On Sep 3, 4:13Â pm, "Dan Drake" dandrake.com> wrote:
> On Tue, 2 Sep 2008 14:49:55 UTC, Jerry Kraus yahoo.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Modern scientists tend to misinterpret the recent rehabilitation of
>> Galileo Galilei as indicating that Church admits that they were wrong
>> to prosecute him, at the time. Â This is most certainly not the the
>> case. Â All the Church is saying is that Galileo was not a bad person,
>> and that his writings, even his satires of the Church, Â no longer pose
>> any social threat.
>
> I presume this is why Pope John Paul II declared that Galileo understood
> the theological questions better than the contemporary theologians had.
>
> You're right, though, if you are trying to say that the official response
> was inadequate, with its wishy-washy postion on some "misunderstandings"
> behind which we find no human actor who's admitted to have done wrong.
> This case has been argued strongly by some Jesuits disappointed in the
> result, despite their almost fanatical loyalty to the Pope. (No pretty red
> uniforms, though.)
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>> ...
>> Jesuit Father Sabino Maffeo, the Vatican Observatory's vice director
>> for administration, told CNS that Galileo ran into trouble with the
>> Holy Office because he did not have proof for his claims.
>
>> "Not having proof ... (the Holy Office) was forced to hold on to the
>> centuries-old concept" that saw Earth as the center of the cosmos, he
>> said.
>
>> If he had had proof, which did not come for another 100 years with
>> discoveries made by Isaac Newton, Galileo's fate could have been much
>> different, Father Maffeo said. He added that Italian Cardinal Robert
>> Bellarmine, who was part of the 17th-century Vatican commission that
>> admonished Galileo not to hold or defend the Copernican theory, had
>> told Galileo "the day in which you bring a demonstration then we will
>> have to look at how sacred Scripture gets interpreted differently,
>> but
>> as long as there is no proof, we will continue to interpret
>> (Scripture) literally as we have all along."
>
>> ...
>
>> What would have happened if the Church had not prosecuted or censured
>> Galileo? Â Would Newton have had the same incentive to develop his
>> comprehensive Copernican explanation of the Universe?
>
> Sigh. You really haven't the foggiest notion of what science is and why
> people do it, have you? Are you in management, or a management expert and
> trainer? I don't know any other class of people so utterly clueless about
> getting people to do something fascinating and challenging without a
> neatly defined incentive of the sort that they (managers) can understand.
>
> Â Would society
>
>> have been destabilized by lack of faith in the Church and conventional
>> social order?
>
> Who could possibly think such a thing? Â Certainly not anyone who read what
> Galileo wrote (not to mention what Saint Augustine had said, which one
> should do to make sure Galileo was quoting him accurately). This question
> of astronomy had nothing to do with the truth or falsity of Christian
> doctrine, but was just an opportunity for fools to make Christianity, and
> Catholicism if you make the distinction, and Italy (if you make the
> distinction) look really dumb for hundreds of years.
>
> Well, I don't think anybody really made Italy look dumb until Mussolini;
> but a lot of Italians have been concerned about it, and maybe they know
> better.
>
>
>
>> What implications does this example have for modern Church criticisms
>> of scientific theories such as Evolution and the Big Bang?
>
> Simple: Shut up. Telling scientists what they should believe about science
> is an idiot's and a tyrant's game. Harping on religion this way just makes
> it look like a religious matter, distracting attention from idiots and
> tyrants like Stalin.
>
>> Â Does the
>> Church, or other social institutions have some role in integating
>> scientific concepts into the broader social perspective?
>
> Sure, of course. Just, please sir, don't drag me to Rome in chains (and
> bill me for the chains*) if I have a different idea of how (or whether)
> the concepts should be integrated.
>
> (*) They didn't really do that; just formally threatened to if he didn't
> stop messing about with ill health and crap like that when they wanted him
> NOW in Rome. After which they had him sit there for weeks while they
> figured out what to do next. BTW, please try not to do that to
> distinguished old scientists, either, after making them take a long
> journey in primitive conditions in mid-winter; it makes you look
> unnecessarily stupid and malicious among the vulgar mob who don't
> understand these things. People will go on misunderstanding for centuries!
>
> Â Was Galileo
>
>> a kind of idiot-savant, not understanding how to fully develop his own
>> ideas?
>
> No. This has been brought to you by Simple Answers to Simple Questions.
> Should you wish me to elaborate, I might proceed as follows:
>
> Look here, you blithering freaking idiot, what have you ever done in your
> wasted life half as good as a dozen of the lesser things Galileo did? Wow,
> he didn't go on to invent Newtonian physics by himself, leaving Newton to
> do it thanks to standing on the shoulders of giants, and you call him an
> idiot savant? Ok, if you insist on it, Mr. idiot idiot.
>
>> Â Is this a common problem among scientists in general, who are
>> not holistic thinkers, however skilled they may be in their own
>> speciality?
>
> Does "not holistic thinkers" mean that they bury themselves in a specialty
> and ignore the rest of the world? Or that they don't think the things you
> want them to think? Â
>
> --
> Dan Drake
> d...@
dandrake.comhttp://www.dandrake.com/
>
porlockjr.blogspot.com- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
Yes, I know. Anyone with a Ph.D. and tenure must never be questioned
except by others with Ph.D.'s and tenure. Because they are superior
beings whose pronouncements must be accepted without question. Any
other attitude is tyrannical and must be suppressed by any means
necessary. The scientific system currently in place is perfect and
inviolable. Rather like God.