Iceberg wrote:*sigh* And so more people take the same old strawman and prop it up for more rounds of abuse. The amount of counterexample to the hypothesis "Christianity has done nothing to advance science or philosophy*" is so copious as to hardly need reference.
No, it isn't. It's bullshit. Christianity has aggressively attacked science since its inception. As for philosophy,
anyone can call himself a philosopher. But the philosophy of
logic has never supported Christianity in any way, shape or form.
But if you must...
Look up the following:
Early, middle and late Church Fathers (philosophers)
St. Augustine (philosopher)
St. Ignatius Loyola (philosopher)
You forgot to mention that most of their philosophy was coloured by religious hatred and irrationality. And the only bits that weren't coloured in this way were actually refutations of the faith, such as Occam's Razor.
St. Thomas Aquinas (philosopher, scientist)
Who said: "If forgers and malefactors are put to death by the secular power, there is much more reason for excommunicating and even putting to death one convicted of heresy." Some philosopher.
Leonardo da Vinci (artist, scientist)
Art has nothing to do with science. And Da Vinci earned the ire of the church by predicting various aspects of evolution theory and disproving church doctrine on the age of the Earth.
Galileo Galilei** (scientist)
Imprisoned for heresy.
G.K. Chesterton (writer, philosopher)
Not a scientist.
C.S. Lewis (novelist, philosopher)
Not a scientist.
*: Actually, the hypothesis is usually stated more as "Christians hate science and philosophy." Bitter? Me? Never.
No, it's best stated as "The Christian faith is inherently hostile to science." In fact, the very concept of faith is diametrically opposed to the scientific method.
**: "In conclusion, something must be said about the opposition of the Catholic Church to Galileo's views. Here again, popular folklore portrays Galileo as the valiant defender of free scientific inquiry against religious dogmatism. The truth is far more complex. Galileo was a deeply religious man. With his blessings, his favorite daughter spent her life in a religious order. For a long time, Galileo thought his work supported the power of the church. Initially, many religious scholars and authorities of the church welcomed his findings. Only later, partly because of the continuing threat of the Reformation begun by Luther and others, did the church attempt to prevent Galileo from teaching or publishing his views. Nor did Galileo do all that he might have to escape the power of the church..." - R. Giere, University of Minnesota - Twin Cities, "Understanding Scientific Reasoning" (4th Edition), Harcourt Brace College Publishers
And how does any of this change the fact that he was imprisoned for heresy, by the church that you uphold as a supporter of science? Does the term "smokescreen of superfluous detail" mean anything to you?
Here you go: The Empire probably falls about 50 years to a century earlier.
Why?
The Dark Ages and following Medieval period are much longer, and there is either a delayed Renaissance or no Renaissance at all. The Renaissance scientists, artists and inventors were men of faith as much as they were men of the world.
The Renaissance scientists and inventors coincidentally lived around a time of humanist ethics revival, with philosophers such as Voltaire openly defying religion. You seem to think this is some kind of coincidence. One and a half millenia of faithful Christians produced zero science, but right around the time of a humanist ethics revival, science makes a comeback. And you credit Christians? *snicker*
If anything, the church prolonged the ending years of the Empire by giving it a second source of authority which backed and shored up the flagging authority of the Emperor. It was Catholic monasteries which created modern university education (that cap and gown you wear at graduation are the degenerate remains of a monk's robe and habit).
No, they actually
mean something useful, unlike a monk's robe and habit. And university education did not become useful until the rise of science. Before then, universities were nothing but bastions of elitism for the very wealthy and served no constructive purpose.
Seriously, you guys sound like the fervent Fundamentalist missionaries in a Jack Chick tract, talking about how the evil Catholic hierarchy goes skulking around the cloud-enshrouded Vatican chuckling their evil laughter and plotting their next evil deed to perpetrate on humanity (though without the contrived speech on how only Jesus can save you, not men).
Too bad you can't find a real logical flaw to exploit in order to prove we're wrong about the Catholic church's contempt for human life, eh? "Appeal to ridicule" is a fallacy, you know.