Science and religion have always been at war with one another,
right? Isn't that what we've all been taught? Isn't that what the trial of
Galileo was all about? In fact this widely held view is a distortion of the
historical truth. On the contrary, historians over the past fifty years have
revealed that for most of history science and religion have been deeply
entwined.
Historian Ronald Numbers, an expert on the relationship between
science and religion, points out that for hundreds of years one of the most
prevailing models in Western culture was what was known as the "two
books" - these being the books of Scripture and the book of Nature. From
the Middle Ages through the nineteenth century most people in the Western world
believed that both books were the work of God, and so "it was impossible
that the two should conflict."
When
we look at the history of science, we see that in fact it owes an immense debt
to the religious world. In the early Middle Ages - a time when Christian Europe
turned away from scientific thinking - the science, mathematics, and astronomy
of the ancient Greeks was kept alive in the Islamic world, where it was further
developed and enriched by Moslem scholars. In the thirteenth century when this
scientific heritage began to filter back into Western Europe, it was originally
taken up by Christian monks and theologians.
Throughout the late Middle Ages and Renaissance, most scientific
leaders were men of the church, They included the great medieval champion of
mathematical science Robert Grosseteste (Bishop of Oxford, and the man who
reinvigorated the science of geometric optics); the medieval champion of
experimental science Roger Bacon (a Franciscan monk, sometimes known as the
medieval Galileo); the fifteenth century proto-physicist Nicholas of Cusa (a
cardinal in the Roman Catholic Church and the man who first championed the idea
of an infinite universe); and Nicholas Copernicus (a canon at Frauenburg
Cathedral, and the man who more than any other introduced the idea of a
sun-centered cosmos.)
Up until the eighteenth century, most of those in Europe
studying science were indeed men of deep religious faith, many of them formally
schooled in theology. In part that was because the church controlled the
institutes of higher learning - particularly the universities, which had
originally been set up as training grounds for the clergy and other church
functionaries.
In popular mythology, the "scientific revolution" of
the seventeenth century is commonly said to mark a fundamental break between
science and religion. But nothing could be further from the truth. Almost all
the great pioneers and founders of the new science were religious men who wanted
a science that would harmonize with their faith. All three founders of the new
heliocentric cosmology - Nicholas Copernicus, Johannes Kepler, and Isaac Newton
- saw their new vision of the universe as an offshoot of their theology. Newton.
in particular, was a religious fanatic whose whole life work can be seen as a
search for God. Even the infamous Galileo was a committed Catholic who wanted
nothing more than for the Pope to endorse his vision of the heavens.
Not
until the eighteenth century do we see a fundamental break between science and
religion. In the new rationalistic climate of the Enlightenment philosophers
such as Immanuel Kant and Jean-Jacques Rousseau argued that science and religion
were two separate domains that must be kept apart. But even in the eighteenth
century there was no idea of a warfare between the two spheres. That idea only
arose in the late nineteenth century, particularly after the publication of
Charles Darwin's revolutionary book, "On the Evolution of Species by Means
of Natural Selection." In the wake of this book, some Christian believers
and theologians began to see science as a threat to their faith. On the other
hand, some scientists also began to see religion as a threat to scientific
freedom. Although there have always been people on both sides who did not see a
conflict between science and Christian faith, nonetheless this
"warfare" model has had a powerful influence on Western thinking
throughout the twentieth century.
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| Contributed by: Margaret Wertheim
|