Re: What if: the Church had NOT condemned Galileo
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Re: What if: the Church had NOT condemned Galileo         

Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile
Author: tadamsmar
Date: Sep 7, 2008 05:07

On Sep 2, 10:49 am, 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.  This is most certainly not the the
> case.  All the Church is saying is that Galileo was not a bad person,
> and that his writings, even his satires of the Church,  no longer pose
> any social threat.
>
> http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/0801299.htm
>
> ...
> 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?  Would Newton have had the same incentive to develop his
> comprehensive Copernican explanation of the Universe?  Would society
> have been destabilized by lack of faith in the Church and conventional
> social order?

Society was already destabilizing with the Reformation, which put many
freethinkers like Galileo out of range of the Inquisition.

Francis Bacon, the greatest futurist of all time, predated Galileo.
Before Galileo, Francis Bacon was already telling his king that
"Scientific knowledge is national power."
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