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Old 05-20-2006, 12:55 PM   #21
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Originally Posted by Richard Carrier
Aristotelianism was creationist, even when infused with atomist ideas, and therefore did not have the problem I was referring to. That is, assuming Aristotelianism was as successful as pure atomism in providing plausible explanations (no need to debate that now), you then have two systems: one that succeeds in explaining the phenomena with God, the other that succeeds as well in explaining the same phenomena without God. That is why the latter was rejected by Christians, e.g. in Gregory's panegyric of his teacher Origen he describes Origen's curricula as including a survey of natural science except anything written by atheists (i.e. atomists). Similar attacks on atomist science can be found in On the Natural Philosophers by Victorinus, the Institutes of Lactantius, and so on. Of course, there were also attacks on other systems, too, not just those of the atomists. But there is a reason Galen was preserved while Strato and Erasistratus were not: Christians approved of Galen's creationism, and disapproved of the atheism of the atomists Strato and Erasistratus, despite both of them making considerable scientific accomplishments.
Hi Richard

I'm uncertain exactly what you're claiming.

Are you saying a/ that Ancient Christians rejected atomism of all kinds and descriptions or b/ that they only rejected overtly atheist forms of atomism ?

In your earlier posts I got the impression that you were claiming a/ and was dubious though without the detailed knowledge to challenge such a claim.

In this post you seem to be claiming b/ I'm sure claim b/ is correct but it would IIUC have been common ground within very large sections of the ancient world, and not a distinctive Christian position.

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Old 05-20-2006, 04:55 PM   #22
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Hi all. I've been absent from BCH for a while, off in the political forums and elswhere arguing about Islam (those fanatics are really out of control, something needs to be done... but I digress).

Quote:
I would be very grateful if you could point me towards some secondary literature on the early Christian attitudes to atomism. I'm rather beholden to Lindberg's various articles which are much more general than your claims (he has been recycling the same quotes for a decade or more now). If the work on Gregory, Lactantius, Eusebius, Jerome, Augustine etc is your own, is there a draft you'd be willing to let me see?
A site actually devoted to promoting Epicureanism today, here http://www.epicurus.net/ , has the relevant portions of Lactantius

Quote:
CHAPTER 10 -- OF THE ORIGIN OF THE WORLD, AND THE NATURE OF AFFAIRS, AND THE PROVIDENCE OF GOD.

The ancient philosophers argued that all things were made up of four elements. He would not admit this, lest he should appear to tread in the footsteps of others; but he held that there were other first principles of the elements themselves, which can neither be seen, nor touched, nor be perceived by any part of the body. They are so minute, he says, that there is no edge of a sword so flue that they can be cut and divided by it. From which circumstance he gave them the name of atoms. But it occurred to him, that if they all had one and the same nature, they could not make up different objects of so great a variety as we see to be present in the world. He said, therefore, that there were smooth and rough ones, and round, and angular, and hooked. How much better had it been to be silent, than to have a tongue for such miserable and empty uses! And, indeed, I fear lest he who thinks these things worthy of refutation, should appear no less to rave. Let us, however, reply as to one who says something. If they are soft and round, it is plain that they cannot lay hold of one another, so as to make some body; as, though any one should wish to bind together millet into one combination, the very softness of the grains would not permit them to come together into a mass. If they are rough, and angular, and hooked, so that they may be able to cohere, then they are divisible, and capable of being cut; for hooks and angles must project, so that they may possibly be cut off.

Therefore that which is able to be cut off and torn away, will be able both to be seen and held. "These," he says, "flutter about with restless motions through empty space, and are carried hither and thither, just as we see little particles of dust in the sun when it has introduced its rays and light through a window. From these there arise trees and herbs, and all fruits of the earth; from these, animals, and water, and fire, and all things are produced, and are again resolved into the same elements." This can be borne as long as the inquiry is respecting small matters. Even the world itself was made up of these.

He has reached to the full extent of perfect madness: it seems impossible that anything further should be said, and yet he found something to add. "Since everything," he says, "is infinite, and nothing can be empty, it follows of necessity that there are innumerable worlds." What force of atoms had been so great, that masses so incalculable should be collected from such minute elements? And first of all I ask, What is the nature or origin of those seeds? For if all things are from them, whence shall we say that they themselves are? What nature supplied such an abundance of matter for the making of innumerable worlds? But let us grant that he raved with impunity concerning worlds; let us speak respecting this in which we are, and which we see. He says that all things are made from minute bodies which are incapable of division.

