Showing posts with label Alec Cawley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alec Cawley. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 6, 2018

... on Whether Geocentrism is Obliging? Debate with Anthony Zarrella


Assorted retorts from yahoo boards and elsewhere : ... on Galileo and the Church (quora) · ... on Whether Geocentrism is Obliging? Debate with Anthony Zarrella · With Zarrella et al. on Geocentrism · Correspondence of Hans Georg Lundahl : With Anthony Zarrella on Metaphysics of Science

Q
Did the Pope just denounce Creationism? Isn’t accepting evolution equivalent to rejecting creationism? By creationism, I mean the idea that the world is 6000 years old.
https://www.quora.com/Did-the-Pope-just-denounce-Creationism-Isn%E2%80%99t-accepting-evolution-equivalent-to-rejecting-creationism-By-creationism-I-mean-the-idea-that-the-world-is-6000-years-old/answer/Alec-Cawley


Context link
Pope Francis declares evolution and Big Bang theory are real and God is not 'a magician with a magic wand'
Independent | Adam Withnall | Tuesday 28 October 2014 09:43 GMT
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/pope-francis-declares-evolution-and-big-bang-theory-are-right-and-god-isnt-a-magician-with-a-magic-9822514.html


Hans-Georg Lundahl
Just now
As to header in Independent : “Francis goes against Benedict XVI’s apparent support for 'intelligent design' - but does hail his predecessor’s 'great contribution to theology'”

Where exactly does “Francis” go against Intelligent Design?

It is not synonymous to and does not strictly of itself imply Young Earth Creationism, though they can be combined.

Ratzinger or “Benedict” was also no Young Earth Creationist, as seen by a document from 1993 or 1994. While he was a “cardinal”.

Quora Question Details Bot
Aug 8, 2017
Isn’t accepting evolution equivalent to rejecting creationism? And by creationism I mean the idea that the world is 6000 years old. I honestly have no idea what current Catholic thinking is.

[same link]

Paul Reid
Nov 19
The Catholic Church never held to Creationist ideas at any point in it's 1500 or so years. Creationism is a recent invention, by Protestants in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
Just now
That is false.

An Answer:

Alec Cawley
Wessex man and European
Answered Mar 26, 2017
Generally speaking, the Catholic Church has not taken a position on scientific matters. The one exception was when Galileo deliberately goaded his one-time friend, who had become Pope, into a dogmatic position against the Copernical model of the universe. One of the problems with claiming to be an absolute authority is that it is very hard to back down once you have taken a position. So, having once taken that position, it took a very long time before the Church could admit it was wrong.

However, the Catholic Church has never taken such a forceful position on the Creation. It generally kept quiet while watching to see how the science developed. It implicitly accepted evolution in some form a long time ago. It explicitly accepted it, stating that evolution was the mechanism by which God had wrought his creation (you would have to check for the exact phrasing) about the middle of the 20th century.

The controversy about the heliocentric model was a blot on an otherwise fairly tolerant landscape, driven essentially by Galileo being an assertive and egotistic braggart, even if he was (fairly) right.

Anthony Zarrella
Apr 14, 2017
2 upvotes
“The one exception was when Galileo deliberately goaded his one-time friend, who had become Pope, into a dogmatic position against the Copernical model of the universe. One of the problems with claiming to be an absolute authority is that it is very hard to back down once you have taken a position.”

Actually, the Pope emphatically did not make any dogmatic pronouncement of the kind.

He made a judicial declaration that Galileo was not permitted to promote heliocentrism.

If he had actually dogmatically defined heliocentrism as false, then that dogma would be unchangeable (and would have led to a truly massive crisis of faith for Catholics when heliocentrism was actually proven). The Church would be nothing but a fringe cult by modern times, had that been the case.

This is merely a technical correction though - most of your answer is quite right.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
Mon
I would not consider you correct.

Urban VIII personally only did what you said, up to sentence, but then he sent the sentence to all the Catholic world - making it his, and involving the Church in condemnation of “the sun is immobile centre of the universe” (formally heretical) and “earth is moving around sun and also in a daily motion” (at least erroneous).

