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- From: jfb@draco.macsch.com (John Baskette)
- Newsgroups: sci.skeptic
- Subject: Re: Where has Galileo been all these years?
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.202537.3955@draco.macsch.com>
- Date: 16 Nov 92 20:25:37 GMT
- Sender: jfb@draco.macsch.com (John Baskette)
- Organization: MacNeal-Schwendler Corp.
- Lines: 169
-
-
- The following was posted to soc.religion.christian:
-
- In article <Nov.15.18.21.44.1992.23293@geneva.rutgers.edu> spk@uk.ac.aber (Stephen Kingston) writes:
- >clh writes:
- >> However there's been enough ill-informed discussion in other groups
- >> about this topic, that it's probably worth having someone who knows
- >> the background giving us an explanation of the real history behind the
- >> original judgement against Galileo, and possibly some explanation of
- >> why the Church decided to act now. I'm not going to be willing to
- >> accept comments based on erroneous assumptions. --clh]
- >
- >The following article was posted to the group bit.listserv.christia
- >by James Kiefer maybe two or three years ago:
- >
- >---
- >
- Since the subject of Galileo has come up, I should like to try to
- clear up some misunderstandings.
-
- My chief reference here is THE CRIME OF GALILEO, by Giorgio
- Santillana, Professor of the History of Science at the Massachusetts
- Institute of Technology, available in paperback from Midway Reprint
- Service, University of Chicago Press, for 14 dollars. Since I have lost my
- own copy in the usual way (lent it to someone who did not return
- it), I write from memory.
-
- In Galileo's day, almost every government required a permit to
- print a book, and the Papal States (central Italy, ruled directly by
- the Pope as temporal sovereign) were no exception. When Galileo
- finished his book, A DIALOGUE CONCERNING THE TWO GREAT WORLD SYSTEMS
- (meaning the earth-centered system of Ptolemy and the sun-centered
- system of Copernicus) he applied directly to Pope Urban VIII, with
- whom he was personally acquainted, for the necessary permit. The
- Pope granted the permission, on condition that the book give a
- balanced presentation, and in particular that it contain his own
- favorite argument against Copernicus, one that he had invented
- himself and was particularly proud of. Galileo agreed and got the
- permit. When the book came out, the Pope was chagrined to find that
- his argument was indeed presented, but not as he had expected. The
- book was written in the form of a conversation among friends, and
- the Pope's argument had been put into the mouth of a character
- called Simplicio (=the idiot). Moreover, the other speakers then
- covered the argument with ridicule.
-
- The Pope responded (or so it appears) by giving the Inquisition
- orders to get Galileo for something or other. He was accordingly
- brought up on charges, but could properly plead that he had sought
- and obtained a permit for the book. The prosecution replied that
- about sixteen years earlier he had received a private admonition
- from Cardinal Bellarmine that his views were of questionable
- orthodoxy, and that if the Pope had known of this, he would have
- been more cautious about giving the permit, and therefore Galileo's
- failure to mention the Cardinal's admonition amounted to obtaining a
- permit by fraud, which invalidated the permit, etc. Galileo said
- that he could not remember receiving any such admonition, but under
- pressure admitted that he could not swear he had not.
-
- The upshot was that Galileo signed his famous "recantation" and was
- condemned to life imprisonment. This was a blatant injustice, but
- not as harsh as it sounds. The prison was one of the Pope's summer
- palaces, which was turned over to him for life, and he continued to
- conduct experiments, to receive visitors without restriction, and to
- publish on any subject except astronomy. He here developed and
- perfected his works on terrestial physics, works which undermined
- the theoretical basis of Ptolemaic astronomy.
-
- The wording of the "recantation" is of some interest. The key
- sentence reads pretty much as follows:
-
- I, the undersigned, Galileo Galilei, renounce and condemn the
- belief that the sun is at the center of the world, and that the
- earth rotates on its axis, and also has a daily motion.
