The Church has always been anti Astrology
Really? I seem to recall a story about three 'wise men' who saw a falling star and followed it to Bethlehem. I also seem to recall hearing that in church regularly.
The Church has always been anti Astrology
Did you miss the part where Sagan talked about the Chinese astrologers being executed if their predictions were wrong? He wasn't only talking about Christianity-based societies in this episode. Astrologers tended to go through cycles of being in fashion and being considered anathema and either banished or killed.
timtofly said:What is ironic about it? The truth?
Let's not get anti-theist here, please.
What is ironic about it is that while saying it is a 'problem' when people live in fear of the stars, you clearly allow yourself to live in fear of Yahweh, an imaginary character invented by Bronze Age tribesmen.
I do not adhere to any religion, although without proof most skeptics here lump the Bible in with religion. If it is not science, then it is not religion. If it is not history, then it is not religion. You cannot have it both ways.
We may not be thinking of the same thing... but inasmuch as your comment is directed at mine, I agree with you... and assuming that we are thinking of the same thing... well spotted and statedI'm late arriving again. There are so many levels of irony stacked together that you could wrap it as a gift.
J
I never said that I didn't believe that Jesus was the Son of God. I said that I don't believe in the Second Coming or any sort of Millennial teaching.
The funny thing is, you are probably correct that we see different ironies. To me, the big one was not what was stating it, but whom. The reasons are given a couple posts up. The second irony is also detailed in that post. Someone assuming that Tim was religious is not just ironic, but hilarious. You get more as you dissect the statement.We may not be thinking of the same thing... but inasmuch as your comment is directed at mine, I agree with you... and assuming that we are thinking of the same thing... well spotted and stated
Funny thing, the truth is...
onejayhawk said:Tim has a point. Monotheism was critically important to the development of science. In a polytheistic/pagan/naturist world, any effect can be explained by a spirit/demon/god. It is no coincidence that the word deva can translate both as angle and demon. The concept of one God-over-all started the process of causal inquiry that eventually spawned scientific method.
Please, if you have any pretense of scholarship, separate the two. It is like comparing oranges and orchids because they happen to fall on the same page of a dictionary.
I'm sure that the progress towards modern medicine benefited from the prior use of leeches in some way and that the practice shed light on how things did and did not work, etc...Tim has a point. Monotheism was critically important to the development of science. In a polytheistic/pagan/naturist world, any effect can be explained by a spirit/demon/god. It is no coincidence that the word deva can translate both as angle and demon. The concept of one God-over-all started the process of causal inquiry that eventually spawned scientific method.
I find it interesting that at least one person ascribed religious motivation to Tim. He's typically the other side of the fence, even antagonistic to religion in many areas. That does not mean his statement was not ironic.
Really? I seem to recall a story about three 'wise men' who saw a falling star and followed it to Bethlehem. I also seem to recall hearing that in church regularly.
Yes, yes, yes.Ptolemy = geocentrism. Copernicus = heliocentrism. Did you not pay attention to that part of the video? And over a thousand years before Copernicus came along, there were Greek scientists who were on the right track to figuring things out. There's an interesting segment in the first episode about Eratosthenes, and how he realized that Earth's surface is curved, not flat.
As for astrology, as I pointed out the church outlawed it early on, but then:3. Mystical Woo-woo
But didnt Aristarchus and the Pythagoreans propose heliocentrism in ancient times? If only they had prevailed, we might have had Real Science millennia sooner! We'd be on freaking Mars by now! What was their evidence?
Well, you see, Fire is nobler than earth and the center is a nobler position. So fire has to be in the center. QED.
There are many names for this sort of thinking, but scientific is not one of them. Aristotle says of the Pythagoreans:
In all this they are not seeking for theories and causes to account for observed facts, but rather forcing their observations and trying to accommodate them to certain theories and opinions of their own.
Aristotle, On the heavens II.13.293a
Today, we have answers to the objections listed above, many of them developed in the Middle Ages; but those answers depend on the most part on measurements and concepts that were not then available: force, mass, inertia, etc. For example, Oresme answered the Argument of the Winds by postulating common motion: the sphere of the air is also moving to the east along with the sphere of the earth. But he had no propter quid to explain why the air and the earth shared a common motion. You can't just say that if only A and B were true, then observation C would follow. You actually have to show that A and B are true. The Pope said as much to Galileo, and got mocked for his pains.
As for the three wise men and astrology, don't know...go ask a Catholic theologian.6. The Return of Mystical Woo-woo -- the 1530s
Ptolemy's math worked fine for a thousand years. It was "settled science," as we say today. But gradually, as the star tables were copied and recopied, copyist errors crept in and multiplied like loaves and fishes. This was not due to bugs in the Ptolemaic model, but to errors in the data itself.
The Italian Renaissance was a humanist reaction against Aristotelian obsessions with logic, reason, and natural philosophy. Greco-Roman art and literature were rediscovered. Platonic mysticism was revived, along with astrology, magic, Hermeticism, and Pythagoreanism. Natural science faltered*; but since astronomy was only mathematics, it prospered.
(Continued
Leeches outdated:I'm sure that the progress towards modern medicine benefited from the prior use of leeches in some way and that the practice shed light on how things did and did not work, etc...
That doesn't mean we should still be using leeches to cure illness...
That being said, I'm at least open minded to having some half naked fire priestess straddle me and put them on me as part of some bizarre sex ritual
NSFW
Spoiler :![]()
Don't know about the half naked fire priestess, sound interesting.The humble leech's medical magic
By Melissa Jackson
BBC News Online health staff
Leeches have a long medical pedigree (picture courtesy of Biopharm Leeches)
The latest endorsement for using blood-sucking leeches for medical purposes has come from the US government.
(continued)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/3858087.stm
abradley said:Leeches outdated: