It was only because of what the Church did to Galileo, Descartes withdrew his essay on physics, "The World" from publication — counterpunch
All the while, for example, the Church burned people alive for witchcraft right through to 1792. — counterpunch
What if, instead of finding Galileo grievously suspect of heresy, the Church had welcomed Galileo as discovering the means to decode the word of God made manifest in Creation, and so afforded a scientific understanding of reality - the moral authority of God's word? — counterpunch
I'm not at all sure modern scientific materialism is quite the virtue you seem to think it is! — counterpunch
Surely you must agree that Descartes' invention of algebraic geometry was one of the major foundations of the 'Scientific Revolution'? It allowed the application of the newly-discovered laws of motion and general scientific method across a universal range. — Wayfarer
Is that so? — Wayfarer
Of course they should have. And in reality, there was a progressive sect inside the Church who was horrified by Galileo's treatment, and who argued strongly against the proceedings. Regretably, the ultra-conservatives won the day - and not only on religious grounds. There were many factors driving the whole affair, some of which were political in nature. — Wayfarer
Whether it is or is not a virtue - it has enormous strengths, on the one hand, but also has its blind spots, which I still don't think you've acknowledged — Wayfarer
I'm trying. You're not making it easy. You distinguish between subject and object. — counterpunch
I'm making a distinction between science as a tool, and science as an understanding of reality - and suggesting that the latter is the real blind-spot. — counterpunch
You mean, failing to appreciate the role of science in the understanding of reality is the blind spot? — Wayfarer
From my perspective, you don’t understand what I’m talking about, whilst I think I have at least an inkling of your point. In any case, please don’t let this stop you from reading Thomas Nagel, because he is one of the leading philosophers in the English-speaking world, and very well worth reading. — Wayfarer
It begins with Galileo - who formulated scientific method in order to prove the earth orbits the sun, and was threatened with torture and forced to recant, was found grievously suspect of heresy and held under house arrest for the rest of his life. Meanwhile, his contemporary, Descartes - using an argument that can only be described as sophistry, asserted the primacy of the subject - in a manner consistent with emphasising the spiritual and reviling the profane, and he was appointed to the Royal Court of Queen Christina of Sweden. — counterpunch
Descartes arrived on 4 October 1649. [...] With Christina's strict schedule he was invited to the cold and draughty castle at 5:00 AM daily to discuss philosophy and religion. Soon it became clear they did not like each other; she disapproved of his mechanical view, and he did not appreciate her interest in Ancient Greek.[40] On 15 January Descartes wrote he had seen Christina only four or five times.[41] On 1 February 1650 Descartes caught a cold. He died ten days later, early in the morning on 11 February 1650, and according to Chanut the cause of his death was pneumonia.[42][note 6]
If we are to use history as a source of philosophical insight, it might be useful to recall a few important points. One is that Queen Christian was well versed about the heliocentric system. Her favorite philosopher was Gassendi, an heliocentric. Another is that, while Galileo did live under house arrest, he died in his bed at the respectable age of 77, while Descartes died at the tender age of 53, of pneumonia, four months after accepting the queen's invitation to come to Stockholm. According to Wiki, neither the weather nor the queen agreed with him. Should have stayed in his bed... — Olivier5
Important in what regard? It remains, Galileo was grievously suspect of heresy - which is about a hair's breadth from being burned alive, while Descartes was rubbing shoulders with European aristocracy. And so it remains that science as an understanding of reality was potentially heretical - while subjectivism was potentially a ticket to the big show! — counterpunch
I don't deny facts, ever. But the fact Descartes died is somewhat incidental — counterpunch
How could he have doubted that the world exists, and that his own body exists, and not cared if it was credible doubt? — counterpunch
Because he already had a conclusion in mind - that, thrusting his hand into the fire and finding 'I'm in pain, therefore I am' - would rule out, by implying the undeniable existence of an objective reality, it was his intent to undermine. — counterpunch
we can very reasonably conclude that Descartes wrote the 'cogito ergo sum' argument to accord with Church doctrine - using a dubious method to find certain knowledge in the subjective/soul, rather than, find meaning in the physical world through hypotheses tested by the evidence of the senses - and maybe find himself on trial for his life. — counterpunch
You presented his being invited to the court of Queen Christina as a reward for his supposedly 'subjectivist' philosophy, which the powerful would have some interest in promoting... In truth Christina didn't like Descartes's philosophy, which she found too mechanistic, and he fell sick and died as a direct result of accepting her invitation to Stockholm. So your nice conspiration theory crumbles. — Olivier5
It was a thought experiment about doubting the world, not a real doubt. He was just playing with the idea of radical doubt. — Olivier5
You don't get it. — Olivier5
Pain can sometimes be an illusion. Descartes cogito's point is that one cannot doubt the doubter himself. — Olivier5
Descartes was well aware of the existence of an objective reality, and his cogito is an attempt to prove that it does exist. — Olivier5
Descartes did scrap a book almost ready to publish on heliocentrism, after the second Galileo trial, because he was afraid of being jailed. So he was prudent. But he was not the mouthpiece of the Church. After his death all his books landed on the Church index of prohibited works. — Olivier5
It's puzzling though - why Descartes would be invited to the Royal Court of Sweden, if Queen Christina so objected to his ideas? — counterpunch
In truth Christina didn't like Descartes's philosophy, which she found too mechanistic, — Olivier5
You are imagining a kind of cosmic battle between science and religion, — Olivier5
...in which Galileo was a hero of science and Descartes a kind of traitor, while the 'aristocracy' and the Church are on the other side, fighting for obscurantism. But my contention is that the historical facts paint a far more complex and less manichean picture. — Olivier5
Galileo is my own hero too, more so than Descartes, so no dispute on his contribution. But he, like Descartes and all the others, was a devout Christian educated by the Church and tied to it in many other ways, including financially. — Olivier5
So this battle between science and religious tradition was happening within the Church. It was not pitting the Church vs the scientists, but splitting the Church and her flock in two camps: those who believed that scripture was the only certain source of knowledge, and those who thought that human reason and observation were God-given faculties that, if used well, could help get a glimpse of the glory of God through the study of His creation. — Olivier5
the outline is not imagined. — counterpunch
Galileo too was prudent. After his first trial he stayed put about heliocentrism for two decades. It's only after the new pope, a body of his, encouraged him to write about it that he did... Hobbes too was prudent. He accepted a pension from his king, who just asked him in return never to publish anything about religion or politics again... It's quite facile to condemn past philosophers for being prudent, from the comfort of the present, when you ain't gonna burn for anything you say...I am arguing that Descartes was intellectually dishonest - or what you would call prudent; while Galileo was intellectually honest, and condemned for it. — counterpunch
Had that been so, perhaps now, we would not be facing a climate and ecological crisis that threatens the stability of civilisation — counterpunch
The Catholic Church is 100% committed to ecology and fighting climate change. — Olivier5
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