A Short History of Science and
Religion
~ by Ernie Stokely 9-25-2007
The Rise of Science - The Enlightenment
by Great Scientists and Philosophers
Johannes Kepler and Tyco Brahe -
Two great astronomers lived during the 16th century. Johannes Kepler was
a German astronomer born in Swabia in the south of Germany. Tyco Brahe was
a colorful Danish nobleman who lived in what is now called Sweden.
Tyco Brahe was once out drinking
with friends as a 20-year old. He got into an
argument
and wound up getting his nose cut off in a duel. For the remainder of
his life he wore a copper nose prosthesis. He is also reported to have
had a pet moose which somehow drank too much beer during a party and feel
down onto the floor and died. It is not known why he was in the house.
Tyco Brahe was indeed a colorful fellow! He was also a very bright scholar
and astronomer who was determined to provide a compromise between the
heliocentric system proposed by Copernicus and the geocentric system maintained
by the church. So, he advanced a theory that the sun and moon rotate around
the earth, while the remainder of the planets rotate around the sun. The
resulting system tied mathematicians and astronomers in knots for years
until Brahe's theory was finally disproved. However, the Church was convinced
that his speculations were correct, and they adopted his combination planetary
system.
Meanwhile, Johannes Kepler
tried in vain to convince Brahe that he was wrong, and that the Copernican
heliocentric system was indeed correct. In fact, Kepler even figured out
the ellipical orbits of the planets and laid the foundations for the careful
observations later by Galileo. Remember, there were no telescopes yet
in the 16th century.
Matin Luther Weighs In
- In 1483, Martin Luther was born. Luther, of course,
was
responsible for the Reformation. As we shall see later, it caused
a splintering of the Roman Catholic church that was to indirectly widen
the riff between science and religion. Luther also categorically rejected
the Copernican system of planetary motion, and supported the geocentric
system of the Roman Catholic Church.
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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