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10-02-2005, 04:02 AM | #41 | |
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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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10-02-2005, 04:51 AM | #42 | |||||
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Sure one millenium is worth a "rarely". Quote:
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10-02-2005, 05:08 AM | #43 | |
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10-02-2005, 05:14 AM | #44 | ||||
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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. Quote:
Journal of the Franklin Institute, Volume 253 Quote:
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Best wishes Bede Bede's Library - faith and reason |
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10-02-2005, 05:26 AM | #45 | |||||
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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. |
10-02-2005, 05:53 AM | #47 | |
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Best wishes Bede |
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10-02-2005, 05:54 AM | #48 | |
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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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10-02-2005, 05:59 AM | #49 |
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Bede
"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. |
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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