FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > Religion (Closed) > Biblical Criticism & History
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 12-01-2003, 02:09 AM   #11
Regular Member
 
Join Date: May 2002
Location: UK
Posts: 156
Default

Bede's raison d'etre seems to be to proclaim what ideal bedfellows are Christianity and science, and how the latter could not even exist without the former. Bede is also a member of the Catholic Church.

Could this be the same Catholic Church whose senior cardinal - the president of the Vatican's Pontifical Council for the Family - claimed recently that the HIV virus was too small to be blocked by condom rubber? A claim repeated by priest, nuns, and archbishops around the world?

Christianity, eh? Where would science be without its benign influence?
worldling is offline  
Old 12-01-2003, 02:25 AM   #12
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Lebanon, OR, USA
Posts: 16,829
Default

"The Age of Reason ventured to doubt whether God really commanded that all males and married women among the Midianites should be slaughtered, while the maidens should be preserved. The Bishop indignantly reported that the maidens were not reserved for immoral purposes, as Paine had wickedly suggested, but as slaves, to which there could be no ethical objection."

Bertrand Russell: The Fate of Thomas Paine, reprinted in Why I Am Not a Christian.

Online in this collection of quotes.

BR had also noted what happened to some bishop (the same one?) who, in responding to Thomas Paine, had conceded that some parts of the first five Bible books had not been written by Moses, and that some of the Psalms had not been written by King David. He got in some sort of serious trouble; I forget exactly what.
lpetrich is offline  
Old 12-01-2003, 04:31 AM   #13
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Self-banned in 2005
Posts: 1,344
Thumbs down *sigh*

Is there a possibility that anyone will read Stark's work and criticise it afterwards?
Hugo Holbling is offline  
Old 12-01-2003, 05:43 AM   #14
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Texas
Posts: 932
Default

A somewhat minor quibble,

Bede challenged someone to point out where South Americans invented the calculus.

As to the calculus, I watched a very interesting Nova broadcast in late October mentioning that Archimedes discovered integral calculus in 220 B.C.E. However, his work on this subject was lost to the ravages of time until the 1800s [I think].
gregor is offline  
Old 12-01-2003, 07:33 AM   #15
Bede
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by gregor
A somewhat minor quibble,

Bede challenged someone to point out where South Americans invented the calculus.

As to the calculus, I watched a very interesting Nova broadcast in late October mentioning that Archimedes discovered integral calculus in 220 B.C.E. However, his work on this subject was lost to the ravages of time until the 1800s [I think].
Of course, Archimedes wasn't a South American! I knew something about this. It comes from a Palimpsest that was recently sold and is now being examined. It tell us something about Greek science that although Archimedes was gropping towards calculus in 250BC (he didn't actually get there), his work was never built on by his fellow Greeks. Compare that to how fast Newton's work was accepted and built on in Christian Europe.

You don't just need an individual genius but also a whole milieu where ideas can take root.

Yours

Bede

Bede's Library - faith and reason
 
Old 12-01-2003, 04:01 PM   #16
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Lebanon, OR, USA
Posts: 16,829
Default

First, I wonder what Adora's South American stuff is.

Archimedes had not really discovered integral calculus; he had come up with a "method of exhaustion" for finding the value of pi. Essentially, one constructs an inscribed and a circumscribed polygon with some number of sides and makes that number go to infinity with the help of trigonometric half-angle formulas. Their circumference/radius and area/radius^2 ratios will then go to 2*pi and pi respectively.

Archimedes's method does have an element of the integral calculus in it, but it was not general enough to be called an almost-invention of it. That was to wait over a millennium.

And Bede seems to think that the only way one could possibly have developed calculus is to have believed in Jesus Christ. But why were Archimedes, Euclid, Pythagoras, etc. able to get anywhere in mathematics even though they had never heard of Jesus Christ?

Applying Bede's and Stark's thesis to mathematics, one can plausibly conclude that one can only do mathematics if one believes in reincarnation and refuses to eat beans, as Pythagoras had done.

As to Rodney Stark's book, I might certainly read it some time, at least when Bede gets around to reading books like Earl Doherty's The Jesus Puzzle and Richard Price's Deconstructing Jesus. I wonder how different it will be from other Xtian-apologetics books, however; how will it be much different from what our good friend Ed says here.

Finally, I think that Bede's style of argumentation is cherry-picking combined with misrepresentation of his selections as the whole package.
lpetrich is offline  
Old 12-01-2003, 04:33 PM   #17
Bede
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by lpetrich

As to Rodney Stark's book, I might certainly read it some time, at least when Bede gets around to reading books like Earl Doherty's The Jesus Puzzle and Richard Price's Deconstructing Jesus. I wonder how different it will be from other Xtian-apologetics books, however; how will it be much different from what our good friend Ed says here.
[/B]
Ipetrich, Stark is a professional academic sociologist and his book is published by Princeton University Press. To accuse him of being an apologist when you haven't read his work is simply childish. Your mind is clearly sealed shut against ideas you don't want to hear.

B
 
Old 12-01-2003, 04:47 PM   #18
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Los Angeles, CA
Posts: 2,635
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by lpetrich
As to Rodney Stark's book, I might certainly read it some time, at least when Bede gets around to reading books like Earl Doherty's The Jesus Puzzle and Richard Price's Deconstructing Jesus. I wonder how different it will be from other Xtian-apologetics books, however; how will it be much different from what our good friend Ed says here.
On what basis do you classify Stark as a writing "Xtian-apolgetics books"? And what makes you think that Stark is a Christian apologist?
Layman is offline  
Old 12-01-2003, 05:07 PM   #19
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Chicago
Posts: 1,396
Default

I haven't read Stark, but I suspect his and Bede's argument goes something like this: Monotheistic religion in general, and Christianity in particular, promoted a worldview in which the "mind of God" was revealed in his creation, Nature. Rather than viewing Nature as discordant - an erratic sequence of compromises between a multitude of irrational, conflicting powers - the greatest thinkers were instead focused on understanding and explicating Nature's divine harmony, all for the glory of God. Yadda yadda yadda.

This all seems plausible, and even probable. However, it doesn't rule out the possibility that the Greeks, who knew a thing or two, might have developed science and technology far sooner, had only their civilization survived. I imagine Stark must deal with the Greeks, and I'd be curious what he has to say.

I think it a stretch to conclude that Christianity was uniquely suited to the development of modern science. But on the other hand, the oft-heard claim that religion is necessarily antagonistic toward science is quite wrong-headed.
Apikorus is offline  
Old 12-01-2003, 05:19 PM   #20
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
Default

Stark does not appear to be an apologist. He has also written The Rise of Christianity which provides an explanation for the spread of Christianity that does not rely on the resurrection or believers willing to die for the faith or the hand of God.

It would also appear that Stark does not think a belief in Jesus is helpful for science so much as monotheism, and Christians were some of the biggest monotheists around.

One of the reviewers says that Stark gained insight into early Christianity through his study of the Moonies. I would like to read this, but so many books, so little time. . .
Toto is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 04:25 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.