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Why Our Day Is Far More Religious Than The Middle Ages Was
The Federalist ^ | September 20, 2018 | David Breitenbeck

Posted on 09/24/2018 5:10:16 AM PDT by Heartlander

Why Our Day Is Far More Religious Than The Middle Ages Was

An educated man of the postmodern age can only repeat what he’s been told must be true and assume you are in some manner a bad person if you question it.

By

The Middle Ages are often described as “the Age of Faith.” But surely, if any age deserves that epithet, it is ours.

True, the Middle Ages were the age of Christianity, but hardly the age of faith. If we take faith in the common, though oversimplified sense of blind belief in that which is not seen or understood, then the Middle Ages, with their worshipful admiration of Aristotle, fine definitions, and extremely precise use of language, and monasteries full of busy monks copying and commenting on scholarly texts, are the reverse of the age of faith.

An educated man in the Middle Ages might have believed in many things that we today would question, but he could tell us exactly why he believed them and cite both past scholarship and empirical observations in support of his ideas. An educated man of the postmodern age can only repeat what he’s been told must be true and assume you are in some manner a bad person if you question it.

For instance, take the famous case of Galileo. The contemporary man just knows, because he’s been told, that Galileo proved the Earth goes around the Sun and was persecuted for daring to disprove religious dogma. How he’s supposed to have done this, what arguments he and his opponents employed, why the Earth was believed to be the center of the solar system in the first place, and so on would hardly ever even occur to the contemporary man. For him, it’s simply a matter that Galileo was right, his opponents were wrong.

The educated man of the Middle Ages or Renaissance, by contrast, could tell you exactly why the Earth must be the center of the solar system based on empirical observations and sound reasoning. He could cite the arguments for and, what is more important, the arguments against his own position.

This Actually Happened in Those Days

For instance, about ten years after Galileo’s death, the Jesuit astronomer Giovanni Batista Riccioli published a book in which he weighed the Copernican and Tychonic models of the universe. He presented 49 arguments in favor of Copernicus and 77 in favor of Tycho, with rebuttals to each, and finally concluded that Tycho’s was the stronger system based on then-current knowledge.

Leaving aside his conclusion, can you imagine someone doing that kind of thing today? When was the last time you saw someone lay out the arguments for and against a certain scientific or political theory, with each side’s answers to the other’s objections?

Rather than the heated rhetoric surrounding, say, climate change, picture someone releasing a book in which he clearly defined both positions then listed everything that could be said for either, without any kind of ad hominum attacks or speculations of motive. Wouldn’t that be worth reading? Wouldn’t that seem to be a proper way of getting to the truth?

By contrast the postmodern world, by and large, receives Galileo’s discoveries, or those of Isaac Newton, Charles Darwin, Louis Pasteur, or any other scientist as articles of faith. They are true, and any doubts or questionings are not to be tolerated.

Try to explain to someone, for instance, the distinction between the Ptolemaic, Tychonic, Copernican, and Keplerian systems, or the major flaws in Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection, and you will meet a blank wall of resistance, often coupled with snide implications against religious dogma. You see, you are now an infidel for questioning the Faith, and thus must be considered as one of the indistinguishable “bad people.”

Our Brains Are Instead Full of Blind Allegiances

To be clear, this isn’t to deny either the truth of their conclusions or the great work they did. The point isn’t whether any of these men were right or wrong; the point is our approach to them and their discoveries.

The assumption is that the world is divided into two parts: let us call them the House of Progress and the House of Reaction. Anything that is not part of the House of Progress is, by definition, the House of Reaction and must be opposed. Anything part of the House of Progress must be defended at all costs.

Darwin, for instance, is part of the House of Progress, which is why so many people will accuse you of being a creationist if you offer any criticism of his theory of Natural Selection (amusingly, this happens even to atheists). He was “right,” you see, so any opposition to him or any doubts as to his theory must be mere unthinking reactions.

Likewise, look at the treatment of scientists who question the extent, cause, or proper response to climate change: they are simply labeled “deniers” and dismissed, rather than engaged. You see? In the Middle Ages, educated men disputed each other by putting their opponent’s case in the strongest possible light before answering it. In the postmodern age, we fortunate recipients of universal education and an expensive college degree can only paste “not to be listened to” labels on our opponents.

School Is Now a Place to Be Indoctrinated, Not Educated

We’re not taught how to reason in school: we’re just presented with “right answers” and told to put those down. Science textbooks don’t delve into the complexities of research, competing theories, the long, hard process by which accumulated facts slowly create a clearer and clearer picture of the workings of nature. They just list the facts, laws, and theories as ready made, sometimes with an understated sneer at those who initially doubted them for failing to give the right answer.

It’s like this with most aspects of our lives. When was the last time you actually heard someone lay out the reasons why, say, racism is wrong, or democracy is good? We don’t make arguments, just statements of faith based on what we’ve been taught to say.