You maybe should buy from Pope Michael his reedition of nine papal decisions against Heliocentrism.

Anthony Zarrella
23h ago
“Urban VIII personally only did what you said, up to sentence, but then he sent the sentence to all the Catholic world”

Yes, as a judicial sentence, not as an infallible dogmatic decree.

“involving the Church in condemnation of “the sun is immobile centre of the universe” (formally heretical) and “earth is moving around sun and also in a daily motion” (at least erroneous).”

Remember, he only prohibited Galileo from teaching those propositions as settled truth—he did not prohibit him from discussing them as theory.

Does that sound like what a pope would do with formal heresy?

Moreover, infallibility, per Vatican I, applies only to matters of faith and morals. Scientific empirical facts are neither.

We don’t proclaim, “I believe in one God, the Father Almighty, maker of Heaven and Earth… and that the Earth is the center of the universe…” It’s not a dogma of faith, and has never been taught as such.

“You maybe should buy from Pope Michael his reedition of nine papal decisions against Heliocentrism.”

Sorry, but again, I view David Bawden as a formal schismatic at least, and possibly a material or formal heretic. I trust his imprimatur no more than I would that of Bishop Donatus Magnus.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
23h ago
"Yes, as a judicial sentence, not as an infallible dogmatic decree."

When does a judicial sentence become that?

  • 1) It needs to involve the Pope

  • 2) It needs to imply the Catholic world

  • 3) It needs to be on faith or morals (for Pope to decide)


It did involve Pope Urban VIII, it was sent to the Catholic world, and it was about both exegetics and philosophy and therefore about the faith.

"Sorry, but again, I view David Bawden as a formal schismatic at least, and possibly a material or formal heretic. I trust his imprimatur no more than I would that of Bishop Donatus Magnus."

It is not by his imprimatur, he is reediting older books. Which already have imprimatur or imprimi potest from pre-Vatican II authorities. Note, I asked him about one book which had a post-Vatican II imprimatur and have so far no response to the dubia. Do you think imprimaturs expire even without direct revocation and putting on index?

"Remember, he only prohibited Galileo from teaching those propositions as settled truth—he did not prohibit him from discussing them as theory."

No longer true by end of 1633.

"Does that sound like what a pope would do with formal heresy?"

The actual distinction is between mathematical hypothesis and theory of fact.

If Galileo wanted (as per previous discussions) treat it as about a mathematical model making counting orbits easier but with no relevance to facts, Galileo had at one time been free to do so. At one time, no longer by end of 1633. It's like I don't believe in "i", but am fine with using it for computer modelling when formulas have "dimensions".

But if Galileo was so involved with Heliocentrism as a fact that he was willing to adapt exegesis to it - that was the rub.

"Moreover, infallibility, per Vatican I, applies only to matters of faith and morals. Scientific empirical facts are neither."

Is God existing a matter of faith and morals? Did Vatican I say that God can be deduced from empirical facts? Yes and yes. Therefore, sth being "empirical fact" has no bearing to make it immune from Papal infallibility.

Moreover, Heliocentrism is to this very day not verified as empirical fact. It is not on par with "grass is green" and hardly even on spectral theory of colours.

"We don’t proclaim, “I believe in one God, the Father Almighty, maker of Heaven and Earth… and that the Earth is the center of the universe…”"

We also don't proclaim "... who ascended to the Father, assumed His Blessed Mother there, who is there Queen with His Kingship, and who thence shall return to judge the living and the dead" - and yet, Assumption is either dogma or fidei proxima (I seem to have cleared Pacelli from a doubt on that encyclical which didn't concern the main point).

There are lots of dogmata that are less solemn than the articles of the faith and yet are necessary to propose once the other alternative has been proven to lead to damnable errors, like Heliocentrism and Acentrism did with Giordano Bruno.

Anthony Zarrella
23h ago
1 upvote from Hans-Georg Lundahl
Without getting into a rehash of the entire geocentrist debate, I’ll just point out a few things:

  • 1) Infallibility does not merely need to “involve the pope” and “imply the Catholic world”—he must propose something as a doctrine to be definitively held by all the faithful. Popes of that era knew quite well how to anathematize heresies—so I feel confident that if heliocentrism had been intended to be so anathematized… well, Pope Urban VIII could have very easily just said, “Anathema sit.”

