

84 posted on 12/04/2003 9:55:20 PM PST by Byron_the_Aussie (http://www.theinterviewwithgod.com/popup2.html)
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To: E Rocc
How did Copernicus know that the year he published was the year he would die?
85 posted on 12/04/2003 10:03:19 PM PST by breakem
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To: Campion
Bruno was burned for witchcraft, not for his cosmological ideas.
He was burned for dissenting views on a number of subjects. "Witchcraft" was always easy to claim and difficult to disprove.

However, the mere fact that he was burned at the stake as late as 1600 proves the point made, that the Church of the time considered certain questions unaskable. The fact is we'd likely be 100 to 300 years ahead of where we are today if Torquemada et al had been the ones thrown upon the fires.

This does not mean that the Church did not have a positive influence on science at other points in history. But as was usually the case, when it attempted to enforce its views it became a repressive influence upon progress.

-Eric

86 posted on 12/05/2003 4:45:18 AM PST by E Rocc (You might be a liberal if.....a proctologist helps you figure out where your head is at.)
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To: Capt. Tom
Yes and it is the KORAN which states that the world is flat. So it's part of Islamic belief to say it is flat, but then Mo got quite a lot of things wrong, now didn't he, like making it that Ishmael was to have been sacrificed by Abraham instead of Isaac and that MAry gave birth to our Lord under a tree...
87 posted on 12/05/2003 4:49:52 AM PST by Cronos (W2004)
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To: Califelephant
I learned that by reading "How the Irish Saved Civilization" -- great book.

That is quite true, but that makes it even more inexplicable how the English started to potray the Irish as uncivilised brutes and barbarians (they started to do this in the 1700s and thhis continued until the Irish got partial independence from the English in the early 1900s (can't remember the exact date)). They lumped Irishmen and West African tribes together -- sub-humans. Crazy English!
88 posted on 12/05/2003 4:54:20 AM PST by Cronos (W2004)
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To: Mr. Silverback
It was Buridan, not an Enlightenment luminary, who first proposed that Earth turns on its axis.

from http://www.physics.gmu.edu/~jevans/astr103/CourseNotes/history_greekGeocentricHeliocentric.html

The heliocentric concept, which followed the geocentric one, did not originate with Copernicus. He became aware that in the third century B.C. the Greek natural philosopher Aristarchus had proposed the Sun as the center of planetary motion. In his treatise, On the Sizes and Distances of the Sun and Moon, Aristarchus estimated that the Sun is 20 or so times farther from the Earth than the Moon (the actual value is about 400), and since both have approximately the same angular size, the Sun must be 20 times larger than the Moon or, he reasoned, about 7 times the Earth's diameter (the actual value is almost 109 times). From these estimates he apparently thought it natural to put the largest and only self-luminous body in the Solar System, the Sun, at the center of the system. Additionally, Aristarchus attributed the daily movement of the heavens to the rotation of the Earth on its axis. Annual changes in the sky and the planet`s motions could be explained if they and the Earth then revolved about the Sun. Even prior to Aristarchus, the Greeks were aware that the Moon, and possibly the planets, "shine" by reflecting sunlight, a notion they probably came to by observing lunar eclipses. It is also possible that Aristarchus recognized that the stars were self-luminous and conceivably like the Sun only farther away, but this is speculation.
BTW, Kopernick was a Canon, which was essentially an ecclesiastical sinecure. Kopernick's work amounts to little more than a coordinate conversion of Ptolemaic elements. It was really a matter of aesthetics more than physics. Without a physcial theory one explanation is as good as an other. Ptolemy gets the nod because his orbital elements were easier to use to make predictions about events observable on Earth. Kopernick's greatest contribution was that he inspired Kepler. Kepler fitted Tycho's observations of Mars to heliocentric eliptical orbits and thus revolutionized astronomy. Only almost no one noticed. His laws were difficult to apply in the days before computers and astronomers already knew how to apply Ptolemaic laws.

Validation is everything. Kepler and Kepler's Laws predicted transits of Venus (the shadow of Venus hitting the Earth, like an eclipse, but it only results in a tiny dot crossing the Sun) which occurred after his death. These events were not predicted by either Ptolemy's or Kopernick's models, so Kepler's ideas began to catch on.

89 posted on 12/05/2003 5:16:05 AM PST by Lonesome in Massachussets (Uday and Qusay and Idi-ay are ead-day)
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To: Cronos
So you think the world is round? OK lets go down to the waters edge and watch a tall ship sail of into the horizon.

I guess your right. I can see the top parts of the masts but the hull is below the horizon. -Tom

(you would have thought something as easy to observe as that would convince people.)

90 posted on 12/05/2003 9:44:26 AM PST by Capt. Tom (Anything done in moderation shows a lack of interest. - Capt. Tom)
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To: Capt. Tom
(you would have thought something as easy to observe as that would convince people.)

