A Short History of Science and
Religion
~ by Ernie Stokely 9-25-2007
The Decline - The "Dark" and
Middle Ages
The Invasion -
The Germanic tribes from northern and eastern Europe began to overrun
the Roman Empire in around 400-500 CE. This started a decline in learning
as people fled the cities and abandoned many of the developments of society
that were in evidence during the height of the Roman Empire.
The Attempt to Preserve Learning -
Between roughly 400 -1400 CE we have what are called the Middle Ages.
During this time learning was kept alive in the Christian monasteries
(abbots, priories, hermitages, etc.), but only the science that was written
in Latin was preserved. Again, there were few that could read or write
Greek.
Universities began to appear across Europe
and Great Britain during this time (in Oxford, Bologna, Paris, e.g.).
The Great Islamic Handoff! -
Although the Roman Empire was uneducated in the Greek language, not so
with the Islamic world. Islamic scholars not only transcribed the Greek
science into their own language, they carried forward the science and
made their own contributions (see Teresi's book, Lost
Discoveries, for
more details
or
go here for
more details). In fact, the period 700 - 1400 CE is known as the Islamic
Golden Age. Beginning in about the 13th century or so, the science that
had been nurtured by Islamic scientists began to make its way back into
Western Europe ... across the Pyrenees from the Moors in Spain and from
documentation from the Christian crusaders returning from the Middle East.
The Renaissance was beginning to bloom in Europe as knowledge began to
once again grow and new thinking began to flourish.
Unfortunately, Islamic science began a decline
about that time - between the 10th and 13th centuries - due to several
reasons, but primarily due to conservative and restrictive interpretations
of the Qur'an and a turn from thought based on reason to thought based
on strict beliefs. That situation persists today in some sects of Islam.
Go to the next page.
Index:
Introduction
The Ancient World
The Greek Era
The Rise of Christianity
The Middle Ages
The Rise of Science and Enlightenment
The Enlightenment by Great Scientists and Philosophers
Galileo, Newton, and Kant
Reason and Enlightenment
Fundamentalism, Evangelicalism, Progressiveism
Personal Theologies of God