If this were so, no object would ever need the seed of its own kind. Birds would be born without eggs, or eggs without bringing forth; likewise the rest of the living creatures without coition: trees and the productions of the earth would not have their own seeds, which we daily handle and sow. Why does a corn-field arise from grain, and again grain from a corn-field? In short, if the meeting together and collecting of atoms would effect all things, all things would grow together in the air, since atoms flutter about through empty space. Why cannot the herb, why cannot the tree or grain, arise or be increased without earth, without roots, without moisture, without seed? From which it is evident that nothing is made up from atoms, since everything has its own peculiar and fixed nature, its own seed, its own law given from the beginning.

Finally, Lucretius, as though forgetful of atoms, which he was maintaining, in order that he might refute those who say that all things are produced from nothing, employed these arguments, which might have weighed against himself.

For he thus spoke:

"If things came from nothing, any kind might be born of anything; nothing would require seed."

Likewise afterwards:

"We must admit, therefore, that nothing can come from nothing, since things require seed before they can severally be born, and be brought out into the buxom fields of air."

Who would imagine that he had brain when he said these things, and did not see that they were contrary to one another? For that nothing is made by means of atoms, is apparent from this, that everything has a definite seed, unless by chance we shall believe that the nature both of fire and water is derived from atoms. Why should I say, that if materials of the greatest hardness are struck together with a violent blow, fire is struck out? Are atoms concealed in the steel, or in the flint? Who shut them in? Or why do they not leap forth spontaneously? Or how could the seeds of fire remain in a material of the greatest coldness?
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Old 05-21-2006, 02:58 AM   #23
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The trouble is that Lucretius was a notorious atheist. Carrier claimed that atomism was rejected because it led to atheism rather than because atheists held it to be true. He claimed: "Atomism in one form or another became fundamental to all ancient science and was only abandoned under Christianity--largely because it was so successful at explaining observations without appealing to the divine, hence it was seen as a temptation to atheism and its advocates were thus suspect."

Besides, Lactantius's objections are perfectly valid and Lucretius's ideas seriously half-baked. As I said, I would be very interested in seeing Carrier's rather strong remarks backed up (although he may well be right, it does need to be demonstrated). To find Christians attacking an atheist is no surprise.

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Old 05-21-2006, 06:53 PM   #24
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Originally Posted by Richard Carrier
That's one of the issues I shall be discussing. The answer depends on how you define science. The history of science community (as represented, for example, by the History of Science Society) has largely sided with the broader definition: a pattern of correct theoretical discoveries regarding the operation of nature is science, regardless of how these discoveries are made or in what intellectual context. The distinction is then made between ancient science and modern science (and within the ancient context, a distinction is made between remarkable and unremarkable scientific progress).
An interesting contrast between the two styles, so different that one might well be called "natural philosophy" and the other "true science" is provided by the work of Aristotle and Archimedes on the principle of the lever. Aristotle (or rather, whichever of his pupils wrote the "Mechanics") used some rather occult properties to account for the principle of the lever, arguing for example that rotational motion was a sort of dialectical contradiction, since the center of rotation was not actualloy in motion. He argued that the fixity of the center of rotation exerted a retarding influence on the motion of other particles, and that the retardation was proportional to the distance of the point from the center. Hence the law of the lever: Force x distance from center is the same for two forces that balance and cause no rotation. His "retarding influence" doesn't add anything to the observation that points father from the center are moving faster. It's a sort of verbal band-aid put over ignorance, as I suggested in another thread, like saying that opium makes people sleep because it has a dormitive virtue.

Contrast that with Archimedes' elegant symmetry assumptions and geometric proofs of the law. Here you see a mathematical model, that amounts to theoretical physics worthy of Newton.
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Old 05-21-2006, 07:05 PM   #25
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Originally Posted by Richard Carrier
All true. This refers to what is commonly called the Jaki thesis. Though he didn't invent it he has long been its leading defender. Others who have advanced versions of it include Rodney Stark, Nancy Pearcey, and Charles Thaxton. They almost always begin from completely false premises or conclusions about the ancient context, and often even rely on false premises or conclusions about the early modern and premodern periods as well.
Jaki is an interesting character. I knew him when I was a graduate student (even, as a good Catholic at the time, confessed to him once or twice). He lost a vocal chord to some illness (I'm not sure what) and once gave a lecture in which he mentioned that during the recovery from this illness, he had sought to learn physics in order to find a watertight proof of the existence of God. He concluded the lecture by saying that he came to realize that physics could not provide what he wanted. He and I had a common scorn for another local, the pseudo-scientist Velikovsky. I thought that he, being a Hungarian, would be interested when Imre Lakatos came to town, but he didn't show up at the lecture. (He later told me he was afraid he might "say something untoward" if he did. I don't think he was serious.)