It did, but mostly it was people who had a sailing tradition, like the Greeks. Desert people, and others who were essentially landlocked, rarely had the opportunity to see ships slowly sail over the curve.

However, it was possible for everyone to observe the earth's shadow on the moon. But that would only give the impression that earth was disk-shaped, which is mentioned in the bible:

isaiah
40:22 It is he that sitteth upon the circle of the earth, and the inhabitants thereof are as grasshoppers; that stretcheth out the heavens as a curtain, and spreadeth them out as a tent to dwell in
It was the Greeks who not only knew the surface was curved, but who also reasoned that it was a sphere -- because only a sphere always casts a circular shadow. And of course, they also calculated the size of the earth.
Eratosthenes, a Greek astronomer, discovered a way to measure the circumference of the Earth.
91 posted on 12/05/2003 10:24:28 AM PST by PatrickHenry (Felix, qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas.)
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To: Ronly Bonly Jones
XS>"Isaac Newton was a deeply religious man"


RBJ>Yes. That doesn't make "the last sorcerer" any less guilty of blasphemy in his alchemical researches. Some of his biographers try to fob off this inconvenient factoid as an "attempt to study the universe using the tools he had on hand," but it was in fact an attempt to use magic to make gold out of trash: an abomination to both scientists and the religious.

82 posted on 12/04/2003 9:52:22 PM MST by Ronly Bonly Jones

but it was in fact an attempt to use magic to make gold out of trash: an abomination to both scientists and the religious.

We know that Isaac Newton was an abomination to small minded men who called themselves scientists.

We also know Isaac Newton was an abomination to small minded men who controlled
so-called christian religions based on the Error started at Nicea.
The Error of a Corporate religion controlled by some self identified elite,
who call themselves priests;but to those who read the Word of G-d, they
know that
all followers of the Christ are a royal priesthood see 1 Peter 2:9

The question should be : Was Isaac Newton an abomination to G-d ?


a bondslave to the Christ

chuck

92 posted on 12/05/2003 11:22:16 AM PST by Uri’el-2012 (chuck <truth@YeshuaHaMashiach>)
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To: PatrickHenry
However, it was possible for everyone to observe the earth's shadow on the moon. But that would only give the impression that earth was disk-shaped, which is mentioned in the bible:

Not when the moon's on the horizon.

93 posted on 12/05/2003 11:42:29 AM PST by inquest (Government: Guilty until proven innocent)
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To: Capt. Tom
Well, it would have been difficult to get to the sea for the arabies, eh?
94 posted on 12/05/2003 11:44:25 AM PST by Cronos (W2004)
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To: Capt. Tom
And besides, if someone holds a sword to your throat you too (and me as well!) would say that the earth was flat!
95 posted on 12/05/2003 11:45:10 AM PST by Cronos (W2004)
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To: Doctor Stochastic
Ab Urbe Condita

After the foundation of Rome? I took Latin a very long time ago...am I close?

96 posted on 12/05/2003 11:50:50 AM PST by Mr. Silverback (Pre-empt the third murder attempt-- Pray for Terry Schiavo!)
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To: Mr. Silverback
Oops! Never mind, Inquest gave me the answer earlier in the thread and I missed it.
97 posted on 12/05/2003 11:56:48 AM PST by Mr. Silverback (Pre-empt the third murder attempt-- Pray for Terry Schiavo!)
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To: Pahuanui
What a ridiculous, unproveable statement.

No more "unproveable" than the statement: American High School graduates know what the First Amendment is." What's your point?

98 posted on 12/05/2003 11:59:19 AM PST by Mr. Silverback (Pre-empt the third murder attempt-- Pray for Terry Schiavo!)
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To: PatrickHenry
It was the Greeks who not only knew the surface was curved, but who also reasoned that it was a sphere

See my post #11

99 posted on 12/05/2003 12:42:47 PM PST by Capt. Tom (Anything done in moderation shows a lack of interest. - Capt. Tom)
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To: VadeRetro
Ah, yes, another "debunking" by evolutionists that doesn't really debunk anything. One reason the woodpecker is used is not because the tongue is so cool, but because it exhibits a number of structures that needed to appear fully formed and/or at the same time to confer genetic advantage. The tongue, the brain "shock-absorber," the musculature that drives the drill...each can have a separate "debunking," but the whole is more trouble. How would the ability to drive the head forward repeatedly under great force confer advantage if the brian turns to mush? Why would the shock absober confer advantag with no shocks to bsorb? Why would a long and/or sticky tongue confer advantage if there were no holes to reach into? and most importantly, how would a "proto-woodpecker) with a slightly longer tongue, slightly more cushioned brain and slightly bulked up neck muscles get any advantage from these useless mutations? Of course, this all assumes that there is such a thing as a beneficial mutation...seen any yet?

Threatened worldview my tuchis.

100 posted on 12/05/2003 1:13:07 PM PST by Mr. Silverback (Pre-empt the third murder attempt-- Pray for Terry Schiavo!)
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