  • 2) God’s existence can be derived from empirical facts, but is not itself an empirical fact (in the sense that I’m speaking of—i.e., God cannot be measured and tested by instruments and experimentation, nor can He be directly observed with the senses [a few special prophetic instances notwithstanding]).

  • 3) A re-edit of a text requires a new imprimatur (or perhaps it’s a nihil obstat—I admit I get the two confused sometimes), because the editing process can introduce error. Regardless, my point was that I would go to a source other than Bawden, if I wished to read historical papal proclamations.

  • 4) Heliocentrism is verified to as great an extent as could practically be wished. We’ve sent people into outer space who have directly observed the Earth’s rotation and the orbits of the planets, and we’ve launched unmanned instrumentation that has given even clearer data. Either heliocentrism is verified or there is a vast conspiracy, consisting of hundreds of thousands of scientists, dedicated to pretending that it is (and you know how I feel about conspiracy theories).

  • 5) Giordano Bruno was condemned primarily on the basis of Christological heresies and possible pantheism. The fact that he also rejected geocentrism has no clear connection to that.

  • 6) My point regarding the Creed was not that only those truths contained in the Creed are doctrinal. But geocentrism simply has never been taught in the same way as those doctrines. It’s not even in the pre-Vatican II Catechisms, unless I’m greatly mistaken.


Hans-Georg Lundahl
3h ago
"Popes of that era knew quite well how to anathematize heresies—so I feel confident that if heliocentrism had been intended to be so anathematized… well, Pope Urban VIII could have very easily just said, 'Anathema sit.'"

On your view, condemnation of errors of Berengarius of Tours was not yet infallible?

It is I think in Denzinger.

"God’s existence can be derived from empirical facts, but is not itself an empirical fact (in the sense that I’m speaking of—i.e., God cannot be measured and tested by instruments and experimentation, nor can He be directly observed with the senses [a few special prophetic instances notwithstanding])."

Heliocentrism is not an empiric fact. I do not believe it can be derived from them, and it certainly is not in itself.

Accept Geocentrism as an empiric fact, that is ONE from which you can derive the existence of God, it is basically Prima Via, with a physically different version in Abraham's argument according to Josephus Antiquities.

"A re-edit of a text requires a new imprimatur (or perhaps it’s a nihil obstat—I admit I get the two confused sometimes), because the editing process can introduce error."

Not if it simply reprints text as such.

Also, under new canon law, imprimatur is not strictly required, is it?

"Regardless, my point was that I would go to a source other than Bawden, if I wished to read historical papal proclamations."

Very mistrusting. If it weren't part of a psychiatric superstition, I would from popular usage consider that attitude "paranoid." Note, once again, popular sense, not DSMH sense.

"We’ve sent people into outer space who have directly observed the Earth’s rotation"

We directly observe the universe rotating around us. 7 billion pairs of eyes trump a few cameras and a few astronauts.

In other words, the argument is as good as "I flew around a tower in a chopper, and the tower was turning around its axis, I observed that". In Geocentrism, the men on the Moon (if any) were in a situation definitely comparable to the chopper.

Your explanation for why 7 billion pairs of eyes can be discounted works exactly other way round for why a few pairs of eyes can be so.

It would be God's providence which of the views is the more common one.

" and the orbits of the planets"

You have heard of Tycho Brahe? Galileo's first judge, Cardinal Bellarmine, had.

"Either heliocentrism is verified or there is a vast conspiracy, consisting of hundreds of thousands of scientists, dedicated to pretending that it is (and you know how I feel about conspiracy theories)."

Some conspiracies are easier than others, like a vast conspiracy to ignore Geocentric arguments, or to ignore Tycho Brahe, because arguing with Dichotomy between Ptolemy and Modern Science is easier.

So, that kind of vast conspiracy is as easy as Martin Luther launching one, which lasts to this day.

"The fact that he also rejected geocentrism has no clear connection to that."