There is a good case for Medieval Christian roots of modern science. The series by Marshall Clagett on Archimedes in the middle ages shows how much interest there was at Oxford and other universities in recovering the ancient Greek texts. It of course wasn't modern science. They had many assumptions that turned out to be common-sense prejudices. Nevertheless, the general idea of law was important. Science has classical, Islamic, and Christian roots. But most modern science is so far beyond its origins that those roots are essentially irrelevant to modern practice.
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Old 05-22-2006, 01:49 AM   #26
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Originally Posted by EthnAlln
Jaki is an interesting character. I knew him when I was a graduate student (even, as a good Catholic at the time, confessed to him once or twice). He lost a vocal chord to some illness (I'm not sure what) and once gave a lecture in which he mentioned that during the recovery from this illness, he had sought to learn physics in order to find a watertight proof of the existence of God. He concluded the lecture by saying that he came to realize that physics could not provide what he wanted. He and I had a common scorn for another local, the pseudo-scientist Velikovsky. I thought that he, being a Hungarian, would be interested when Imre Lakatos came to town, but he didn't show up at the lecture. (He later told me he was afraid he might "say something untoward" if he did. I don't think he was serious.)

There is a good case for Medieval Christian roots of modern science. The series by Marshall Clagett on Archimedes in the middle ages shows how much interest there was at Oxford and other universities in recovering the ancient Greek texts. It of course wasn't modern science. They had many assumptions that turned out to be common-sense prejudices. Nevertheless, the general idea of law was important. Science has classical, Islamic, and Christian roots. But most modern science is so far beyond its origins that those roots are essentially irrelevant to modern practice.
This is a fat load of nonsense.

There are no roots of science whatsoever from Christianity or Islam.

All that the Christians and Muslims did was inherit texts and knowledge that had been developed by others.

For the most part they destroyed science, and then, only hundreds of years later, some people who were in institutions that held the ancient texts started to re-evalute them.

To claim that "Christianity" contributed to scientific thought is like claiming that Soviet Communism contributed to free market theory.

Were their members of the Communist Party who worked in Soviet institutions who persued the study of free market theory during the 1970s and 1980s?

Yes, absolutely.

To claim that their persuits were "the product of Soviet Communism" is completely absurd however.

Muslims have been attributed with all kinds of scientific advances that are not really theirs because they simply held the knowledge when the Europeans came in contact with it, but it didn't origionate from them or from Islamic thought.

The Muslim world inherited knowledge that was the product of both Indian and Greek materialists, whose works made their way to the Middle East when their cultures were overtaken by religious zealots. In Greece this was the Christians and in India the Hindus.

In all of these cultures, Christian, Hindu, Islamic, they were very much like Soviet Communism, i.e. centralized, uniform dictatorships, where everyone had to be a member of "the party" in order to be allowed to exist or to have any work.

All of the institutions were run under the banner of the dominant organization, i.e. the Catholic Church, the Islamic Caliph, and whoever dominated the Hindus.

Yes, there were individual "heroes", whose work trancended the institutions and thinking of their culture and the religious framework in which they existed, and these people had to navigate the social and political structures to keep themselves out of harms way and allow their work to proceed, but in every case these pioneers, mostly of engineering since it was practical and didn't present obvious theological threats, were working against the tenants of the popular theology, not through it.

In all cases only materialism has produced any kinds of results.

All that one has to do to see how the Christian destroyed science in read the works of the early Chrsitain fathers, its all their plain as day in black and white.

They denounced the concept of atoms outright, they denounced naturalistic explanations for anything, they claimed that all knowledge came from god, and that they ounly source of knowledge that they needed was "Jesus" e.g.:

Quote:
Away with all attempts to produce a mottled Christianity of Stoic, Platonic, and dialectic composition! We want no curious disputation after possessing Christ Jesus, no inquisition after enjoying the gospel! With our faith, we desire no further belief. For this is our palmary faith, that there is nothing which we ought to believe besides.
- Tertullian; THE PRESCRIPTION AGAINST HERETICS
Regardless of how precisely correct various ancients were about the specifics, they were certianly more correct than the Christians about anything, but most importantly they didn't construct mental obsticals to further inquisition and refinement of knowledge.