The trouble is that this kind of faith-based approach is very fragile (which is one of the reasons the old Christians didn’t use it). It’s apt to breed resentment and rebellion, and to crumble if the observed facts don’t seem to match the received doctrine.

We’re sometimes told with horror that half the country doubts evolution. Well, why shouldn’t they? They’ve been taught it as a matter of faith, not as a scientific fact dug out of nature through observation and reason. They’ve simply been told, in essence, “This is true and you’re a bad person if you don’t believe it.”

We should only expect some people to rebelliously turn their backs on it for that reason alone. Then again, there’s the fact that anyone of basic intelligence can see where evolution, as it is usually taught, seems to contradict the observed world around us. It doesn’t make sense that the vast variety, beauty, and efficiency of the natural world came about simply by random mutations that happened to be beneficial (I am told modern evolutionists generally think the situation is much more complicated and interesting than that). So, when forced to choose between the rather patronizing faith that’s been shoved down their throats or their own good sense, they choose the latter.

People Need to Know Why

The trouble is, the same thing happens regarding racism. The evils of bigotry and the equality of man are received truths: we’ve never been expected to argue for or against them, or how we may safely conclude this.

It’s true that racism is wrong and evil, but there are reasons we know this to be so—reasons we’re never taught. If you’re told all your life that racism is wrong and that black people are just as good as white people, then you spend some time in East Detroit, or watch Black Lives Matter fanatics burn down a city, then you’ll start to question this faith. And since you’ve never been given any solid reasons for believing racism to be wrong, or even taught to think rationally in the first place, there’s nothing to stop you from believing otherwise.

My point isn’t just that this is wrong, my point is that, just like with the doubts over evolution, this is an entirely predictable result of how we approach these issues. We simply insist upon the wrongness of racism or the truth of evolution as a matter of faith: we don’t bother to reason out why. In fact, we actively discourage the kind of questioning that leads to reasoned discourse and just demand blind acceptance, while insulting anyone who doesn’t go with the program.

As with so much of the modern world, the question is what, exactly, did we think was going to happen as a result?


TOPICS: Education; Religion; Science; Society
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 09/24/2018 5:10:16 AM PDT by Heartlander
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To: Heartlander

The “Good Old Days” were not so good.


2 posted on 09/24/2018 5:29:03 AM PDT by Erik Latranyi (The Democratic Party is now a hate-group)
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To: Erik Latranyi

Murders were fewer in the Wild West than they were now. They are just a sensational part of Western Drama to include a killer outlaw that needs to be brought down. Not to mention 100 years ago the national murder rate was less than 1 per 100,000.


3 posted on 09/24/2018 5:32:56 AM PDT by Morpheus2009
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To: Heartlander
True, the Middle Ages were the age of Christianity, but hardly the age of faith. If we take faith in the common, though oversimplified sense of blind belief in that which is not seen or understood, then the Middle Ages, with their worshipful admiration of Aristotle, fine definitions, and extremely precise use of language, and monasteries full of busy monks copying and commenting on scholarly texts, are the reverse of the age of faith.

B.S. Premise. Only anti-religious types accept the definition of faith put forth by this article. Faith and Reason go hand in hand. They must. Check out the Church Fathers, great in faith and great in reason. Way before the middle ages. They were reasoning out the great world that God created.

4 posted on 09/24/2018 5:36:37 AM PDT by frogjerk (We are conservatives. Not libertarians, not "fiscal conservatives", not moderates)
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To: Heartlander

Good article. I have been thinking this is especially true of homosexuality. People have known that it is bad for the person and bad for society for a long time, but for decades if you asked most Americans why homosexuality is a bad “lifestyle choice” they would tell you that “the Bible says it’s wrong”, or simply, “It’s weird”. Like the article says, that’s a fragile approach and it has crumbled easily in the past 10 years or so.


5 posted on 09/24/2018 5:38:33 AM PDT by GOP_Party_Animal
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To: frogjerk

Good catch Froggy. I was going to make the same point until I saw you had it covered. Biblical “faith” is not a “blind faith” or a “leap of faith” - it is fully consistent with reason and logic.


6 posted on 09/24/2018 5:40:43 AM PDT by circlecity
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To: Heartlander

The article is a play on the ambiguity of the word “faith”. The Age of Faith refers to a teleological view of cause and effect which could be applied to all of nature. In short, things were because god willed it so. Even the smallest events, like the fall of a sparrow, had a devine cause. Today, we are more apt to believe that nothing has a cause, or even that perhaps the effect could just as well have preceded the cause.


7 posted on 09/24/2018 5:42:53 AM PDT by PUGACHEV
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To: frogjerk

I agree with this article, but he is discussing more the pseudo-elites who think they already know everything without actually understanding it. They are the intelligentsia, the politicians, academicians and media and are trying to impose their will on thinking people and failing.