-
- Now the word "world" (=mundus) is ambiguous. It can refer to the
- universe, or to the earth. Similarly, the daily motion of the
- earth, according to Copernicus, is precisely its rotation once a day
- on its axis. It is therefore false (according to Copernicus) to say
- that the earth has two motions, one rotation and the other a daily
- motion. It is also false to say that the sun is at the center of
- the earth. Thus Galileo should have had no difficulty about signing
- the document.
-
- Is there any evidence that this is not just ingenious twisting of
- words? Four considerations come to mind.
- (1) Torricelli, Galileo's friend and pupil, best known as the
- inventor of the barometer, when he heard that Galileo had repudiated
- Copernicanism under oath, said, "Alas, he is damned. He has sworn
- falsely." But when he saw the text of the recantation, he said, "Oh
- joy, he is not damned."
- (2) When the tribunal presented Galileo with their draft of a
- recantation, he flatly refused to sign it. He then negotiated a
- revised text, which he did sign.
- (3) Both Galileo and the members of the tribunal were men who
- chose their words carefully, and who knew the art, essential in
- politics whether ecclesiastical or otherwise, of wording a document
- to as to convey the impression of saying more, or less, than is
- actually said.
- (4) At least some of the tribunal members (Santillana argues a
- majority of them) were themselves of the Copernican persuasion, and
- would be sympathetic to a resolution of the matter that gave the
- Pope his personal revenge but without forcing Galileo to repudiate
- what he and they believed to be the truth.
-
- The Galileo episode has often been cited as evidence that Science
- and Religion (some prefer to say, Science and Theology) are by their
- very nature irreconcilable enemies. In fact, a close look at the
- Galileo episode seems to me to yield two morals both quite different
- from this.
-
- One moral, of course, is that if you need a permit from a board in
- order to do something, whether publish a book or have your property
- rezoned, it is unwise to pull the nose of the chairman of the board
- in public.
-
- Another moral is that if you establish a government committee to
- safeguard public morals, the committee members will assume as
- self-evident that nothing could be more subversive of public morals,
- and therefore of the very foundations of society, than a deed that
- strikes at the guardians of morality by making the members of said
- committee look personally ridiculous.
- Example: The Watergate scandal began because the press was
- obtaining confidential reports out of the Nixon Administration, and
- high officials were determined to learn who was responsible. In the
- process of trying to learn, they cut corners. One might have
- expected the investigating committee to be keenly aware that there
- are things more important than stopping leaks to the press.
- However, some stories appeared in the press about the committee,
- including, for example, a statement by one committee member that
- another member was apparently incapable of answering any question,
- including, "What time is it?" without first frowning and staring at
- the ceiling for several seconds. (A perfectly correct observation,
- by the way, which is precisely why it caused such a commotion.) The
- committee responded by taking off a full week from the job of saving
- the country to conduct a full-time investigation into the question
- of who had been betraying his sacred trust by reporting confidential
- information to the press, information that, by making the committee,
- the guardians of the Constitution, look silly, amounted to an attack
- on the Constitution itself. (My source here is an article in the
- WASHINGTON MONTHLY at the time.)
-
- The over-all theological atmosphere of Galileo's time and just
- before was far from a rigid commitment to the idea of a fixed earth.
- Nicolas of Cusa, who died a century before Galileo was born, wrote,
- "When we say that the earth does not move, we mean simply this, that
- the earth is the point from which man makes his observations of
- celestial phenomena." A modern physicist discussing relativity
- theory could not improve on that. During Galileo's lifetime, the
- Inquisition was officially asked whether someone who revealed in the
- confessional that he held the Copernican view and was not about to
- give it up should be denied absolution as an impenitent heretic.
- The official answer was "no". I conclude that the punishment of
- Galileo was based, not on any conflict between his view and Church
- doctrine, but on the Pope's regrettable but unsurprising conviction
- that anyone who publicly makes a laughing-stock of the Pope is
- striking at the foundations of all that is good and decent and must
- not be permitted to get away with it. Urban VIII is by no means the
- only public figure to reason like this. I feel the urge to give
- several more examples, but this post is already too long.
-
-
- James Kiefer
-
- ---
- >
- >Stephen
- >
-
- John
-