I have two large sections about this in my paper on evolution:

http://www.rationalrevolution.net/ar...nst_Naturalism

http://www.rationalrevolution.net/ar...stic_Worldview

Then this nonsense mentioned earlier about how its not really "Christianity per se" that hurt science, just Catholic Christianity, because science advanced under Protestantism, is also nonsense.

Science advanced in the Protestant regions because Protestatism broke the back of state control over thought and action, thus the Protestant areas had weaker control over free speech and free inquiry. It wasn't that Protestants were doing the advances, it was that materialists had more freedom in Protestant areas, not because Protestants wanted to give it to them, but because the Protestanst were fractured and politically and instutionally weaker.

And, also, many people who remained Christians in name nevertheless began persuing material explanations for phenomena.

All advance really can be attributed to materialism. Even when religious instutions sponsored advances in science or engineering the advances came through materialism, not prayer, not scripture, not divine revelation.
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Old 05-22-2006, 02:52 AM   #27
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I'm not sure how far I can accept Malachi151's version, because St. Thomas Aquinas and others were willing to do what Tertullian had objected to; Aquinas had produced a "mottled Xianity of Aristotelian composition", to paraphrase Tertullian. But Malachi151 is likely correct about the early Church Fathers; many of them had little interest in science, and pagan philosophy in general.

As Richard Carrier notes in Was Christianity Too Improbable to be False?, section 17. Did the Earliest Christians Encourage Critical Inquiry?, Paul's idea of method is not rational argument or assessment of evidence, but instead receiving revelations from the Holy Spirit. Celsus, an early critic of Xianity, noted that inquiring about Xian doctrines would often lead to "do not question, just believe!" The theologian Origen, our only source on Celsus, quotes that -- and defends that policy!

RC noted that Celsus advocated that one should "follow reason and a rational guide, since he who assents to opinions without following this course is very liable to be deceived." And that there is nothing like that in the Bible.

But I wonder when some Xian apologist is going to construct some "mottled Xianity with metaphysical-naturalist composition" -- or has already done so.

And I'm not sure how much I can accept EthnAlln's dichotomy between "true science" and "natural philosophy", though I agree that Aristotle's understanding of the lever law is much more fumbling than Archimedes's.
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Old 05-22-2006, 03:06 AM   #28
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I explain why Aristotle was nominally accepted by Christians in my article on evolution.

Aristotle was an anti-materialist, teleologist, who refuted Democitian atomism, Epicureanism, and evolution.

Aristotle said that all things in nature are designed by a divine intelligence.

Aristotle and Plato were the last pre-Christian Greek thinkers to be cast out of the Christian paradigm, and the first to be reaccepted back into it during the Renessance.

This was the case because their views were so close to Christianity, and, of course, wrong and inferior to the materialists.
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Old 05-22-2006, 10:59 AM   #29
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Just very briefly and then I'll sign out here:

(1) Since Savior of Science has been cited or quoted to me by laymen several times, but none of those who mention it had ever heard of Lloyd or Sarton, or Lindberg or Ferngren, I conclude more laymen are reading Jaki than the more mainstream or traditional historians of science. Stark, Thaxton, and Percey were all clearly influenced by Jaki, and their books are hitting popular audiences (Stark especially and most widely, Thaxton and Pearcey mainly among Christians interested in apologetics). I accept as a given that hardly anyone reads anything about the history of science, but those who are reading in the field who are not in the field themselves, seem to be reading Jaki or Jaki-influenced authors far more frequently than is warranted. Make of that what you will.

(2) When I said Aristotle was a creationist, I did not mean a proponent of creation-ex-nihilo, but an anti-evolutionist, i.e. God made animals and man, by whatever mechanism (Aristotle I imagine would have been a fan of "guided evolution" today), though certainly he was also in favor of God being the agency behind cosmic order as well, again by whatever mechanism. And most Aristotelians agreed with this even before Christians took up the cause. Exceptions, like Strato, were not preserved and thus proportions might be biased by the medieval selection of texts, but a big sell for preserving Ptolemy and Galen was that they were Aristotelian creationists: Ptolemy believing the solar system was a divinely ordained mechanism; Galen writing his magisterial treatise On the Use of the Parts specifically to prove intelligent design of the human body through detailed anatomical study (and Galen railed viciously against anti-ID anatomists like Erasistratus).

