¶ … middle ages, scholastic thinking was structurally limited by the Catholic Church, which considered itself the arbiter of such matters. However, thanks to changes in the sciences and in the methodologies used to approach them, the sheer weight of evidence was able to defeat some of the old dogmas that restricted thinking. Changes in science took on mathematical, experimental, and political dimensions and eventually gave enlightenment thinkers the objectivity needed to approach almost every subject from a rational angle, including political theory. In the history of European culture and perhaps even for humanity as a whole, the emergence of the enlightenment was one of the most divisive turns of events to ever occur, and ultimately one of the most rewarding. The development of modern mathematics was spearheaded by Newton in England and DesCartes in continental Europe, but was inspired by astronomy. Some place the start of the Scientific Revolution was the publication of 'De revolutionibus orbium coelestium' by Nicolaus Copernicus in 1543, while others wish to extend it into the 18th century. What is evident, however, is that a series of new discoveries began with the technology of the Renaissance, was stoked by the revolutionary anti-Catholic movements in northern Europe, and culminated with the 'Age of Reason.' The Polish prelate Nicolaus Copernicus was among the first men to question the nature of the world as classical Greek scholars had defined it. Copernicus developed a comprehensive heliocentric theory of the universe, and worked closely with Rheticus, who developed the science of trigonometry. Until the middle of the sixteenth century no scholar in the Latin West had systematically questioned the system of Claudius Ptolemy (ca. A.D. 100-170) that placed an immobile earth at the center of the universe, with the planets, as well as the moon and the sun, orbiting around it. This theory was backed by the force of the Catholic Church and reflected many presumptions derived...
The Catholic church at the time could not be brought to accept the idea of countless beings on countless planets, because it was antithetical to the idea of a Christian salvation. This belief became popular with religious scholars after Galileo became commonly accepted.Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
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