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Old 10-02-2005, 04:02 AM   #41
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bede
I know of no medical advances that the Church tried to stop (it is false that it tried to prevent human dissection
Can you post a link?

As for the Ben Franklin story being a myth, do you have a reference?

All this revisionism and no references...

As it's been said, nobody's claiming that the Church opposed every scientific advance, but it certainly opposed some.
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Old 10-02-2005, 04:51 AM   #42
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Originally Posted by Bede
You are a victim of popular culture in that most people do believe all the rubbish that White came up with. But, you have no more excuse for sticking to nineteenth century works of history than to nineteenth century works of science. Nor should you use the internet as an authority when you lack the skills to tell the wheat from the chaff.
Insulting. Because you are short of an argument.
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The Church has rarely attempted to hinder science and its positive effect has been much greater.
:rolling: :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: This is not the humour forum, or am I mistaken
Sure one millenium is worth a "rarely".
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I know of no medical advances that the Church tried to stop
Lack of knowledge is not an argument.
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(it is false that it tried to prevent human dissection and the argument
So you do not know Vésale and what he wrote, and what happened to him...
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Nice try, though.
Autogoal, yes.
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Old 10-02-2005, 05:08 AM   #43
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"..his work as an anatomist is far more significant than his work as an engineer, or inventor, or architect. He mapped and documented the human body more rigourously and specifically than had been done before; his anatomical drawingsconstituted a new visual language...There is a certain dogged courage in these investigations which were beset by taboos and doctrinal doubts......At least once Leonardo's activities brought him into confrontation with the Church: in Rome in 1515 an ill wisher 'hindered me in anatomy, denouncing it before the Pope and also at the hospital."
From Nicholl Da Vinci p240 -
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Old 10-02-2005, 05:14 AM   #44
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rob117
Can you post a link?
Park K ‘The Criminal and Saintly Body - Autopsy and Dissection in Renaissance Italy’ Renaissance Quarterly 47:1 (1994)
Grant, E 'God and Reason' (Cambridge, 2001) p. 112

The Leonardo quote above shows us that amateurs were not allowed to source corpses from the black market and dissect tham at home. Dissections had to take place only in licensed Medical schools and universities. In fact, Leonardo was allowed to get away with it. Today he'd be locked up PDQ.

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As for the Ben Franklin story being a myth, do you have a reference?
Cohen IB, 'Prejudice against the introduction of lightning rods'
Journal of the Franklin Institute, Volume 253

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All this revisionism and no references...
I gave two to my own articles above. There is a lot more at my site.

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As it's been said, nobody's claiming that the Church opposed every scientific advance, but it certainly opposed some.
I see a line of retreat being prepared here... Certainly, the church did oppose some science (although Mr Lawyer did use the word all) but it encouraged a great deal more. On top of that, most of the examples of opposition that people think they know are myths. Thus the case looks completely different to what the OP and the site he linked to believe.

Best wishes

Bede

Bede's Library - faith and reason
 
Old 10-02-2005, 05:26 AM   #45
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Philadelphia Lawyer
Christianity opposed every advance in science that threatened any of its dogmas.
Bede has covered this already.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Philadelphia Lawyer
Geology because it refuted the Genesis stories of the creation of the Earth and the Flood; medicine because it undermined belief that diseases were caused by evil spirits or sin or God (the Church opposed dissection of cadavers, vaccinations, the use of pain killers, even surgery); philology because it undermined the ridiculous "Tower of Babel" story and also the notion that Adam had "named" all the animals; meteorology because it undermined the belief that God or evil spirits were responsible for the weather. Much the same could be said for anthropology, history, geography, and so on. If you want quotes, see here and here.
I looked, but couldn't find any quotes from officials within the Church declaring that studies of A or B were banned because it clashed with Christian doctrine. How do you know that the Church opposed those things?

