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Old 09-17-2007, 09:13 PM   #311
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You forgot the mystics. See The Flowering of Mysticism: The Friends of God in the Fourteenth Century, by Rufus Matthew Jones.
I may have forgotten more than that! Meanwhile, why don't you expand a bit on mysticism [which has actually always interested me]?
NEW ADDITION to the brighter Middle Ages:

-- Traders/Explorers (of Asia), who brought much geographical and anthropological information to the Europeans:

> Giovanni da Pian del Carpini (1180-1252), one of the first Europeans to enter the court of the Great Kahn of the Mongol Empire. He wrote books on Central Asia, Rus, and other regions of the Tartar dominion.

> Marco Polo (1254-1324) and his father and his uncle traveled the "silk road" to China (Cathay).
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Old 09-18-2007, 04:45 AM   #312
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How Dark? How about a terrible torture and a welcome death for the victim, for daring to criticize scripture, or authority, which of course happened to be the church. Suppressed scientific discoveries, witch hunts, especially if the accused had assets. Check out a book by Daniel P. Mannix ''The History Of Torture (or via: amazon.co.uk)'' [ 1964, 2003 ]
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Old 09-18-2007, 05:52 AM   #313
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In the "dark ages" in england, people created beautiful jewlery, there were many different languages use across the country, the "vandals" invaded, laying waste to large areas, but equally so bringing another language which has been incoporated into modern english.. and new music, and art, and methods of construction and boatmaking...
There were more than twenty kings, all holding royal court, eating the finest foods, drinking the finest wines.. even peasants drank mead (honey brewed ale.. its quite lovely)..
There were many different religions, ranging from nordic and germanic paganism, to the varied beliefs of the druids and heathens...
Ogham script was still in used, as were other versions of the written language, examples still exist today.
Most of the wild forests still existed, wales was a thickly forested wild land, scotland and england were covered in lush green growth, we still had wild boar and huge herds of deer. Tales of the huge stags and exciting hunts survive even now.. people believed in fairies and dragons, and other mythic creatures, Exciting spices and fabrics were arriving from other countries..
Dark? No way!
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Old 09-18-2007, 06:49 AM   #314
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On a side note, I have to post a correction: I earlier stated that in the middle ages builders did not use scaled drawings. Yesterday I bought a book which contains a (photograph of a) beautiful scaled drawing on parchment of the facade of Strasbourg Cathedral (with 2 towers, as it was meant) Now, this was built in the late Gothic period (15th century) so my argument about the extinction of the educated professional classes during the Dark Ages is not necessarily dispelled, but the specific claim I made was not entirely true.
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Old 09-18-2007, 02:04 PM   #315
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How Dark? How about a terrible torture and a welcome death for the victim, for daring to criticize scripture, or authority
Things that were quite common well into the Modern Era.

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which of course happened to be the church.
Churches (plural). This was the case well into the Modern Era, and the Catholic Church had no monopoly on all this.

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Suppressed scientific discoveries,
Name one. We're talking about the Dark Ages here (500-100 AD) Name one. Or name one for the Middle Ages generally (500-1500 AD)

And you are the same Angelo Atheist who claimed the Church taught the Earth was flat and then ran away when the thread on that subject showed you were totally wrong, aren't you? Are you going to try to actually present some evidence to support that claim or are you going to run away again?

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witch hunts, especially if the accused had assets.
The witch hunts were largely a post-Medieval phenomenon and largely a Protestant obsession.
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Old 09-18-2007, 03:53 PM   #316
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I may have forgotten more than that! Meanwhile, why don't you expand a bit on mysticism [which has actually always interested me]?
NEW ADDITION to the brighter Middle Ages:

-- Traders/Explorers (of Asia), who brought much geographical and anthropological information to the Europeans:

> Giovanni da Pian del Carpini (1180-1252), one of the first Europeans to enter the court of the Great Kahn of the Mongol Empire. He wrote books on Central Asia, Rus, and other regions of the Tartar dominion.

> Marco Polo (1254-1324) and his father and his uncle traveled the "silk road" to China (Cathay).
From the 12th century on, geographical explorations were associated with commerce. But as noted before, the advent of the translated classics, especially Aristotle's natural philosophy and works by mathematicians and astonomers, awakened a layer of Europe [primarily some people in Italy, France, England] literally from its "dogmatic slumbers." [This is the term Kant used when Hume awakened him.]