It has if you study the philosophy of Prima Via.

"But geocentrism simply has never been taught in the same way as those doctrines. It’s not even in the pre-Vatican II Catechisms, unless I’m greatly mistaken."

Will have a look at the Trentine one.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
Just now
I did look on Catechism of Trent, here is from First Article:

4 The words " heaven" and " earth" include all things which the heavens and the earth contain ; for, besides the heavens, which the Prophet called " the work of his fingers," 5 he also gave to the sun its brilliancy, and to the moon and stars their beauty : and that they may be " for signs and for seasons, for days and for years," 8 he so ordered the celestial bodies in a certain and uniform course, that nothing varies more their continual revolution, yet nothing more fixed than that variety.

By Celestial bodies, Earth is not meant.

Edit - here is more:

The earth, also, God commanded to stand in the midst of the world, rooted in its own foundation, and " made the mountains to ascend, and the plains to descend into the place which he had founded for them." That the waters should not inundate the earth, " he hath set a bound which they shall not pass over, neither shall they return to cover the earth." 6 He next not only clothed and adorned it with trees, and every variety of herb and flower, but filled it, as he had already filled the air and water, with innumerable sorts of living creatures.

Lastly, he formed man from the slime of the earth, immortal and impassable, not, however, by the strength of nature, but by the bounty of God. His soul he created to his own image and likeness ; gifted him with free will, and tempered all his motions and appetites, so as to subject them, at all times, to the dictate of reason. He then added the invaluable gift of original righteousness, and next gave him dominion over all other animals By referring to the sacred history of Genesis the pastor will make him self familiar with these things for the instruction of the faithful.

Thursday, June 8, 2017

... on Bible Access in the Middle Ages (quora)


Considering the last of the 4 answers is by one Dennis Gardner who was pastor for 43 years and it is so ignorant of history, they are the kind of problem now that they pretend and for some priests perhaps rightly so there was of ignorant priests.

Two of the answers illustrated a blatantly protestant ignorance about Medieval conditions, and I commented under them, but the first, Alec Cawley, at least is not supposed to be a pastor!/HGL

Q
Did all churches have a Bible in Middle Ages?
https://www.quora.com/Did-all-churches-have-a-Bible-in-Middle-Ages


C on Q
I’m not sure if even smaller churches in small villages had one. Books were expensive at that time , before Gutenberg invented the printing press in 1450.

What (do you/do we) know about this ?

Answers:

I
Alec Cawley
Read a bit, learned a bit. Much more to read, much more to learn.
Answered 15h ago
Yes, it is true that not all churches had Bibles, and doctrine said they didn’t need them - studying the Bible was the province of professional clerics and ordinary folk should not read them lest they get mistaken ideas. And also, the Bible could only be distributed in Latin, which the common folk could not understand but was spoken by clerics.

The teaching medium for the common people was essentially the equivalent of comic books - stained glass, and simple representations of favorite Bible stories. The rest would have been passed on by the village priest, who might, or might not, have had some sort of Book of Hours or compendium of prayers.

The more or less simultaneous arrival of native language translations and of a printed Bible which could be distributed to all churches (and of printing generally, which sharply increased literacy and general inquiry) was an earthquake which shook the Church and, among other things, split off the Protestant churches.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
14h ago
“doctrine said they didn’t need them - studying the Bible was the province of professional clerics and ordinary folk should not read them lest they get mistaken ideas.”

This is a bit summary about doctrine.

ALSO, every Church HAD one professional cleric at least, the Parish priest.

“And also, the Bible could only be distributed in Latin, which the common folk could not understand but was spoken by clerics.”

There were approved Bible editions in some languages, though this is correct for England between roughly 1401 and Reformation.

Understanding of Latin was not strictly limited to clercics, but varied among diverse commoners.

“The teaching medium for teh common people was essentially the equivalent of comic books - stained glass, and simple representations of favourite Bible stories.”

Comic books are however a great medium for teaching Biblical history.

Genesis flows fine as it is, but try getting the rest of Pentateuch as history directly from Bible without being distracted by all the laws … I am thankful for Bible comics.