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Originally Posted by Philadelphia Lawyer
Basically, the story is the same for every advance in science. (It goes on to this day with evolution.)
Some Christians, yes, but that can hardly translate to "the Church opposes every advance in science".
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Originally Posted by Philadelphia Lawyer
Christianity first opposes the advance because it refutes some tenet of Christian belief. It calls the scientists blasphemers and so on. Then, when the scientific advance becomes inarguable, the Christians try to find compromise positions that grudgingly accept what science has to say while still paying lip service to the traditional Christian view.
Again, some Christians, yes. But even for evolution, some Christians never had a problem once it became accepted. Do you know of where the Church officially opposed the advance of science, except for Galileo?

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Originally Posted by Philadelphia Lawyer
When the compromise position itself becomes untenable, the Christians admit that the scientists were right, but then try to rewrite history to show that they never opposed the scientific view, that the "Scriptures" are not in conflict with that view, that they, the Christians, have always nurtured science, that no "true Christian" is, should be, or ever was opposed to the scientific view, and that what had been the traditional Christian belief was in fact only a holdover from paganism!

For a great example of this last point, see here. All that bell ringing, incense burning, and praying to prevent storms and lightning was never really part of "true Christianity" at all, don't ya' know!
So, how did Christianity stop the development of lightning rods? There doesn't seem to be anything more than that some Christians opposed the rods. But then, other Christians accepted them.
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Old 10-02-2005, 05:42 AM   #46
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Cutler's biography of Steno describes a brilliant person in the mid seventeenth century in the classic mold of the renaissance man.

Steno forced the change from a static to a dynamic evolutionary view of the world. he lived a generation after Galileo and was well aware of the power of the Church.

"His seventy eight page masterpiece De Solido was originally intended as an abstract of a much longer dissertation. But that work never materialised. De Solido was his last published geological work. A few years later he entered the priesthood and gave up scientific research altogether. While in Italy he had made a controversial switch from Lutheranism to Catholicism."

Steno is an example of the Church killing scientific progress by giving Steno a then insoluble psychological problem - is my brain right or the Church right? He took the way out that was common them and hid the issues that Darwin faced up to later.
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Old 10-02-2005, 05:53 AM   #47
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Originally Posted by Clivedurdle
Steno is an example of the Church killing scientific progress by giving Steno a then insoluble psychological problem - is my brain right or the Church right? He took the way out that was common them and hid the issues that Darwin faced up to later.
Rubbish Clive. Steno is a great example of a devout man doing great science. The popular book tries to dress up a conflict where none existed. He jointed the priesthood not to escape but because he realised it was his true vocation. Worse, for the conflict hypothesis, it shows how most of the founders of modern science, were not just averagely religious for their time, but especially devout. Witness, Keplar, Newton, Steno, Descartes, Pascal Boyle right up to Priestley and Faraday. Mersenne and Gassendi were both Catholic priests. What is impressive is how Christianity is what unites these men and almost nothing else.

Best wishes

Bede
 
Old 10-02-2005, 05:54 AM   #48
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Originally Posted by Bede
Today he'd be locked up PDQ.
Complete silly comparison. Currently students can have all material they need, in books and otherwise. In the time of Vésale it was far from it. Authorisations were scarce in some cases one corpse for one year, even for reknowned anatomists. And those authorisations were granted despite the church.
Well, anatomy was proving then that men and women have the same number of ribs... disproving the Bible as it was understood... :rolling:
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Old 10-02-2005, 05:59 AM   #49
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"Originally Posted by Bede
Hi Trexmaster,

I think you are probably wrong about this. Many historians today realise that the Church was a major sponsor of science and that Christianity might well have been an important factor in the rise of modern science."

It is easy for the Christian Church to claim they sponsored science;-this was after all opposition to the Church had been eliminated on pain of torture and the stake. As a consequence, all men of any culture and learning were Christian, and having become rich and leisured as a result of the general rapaciousness of their Church as it "encouraged" the poor to give to the Church, it was then able to pursue scientific interests,--but only as far as it supported God and Church;--inconvenient findings were suppressed, and still are,--hence the continued row over Evolution. There was science and learning before the Church ever existed.
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Old 10-02-2005, 06:00 AM   #50
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And our xians here are still keeping silent about the millenium gap between the rise of xianity and Renaissance. Renaissance despite xianity...

Only to give a look at the EC forum to understand how xians are sticking to revealed truths...
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