Our institutions of intellectualism have indeed sunk into a blind faith. All we are waiting to see is if those of real faith and genuine intellect outnumber them and can wrest control of our civilization from them.

See my article “Critique of Critical Thinking” in my blog. That is a partial analysis of the thought mode of those people. Jordan Peterson is a voice of intellect in a world of blind faith and is worth listening to. I don’t agree with everything he says, but he is a rare enlightened and genuine intellectual.


8 posted on 09/24/2018 5:50:05 AM PDT by gspurlock (http://www.backyardfence.wordpress.com)
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To: Heartlander

He is confusing piety with intelligence.

People of the Middle Ages WERE far more religious than today and they sincerely believed in their faith.

They were perfectly willing to die defending that faith as exemplified by the Crusades.

With a few exceptiond, we live in a post-Christian era. Regardless of the feelings
of idividual practitioners, the leadership of mainstream Christian groups like thr,ELCA,UMC, Anglicans, etc, have rejected long established Christian beliefs and morality. The head of the Catholic Church, Bergoglio, and his immediate accomplices, fall into this category.

Christianity has never before been in more danger. Rotting from within, and assaulted by its own governments while being inundated with Muslim terrorists masquerading as refugees in its heartland.


9 posted on 09/24/2018 6:01:07 AM PDT by ZULU (MAGA)
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To: Heartlander
the distinction between the Ptolemaic, Tychonic, Copernican, and Keplerian systems...

For the record, based on my new understandings, the Copernican was essentially Ptolemaic. This is because Copernicus had the same basic viewpoint as Ptolemy, only he changed the math a bit. Although he firmly put the Sun in the center of things, it was not a fundamental change. It wasn't till Kepler that we get to true heliocentricity.

10 posted on 09/24/2018 6:02:23 AM PDT by C210N (Republicans sign check fronts; 'Rats sign check backs.)
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To: Heartlander
When was the last time you saw someone lay out the arguments for and against a certain scientific or political theory, with each side’s answers to the other’s objections?

kialo.com

11 posted on 09/24/2018 6:02:40 AM PDT by mjp ((pro-{God, reality, reason, egoism, individualism, natural rights, limited government, capitalism}))
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To: Heartlander
...about ten years after Galileo’s death, the Jesuit astronomer Giovanni Batista Riccioli published a book in which he weighed the Copernican and Tychonic models of the universe.

Galileo died in 1642 and Riccioli's book is from the 1650's--long after the Middle Ages.

12 posted on 09/24/2018 6:15:37 AM PDT by Fiji Hill
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To: Heartlander

Bookmark.


13 posted on 09/24/2018 6:23:37 AM PDT by Southside_Chicago_Republican (The more I learn about people, the more I like my dog.)
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To: frogjerk

“B.S. Premise. Only anti-religious types accept the definition of faith put forth by this article. Faith and Reason go hand in hand. They must. Check out the Church Fathers, great in faith and great in reason. Way before the middle ages. They were reasoning out the great world that God created.”

In accord with the third paragraph of the article: Can you tell us exactly why you believe all that and cite both past scholarship and empirical observations in support of your ideas or can you only repeat what you’ve been told must be true and assume we are in some manner bad people if we question it?


14 posted on 09/24/2018 6:38:11 AM PDT by KrisKrinkle (Blessed be those who know the depth and breadth of ignorance. Cursed be those who don't.)
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To: Heartlander

It is the usual liberal cannard that Gallileo was persecuted for opposing God, when he was criticizing the paganistic church’s position on Aristotle’s greek/hellenistic narcistic view of the world. They were gay I assume and no one is admiting that Gallileo was persecuted by those following theories of homosexuals


15 posted on 09/24/2018 7:35:03 AM PDT by JudgemAll (Democrats Fed. job-security Whorocracy & hate:hypocrites must be gay like us or be tested/crucified)
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To: KrisKrinkle

Bill Cosby said he would not want to have for doctors affirmative action sponsored kids with gold teeth.

True consciousness is of utmost importance in genuine scientific research which requires great sacrifice , little pay and most of the time an ungrateful response from the public

Gallileo was not the last, Pastor was persecuted, Einstein’s most important papers never got him the Nobel Prize and would have been forgotten hadn’t he thought of a practical application of the electron etc.

Today’s global warming hysteria is also hinged on estrogenated hysteria of victimhood and not science at all, but a posse of crying sheeps on some islands. We all know that being an alleged victim nowadays get women to rally together and to know physics better than Einstein


16 posted on 09/24/2018 7:42:37 AM PDT by JudgemAll (Democrats Fed. job-security Whorocracy & hate:hypocrites must be gay like us or be tested/crucified)
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