“The rest would have been passed on by the village priest”

Even that would have been passed on by the village priest who was after all a professional cleric. Assume you had a stained glass window, it was he who explained what was happening.

Assume you had a Rhymed Bible - translated from Historia Scholastica - in the parish, you can’t read, he can, guess who reads what to whom?

“who might, or might not, have had some sort of Book of Hours or compendium of prayers.”

He needed a book of hours, a book for Mass and also a Bible, in order to fulfil the duty of studying all of the Bible.

“The more or less simultaneous arrival of native language translations and of a printed Bible which could be distributed to all churches (and of printing generally, which sharply increased literacy and general inquiry) was an earthquake which shook the Church”

It was the Church who did it.

“and, among other things, split off the Protestant churches.”

Not by itself.

II
Benjamin Peterson
I've read C. S. Lewis
Answered 15h ago
In England, all churches had a bible (barring accidents). The scriptoria of major monasteries constantly produced new bibles, often with specific quirks and stardards unique to that monastery. Many of these centers of production were in France, and bibles were often shipped a long distance if a church required one; on the other hand, even relatively small centers sometimes produced their own bibles. Over time, bible production was refined; the earlier middle ages tended to have massive, multi-volume bibles but by the mid-1200s, portable single volume bibles were common. The vast majority of bibles were based on the Vulgate, St. Jerome’s Latin translation — not because it was the only permitted text but because the effort of duplicating St. Jerome’s effort was too huge. The middle ages being as they were, scholars were often busy enough just trying to keep faithful to the original Vulgate.

These bibles were indeed very expensive, and they tended to be extremely durable and to be chained to the church as a result!

Pedantry: I should point out that Gutenberg only invented printing *in the West*.

III
Hans-Georg Lundahl
History buff since childhood. CSL & Eco added to Medieval lore. + Classics.
Answered 15h ago
I think all Churches had one Bible, as well as one Missal and one Breviary.

The priest was obliged to read the Bible continuously.

As to expensive books before Gutenberg, there was an activity invented a bit earlier, at the start of the High Middle Ages, which made books a bit cheaper.

The book from which a copy was made was divided into peciae, these were then distributed among several copyists (12 peciae = > 12 copyists) who would take turns copying each the same peciae.

But before that, in the Dark Ages? I don’t know.

IV
Dennis Gardner
Master's in Biblical Studies, 43 years as a pastor and student of the Bible
Answered 7h ago

No. Very few churches had even a part of the Bible. The Pope made sure that only the priests would have control of the Bible so they could tell people what it said. The people had little choice but to believe their words. It’s also true that many people didn’t know how to read or write.

Yes, Gutenberg’s press made a very tremendous difference in the world. There were also churches other than RC churches that had a portion of the Bible. Some of these were heretical in their teachings, and many were truly Christian orthodox in their teachings. Gradually when the world came out of the Dark Ages, more copies of the Bible were available and more people were beginning to learn to read and write.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
Just now
“The Pope made sure that only the priests would have control of the Bible so they could tell people what it said.”

But there was a priest in each Church, for starters!

Also, it is not quite true.

A priest was obliged to read the Bible and obliged to be able to explain it to laymen. But laymen were not strictly speaking obliged to not read the Bible.

Under certain circumstances, “pirate translations” had been abused by heretics, and so there was a requirement for a layman to get permission before reading the Bible.

If you have seen “Sceptics’ Annotated Bible” you may realise why this is a good idea.

“The people had little choice but to believe their words.”

This is even Biblical, since they are successors of Apostles Luke 10:16.

“There were also churches other than RC churches that had a portion of the Bible.”

Can you enumerate?

“ Some of these were heretical in their teachings,”

I say amen to that, except for calling them Churches …

“and many were truly Christian orthodox in their teachings.”

Namely?

“Gradually when the world came out of the Dark Ages”

What Dark Ages? The militarily dark ones for Christendom which ended with beginning Reconquest of Sicily and Spain and First Crusade in 1033 and 1089? Or did you mean sth else?

“more copies of the Bible were available and more people were beginning to learn to read and write.”

Much thanks to the efforts of the RC Church.