I mentioned three new mathematicians in post # 303; now I'll mention some "theoreticians" [of nature] -- which brings to mind Vico's Greek terms "theremata and mathemata" in conjunction with the ancient transition from the Age of the diviners to the Humanistc Age. (This is also mentioned in Robert Pogue Harrison's book, "Forests -- the Shadow of Civilization," 1992.// Vico wrote "The New Science" in the 18th century.)

Aristotelian theories of nature had been utilized by theologians, but now that the original works of Aristotle became available in Latin, the theologians found that Aristotle was not all "speculations;" he was a curious observer on nature (especially living things) and formulated some arguments about nature on the basis of empirical observations. So, a spirit of empiricism arose in theologians and other learned men. But I must add immediately that current writers (in Wikipedia and journals) still do not know the difference between empiricism and science and, therefore, infer that there was an awakening and pursuit of science in various theologians. Some people do not know either the difference between empirical mathematics and demonstrative mathematics, and make ludicrus historical inferences.) Indeed, some theologians in England and France and Italy conducted some naturalistic/empirical research, but they are not to be called scientists. (Beginning in the 17th century, the basic Aristotelian theories about nature were directly or indirectly overturned by the scientists: Galileo, Newton, Darwin, and some less renoun scientists.)

Theologians to search out: Grosseteste, Oresme, Roger Bacon, Duns Scotus [the Irishman], William of Ockkam, and others. (The high-level theology of the schools came practically to an end after them, since they advocated, and even practiced, the independence of theology and of natural philosophy -- in the empirical Aristotelian vein. They also understood the "logical necessities" of Greek mathematics a prescibed a mathematical basis for philosophy.)

The new naturalists, as we should call them, were associated, not with commerce, but with technology, of which they were inventors. Two examples in the aftermath of the revival of natural philosophy and of mathematics in Europe:

Quote:
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Giovanni Campano)

Johannes Campanus (in Italian, Giovanni Campano; also known as Campanus of Novara or similar) (1220-1296) was an Italian astrologer, astronomer, and mathematician who devised a house system for the horoscope which bears his name. This house system divides the prime vertical into equal 30° arcs, or houses.

Born in Novara, he served as chaplain to Pope Urban IV and personal physician to Pope Boniface VIII. He travelled to Arabia and Spain.

In 1260, Campanus published a Latin edition of Euclid's Elementa geometriae, in fifteen books. The work was based on an Arabic translation of the original Greek text. .......

In the field of astronomy, he wrote a Theorica Planetarum in which he geometrically described the motions of the planets as well as their longitude. He also included instructions on building a planetarium as well as its geometrical description. This was the first description of a planetarium by a European. Campanus also attempted to determine the time of each planet's retrograde motion. ..........................

Campanus also wrote Tractatus de Sphaera, De computo ecclesiastico and Calendarium.

........................
And

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from De'Dondi)

Jacopo and Giovanni de'Dondi (father and son) were scholars active in 14th century Padua, Italy, and are remembered today as being pioneers in the art of clock design and construction. The Astrarium, designed and built by Giovanni de'Dondi over a period of 16 years, was a highly complex astronomical clock and planetarium, constructed only 60 or so years after the very first mechanical clocks had been built in Europe, and demonstrated an ambitious attempt to describe and model the solar system with mathematical precision and technological sophistication.

Giovanni de'Dondi's Astrarium. Tracing of an illustration origionally from his 1364 clock treatise, Il Tractatus Astarii. It doesn't show the complex upper section with its many wheels, but just the weights, escapement, and main gear train.
Giovanni de'Dondi's Astrarium. Tracing of an illustration origionally from his 1364 clock treatise, Il Tractatus Astarii. It doesn't show the complex upper section with its many wheels, but just the weights, escapement, and main gear train.

....................................

Giovanni de'Dondi lived with his father from 1348 to 1359, and shared his father's interest in astronomy and clockmaking. In 1348 he began working on what he called his astrarium or planetarium. He described in detail the design and construction of this project, which was to occupy him until 1364. His manuscripts provided enough material for modern clockmakers to build reconstructions. In 1371 he served as ambassador to Venice, but after the conflict between Padua and Venice in 1372, joined the University of Pavia, and served as diplomat and scholar until his death in Milan in 1389.................
Gutenberg of Germany invented the movable-type press around the middle of the 15th centure and published Bibles. Then came the Aldine Press that specialized in the printing of the classics, making them available far and wide:

Quote:
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Aldine Press was the printing office started by Aldus Manutius in 1494 in Venice, from which were issued the celebrated Aldine editions of the classics of that time. The Aldine Press is famous in the history of typography, among other things, for the introduction of italics. The press was the first to issue printed books in the small octavo size, similar to that of a modern paperback, and like that intended for portability and ease of reading. ..........................

