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- Organization: University of Illinois at Chicago
- Date: Wednesday, 30 Dec 1992 17:26:24 CST
- From: <U19807@uicvm.uic.edu>
- Message-ID: <92365.172624U19807@uicvm.uic.edu>
- Newsgroups: sci.skeptic,alt.messianic
- Subject: Re: Will the -REAL- Christians please stand up? Was: What did Judas be
- References: <1992Dec24.172824.12799@cbfsb.cb.att.com>
- <1992Dec27.235003.4413@rosevax.rosemount.com>
- <eharbin.725547983@convex.convex.com>
- <1992Dec28.192307.14583@walter.bellcore.com>
- <eharbin.725572840@convex.convex.com>
- Lines: 95
-
- In article <eharbin.725572840@convex.convex.com>, eharbin@convex.com (Edward
- Harbin) says:
- >
- >In <1992Dec28.192307.14583@walter.bellcore.com>
- >kenl@origami.NoSubdomain.NoDomain (Ken Lehner) writes:
- >
- >>In article <eharbin.725547983@convex.convex.com>, eharbin@convex.com (Edward
- >Harbin) writes:
- >>|>
- >>|> On the other hand, in what non-Christian country would you choose to live?
- >
- >>I'd prefer the non-Christian United States, thank you.
- >
- >>|> It was in Christian societies that both modern science and
- >
- >>Have you heard of Arabic numbers? Where exactly did geometry originate?
- >
- >There were of course interesting approaches to the sciences in Arab countries,
- >classical Greece, India, and China. But the critical combination of
- >mathematics and observation that we think of as modern science came to life
- >in the cathedral schools of Paris, Bologna, and Cambridge.
-
- ....utilizing many techniques and theories from non-Christian societies. Is
- there some sort of problem with the realization that scientific thought was
- preserved by non-Christian scholars while Christian religious authorities
- refused to allow their use (and in fact allowed their destruction as "pagan
- artifacts",etc.) during the middle ages?
-
- >>|> liberal democracy evolved. This was not accidental.
- >
- >>Are you saying that it was the Christianity of the society that somehow
- >>enabled the evolution of modern science? Certainly Galileo would have
- >>some concern with this belief. How is it that the Christian aspect(s) of
- >
- >Galileo was deeply Christian and would have no trouble with it at all,
-
- I'm sure Galileo could answer for himself if he could,thank you...
-
- >which is not to say he had no problems with the religious establishment
- >of his day.
-
- The "religious establishment" of his day (i.e.,the Roman Catholic church)
- forced him to recant due to findings on his part which contradicted their
- interpretation of the bible and its interpretation of how the universe
- worked. So much for Christian thought's unwavering support of scientific
- innovation....
-
- >>society contribute to science? Especially things that tend to throw doubt
- >>on religious teaching (e.g., evolution, cosmology, dendrochronology).
- >
- >Most Christians have trouble with none of the above.
-
- Oh,_please_! You've _never_ seen any attacks on evolutionary theory from
- Christians? Just what in the hell was that din about Darwin's theories that
- occurred back in the 19th century about? What about the fundamentalist Chris-
- tian creationtist movement of recent years?
-
- >What Christianity
- >had to contribute was a metaphysics which accepted simultaneously immanence
- >and transcendence: nature was a created good in which truths may be found
- >which reflect a transcendent order. And some other wrinkles. But put the
- >shoe on the other foot, - why _did_ Newton, Copernicus, Galileo, [long
- >list follows] come from a Christian environment, if that environment were
- >not in some way friendly to their development?
-
- It _wasn't_ congenial to Galileo,Mr. Harbin. The primary reason why Newton was
- left alone was because Copernicus' theories had already been accepted for the
- most part. The Anglican church also had less civil prosecutory power (than the
- Catholic church did in the Italian peninsula) even if they disagreed with cer-
- tain Copernican tenets.
-
- (I also vaguely recall that the Catholic church attempted to put the kibosh on
- Copernicus' theories but couldn't due to his remoteness from the Papal States
- and because the Polish crown decided not to fork him over to the Roman branch
- of the Inquisition. Anybody who knows more about this is free to contradict me
- if he/she has better documentation than I do.)
-
- >>|> wherever you find human suffering, Christians are in the forefront with
- >aid
- >>|> aid and comfort. The Christian ethos has much of which to be proud.
- >
- >>So does the Jewish ethos, and the majority of religions. It's the actions
- >
- >I have the highest regard for the cultural and ethical attainments of
- >other religions.
-
- You do?
-
- Where is it evidenced in your postings,then? You seem to go on (and on,and on,
- and on.....) about Christianity and little else.
-
- ** Chris Krolczyk,esq. * DISCLAIMER: My opinions are in **
- ** Agnostic-at-Large * no way endorsed by the Univer- **
- ** U19807@UICVM.BITNET * sity of Illinois at Chicago. **
- ** u19807@uicvm.uic.edu * So much for frivolous lawsuits.**
-