(3) Though my dissertation is not specifically on Christian attitudes towards atomists, it will touch on the most relevant expressions of Christian attitudes towards natural philosophy, up to Eusebius, and I will be publishing my dissertation as a book, so you can all read about that then. For now, any electronic search of the Ante-Nicene Fathers (and the Nicene Fathers, both collections I believe can be found online) for atheist and Epicur will give you a picture of how Christians responded to atomistic natural philosophy. However, I do think we need to distinguish atomisms that were effectively atheistic (Epicurus, Strato, Erasistratus, possibly Hipparchus, Aristarchus, etc.) from atomisms that were effectively creationist (Galen, Ptolemy, etc.), though the latter were rarely if ever purely atomistic (Galen, at least, embraced qualitative theory, and employed atomist principles only so far).

(4) I think it is clear to anyone who reads Christian polemic in antiquity widely enough, that what bothered Christians most about atheists were the principles they used to justify that atheism, and those principles invariably involved atomism ("the elements of this world"). Pure atomism is entirely incompatible with Christian theology, and Christians knew it. Atomism and atheism thus came to be treated as either synonymous or causally inseparable: atomism was seen as inevitably leading to atheism--not the other way around. You never see Christians in antiquity arguing that someone started an atheist and then "reasoned from" their atheism that atomism was true. You do see Christians claiming on occasion that one who wants to be an atheist will seek a system supporting that, and atomism was "the" system such people flocked to, but as an already-existing doctrine, not something they figured out on their own. Thus, atomism was treated much the same way as idolatry (and in some cases the comparison was made explicitly), as an alluring temptation to sin that Christians had to be protected from. Hence Origen specifically did not allow his students even to read atheist natural philosophers--not because they argued "for atheism" (hardly any treatises in antiquity did that), but because they argued for principles (i.e. atomistic principles) that led to atheism. For example, Origen didn't prohibit his students from reading Epicurean treatises on theology. He prohibited them from reading Epicurean treatises full stop.

(5) How Christianity held back science should not need explaining: Christianity practically invented the idea of "heresy" and used it from very early on as a tool of oppression and compulsion to conformity, conditions under which scientific revolutions are impossible, because scientific thinking requires the ability to question and deviate from authority (experimental philosophy by definition requires making observations authoritative, which implicitly refuses the authority of any Church to decide what we will believe). To an extent Christianity borrowed this idea from the Jews (and Stark is right at least about this: all monotheism has this outcome as an inevitable consequence), but the Jews under Greece and Rome had no power to suppress heresies and thus had to live with an open intellectual society, and heresies thrived happily. But then Christians got the power the Jews always wanted, and that was the end for any significant science.

When Christian power was successfully broken a thousand years later and it thus became possible for many "heresies" to exist and defend themselves (the many heresies of Protestantism being the chief example--I know it's not popular to call Lutheranism or Calvinism or Anglicanism "heresy" but by any definition employed up till then, they were--they were just heresies with armies), only then did science have a chance, and not an assured one at that, but at least the soil was watered--it then depended on the flowers not getting stomped. But that simply recreated what had already been the case before Christianity came into power: free and open dissent and debate was the pagan norm and under it science flourished reasonably well, and might even have hit upon the scientific revolution had the social system and economy not collapsed in the 3rd century (which was not Christianity's fault, and I've written on this point several times now), or had Julian's effort to create an open society in the late 4th century not failed (which was Christianity's fault, though perhaps not consciously so). In the end, social and political conditions forced Christianity to tolerate science and thus allow the scientific revolution to happen (though not without attempts to stomp a few flowers), but Christianity as such was never a cheerleader. Individual Christians, of course, were cheerleaders (since it was effectively illegal for anyone not to be a "Christian") and these cheerleaders certainly (out of obvious necessity) mined Christian ideology and rhetoric for "safe" and socially and politically persuasive ways to cheer, but that is not the same thing as Christianity being conducive to science. It was more like trying to make a square peg fit a round hole. That several very clever men succeeded at forcing the fit doesn't warrant praising the round hole for being so accommodating.
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Old 05-22-2006, 06:01 PM   #30
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Hence Origen specifically did not allow his students even to read atheist natural philosophers--not because they argued "for atheism" (hardly any treatises in antiquity did that), but because they argued for principles (i.e. atomistic principles) that led to atheism. For example, Origen didn't prohibit his students from reading Epicurean treatises on theology. He prohibited them from reading Epicurean treatises full stop.
Do you have a reference for this?

Thanks
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