Initial Innovations

The press was started by Aldus based on his love of classics, and at first printed new copies of Plato, Aristotle, and other Greek and Latin classics. He also printed dictionaries and grammars to help people interpret the books. Since most bibliophiles and book collectors come from academic and classical backgrounds, his first editions are collectors items. His contributions are also respected in the development of a smaller type than others in use. His contemporaries called it Aldine Type; today we call it italics.***

The goal of the press was to create plentiful, affordable books so that everyone could have access to literature. When the press expanded to current titles, they wrote some books themselves and employed other writers, including Erasmus. As this expansion into current languages (mainly Italian and French) and current topics continued, the press took on another role and made perhaps even more important contributions. ..............
___________
***As a script (hanwritten), italics [corsivo, in Italian] was developed much earlier by the 14th century Florentine humanist, Salutati, who was a secretary to the pope, and is therefore called also the chancery script. The letters are curvacious, slanted, and connected, so as to make writing clearer and faster. (The earlier Medieval or Monastic script, one of which is called Gothic, has verticle, disconnected, and generally angular letters (caused by the quill-writing).
Even in the handwriting there is a difference between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance.
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Old 09-18-2007, 08:27 PM   #317
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[plesase mispellings in# 316: ---> renown / vertical / etc.]

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How Dark? How about a terrible torture and a welcome death for the victim, for daring to criticize scripture, or authority, which of course happened to be the church. Suppressed scientific discoveries, witch hunts, especially if the accused had assets. Check out a book by Daniel P. Mannix ''The History Of Torture (or via: amazon.co.uk)'' [ 1964, 2003 ]
Angelo, I have not read the book you cite, nor am I going to document the history of torture and suppressions that I am sure you read about, but I'll make couple of references of my own, anyway.

Back to the Dark Ages:

http://www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cathars

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Catharism was a name given to a religious sect with gnostic elements that appeared in the Languedoc region of France in the 11th Century and flourished in the 12th and 13th Centuries. Catharism had its roots in the Paulician movement in Armenia and was also influenced by the Bogomiles with whom the Paulicians eventually merged. They also became influenced by dualist and perhaps Manichaean beliefs.

Like many medieval movements, there were various schools of thought and practice amongst the Cathari; some were dualistic, others gnostic, some closer to orthodoxy while abstaining from an acceptance of Roman Catholic doctrines. The dualist theology was the most prominent, however, and held that the physical world was evil and created by Satan, who was taken to be identical with the God of the Old Testament; and that men underwent a series of reincarnations before reaching the pure realm of spirit, the presence of the God of Love described in the New Testament and his messenger Jesus.

The Roman Catholic Church regarded the sect as heretical; faced with the rapid spread of the movement across the Languedoc and the failure of peaceful attempts at conversion, the Church launched the Albigensian Crusade to crush the movement.
.......................................
----------------------
http://www.mystae.com/restricted/str...is/legend.html

Quote:
HIGH ON A SACRED MOUNTAIN in Southern France, the whitened ruins of Montségur are a reminder of the last actively visible gnostic scholl in the West, the Cathari.
Below Montségur lies a peaceful meadow, its name, "Field of the Burned", the only indication of a grim event that took place there a little over 700 years ago. In March, 1244, 205 Cathars were burned alive...................................
______________________________

Roger Bacon
http://www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_Bacon

Quote:
.......... As a Franciscan Friar, Bacon no longer held a teaching post and after 1260, his activities were further restricted by a Franciscan statute forbidding Friars from publishing books or pamphlets without specific approval.[2]

Bacon circumvented this restriction through his acquaintance with Cardinal Guy le Gros de Foulques, who became Pope Clement IV in 1265. The new Pope issued a mandate ordering Bacon to write him concerning the place of philosophy within theology. As a result Bacon sent the Pope his Opus Majus, which presented his views on how the philosophy of Aristotle and the new science could be incorporated into a new Theology. Besides the Opus maius Bacon also sent his Opus minus, De multiplicatione specierum, and, perhaps, other works on alchemy and astrology.[3]

Pope Clement died in 1268, and sometime between 1277 and 1279, Bacon was placed under house arrest by Jerome of Ascoli, the Minister-General of the Franciscan Order. Bacon's difficulties are probably related to the Condemnations of 1277, which banned the teaching of certain philosophical doctrines, including deterministic astrology.
........
______________________________
Witches and the rest....
http://www.atheism.about.com/library...an_witches.htm

Quote:
................
1231 Conrad of Marburg was appointed as the first Inquisitor of Germany, setting a pattern of persecution. In his reign of terror, he claimed to have uncovered many nests of "Devil worshippers" and adopted the motto of:

We would gladly burn a hundred if just one of them was guilty.

1233 Pope Gregory IX proclaimed Conrad of Marburg a champion of Christendom and promoted his findings in the Papal Bull Vox in Rama.
1258 Pope Alexander IV declared that Inquisitors should not concern themselves with divination, but only those which "manifestly savored of heresy."
1280 First appearance of images of a witch riding a broom.
1320 Pope John XXII authorized the Inquisition to began persecuting sorcery and witchcraft.
1324 - 1325 Lady Alice Kyteler, her son and associates in Kilkenny, Ireland, were tried for witchcraft. For the first time, stories of mating with demons were linked with stories of pacts with Satan. Lady Alice escaped to England, but others were burned.
1398 The theology faculty at the University of Paris declared that all forms of magic or divination involved some sort of pact with the devil and were thus heresy, justifying the persecution of every possible sort of witchcraft.
..........................
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Old 09-18-2007, 09:16 PM   #318
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How was the persecution of a alternative religion that threatened the status quo unique to the "dark ages"/Middle Ages? Why did the Puritans leave England? Was that in the Middle Ages? Why are the religious persecutions of the Middle Ages held up as examples of barbarism but not the religious persecutions of the Romans?


Bacon's political troubles had more to do with his leaning towards the "spiritual" faction of the Franciscans. They were not an example of any suppression of science.

There was a change in the theology of the later Middle Ages that began to associate some forms of magic with diabolism and therefore make its practice heretical. This was the beginning of what was to become the "Witch Craze" of later centuries. But the "Craze" itself was mainly post-Medieval (Sixteenth to Eighteenth Centuries) and was mostly a phenomenon in Protestant countries.

In other words, a phenomenon of the supposedly wonderous and enlightened "Renaissance" Amedeo.

PS All this posting and still none of the evidence I keep asking you for. Why is that Amedeo. Stop being such a child - just admit that you can't provide that evidence because you were wrong. It won't hurt you to admit the truth and it might restore a tiny bit of your credibility.
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Old 09-19-2007, 04:46 AM   #319
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[QUOTE=Antipope Innocent II;4792967]
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Originally Posted by angelo atheist View Post
How Dark? How about a terrible torture and a welcome death for the victim, for daring to criticize scripture, or authority
Things that were quite common well into the Modern Era.



Churches (plural). This was the case well into the Modern Era, and the Catholic Church had no monopoly on all this.



Quote:
Name one. We're talking about the Dark Ages here (500-100 AD) Name one. Or name one for the Middle Ages generally (500-1500 AD)
Galileo comes to mind. Remember him? The discovery of germs causing illness and death was not accepted by the churches either. [it was the will of god]. And I repeat, there is a religious organization in existence [still] that shuns science and believes the bible as the literal word of god; therefore the world is flat. I no longer have the reference book, so can not give any more info.

But I will try to find the information.
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Old 09-19-2007, 04:49 AM   #320
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[QUOTE=angelo atheist;4794673]
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Originally Posted by Antipope Innocent II View Post

Name one. We're talking about the Dark Ages here (500-100 AD) Name one. Or name one for the Middle Ages generally (500-1500 AD)


Galileo comes to mind. Remember him?
I remember that he was born in 1564 and so is totally irrelevant to the Middle Ages. Here's those dates again - 500-1500 AD.


Quote:
The discovery of germs causing illness and death was not accepted by the churches either.
The discovery of germs was centuries after the Middle Ages. I asked for examples from 500-1500 AD. Try again.

And next time try to pay more attention to the point you're meant to be addressing.
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