Science vs. religion 06-19-2017, 02:08 PM
#1
It's no secret that I'm not big on the idea of religion in the sense that I don't subscribe to anything of the sort, but if that's what you choose to believe, so be it, as long as you don't make that decision for other people. That said, I'm a proponent of scientific advancement and exploration, and I like to bring up this anecdote when debating things like this.
A family brought in a prayer book to an auction house in London which had been an heirloom in France for 70 years, to get it appraised and analysed because of some odd Greek script and the occasional diagram that went beyond the margins of the pages. This prayer book was later sold at auction for over $2 million USD, because 9 years of intensive research revealed that the Greek lettering and diagrams belonged to Archimedes, potentially the most brilliant mind from antiquity to the golden age of science.
As it was later discovered, Archimedes wrote not one, but two essays on papyrus over 2,200 years ago: one on the fundamentals of calculus (which wouldn't be rediscovered by mathematicians for several centuries) and one on the concept of infinity (which was more advanced than anyone ever anticipated). This papyrus manuscript was copied to parchment at some intermediate time between the original writing and the following event, probably saving the absolute destruction of the text in the burning of the Library of Alexandria.
Roughly 700 years ago, a monk in an undetermined location needed new parchment for a prayer book. Seemingly without rhyme or reason, he selected the only surviving copy of Archimedes' work off of a shelf, cut the pages in half, rotated them, and scraped the ink off the surface. Forward 600 years, and Johan Ludwig Heiberg, a Danish philologist, discovered it in a library in Constantinople. After bringing it to the attention of the international community, the book was lost again until sold at auction.
My point about Archimedes' lost works, and the burning of Alexandria, for that matter, is I believe that religion impedes progress. How many hundreds of years ahead would we be if calculus had been brought to fruition over 200 years before Isaac Newton, instead of being turned into a smudged prayer book? Or had Alexandria not been razed because Julius Caesar and Emperor Aurelian were pricks, ultimately attributed to religious ideals?
Source: https://www.sciencenews.org/article/prayer-archimedes
A family brought in a prayer book to an auction house in London which had been an heirloom in France for 70 years, to get it appraised and analysed because of some odd Greek script and the occasional diagram that went beyond the margins of the pages. This prayer book was later sold at auction for over $2 million USD, because 9 years of intensive research revealed that the Greek lettering and diagrams belonged to Archimedes, potentially the most brilliant mind from antiquity to the golden age of science.
As it was later discovered, Archimedes wrote not one, but two essays on papyrus over 2,200 years ago: one on the fundamentals of calculus (which wouldn't be rediscovered by mathematicians for several centuries) and one on the concept of infinity (which was more advanced than anyone ever anticipated). This papyrus manuscript was copied to parchment at some intermediate time between the original writing and the following event, probably saving the absolute destruction of the text in the burning of the Library of Alexandria.
Roughly 700 years ago, a monk in an undetermined location needed new parchment for a prayer book. Seemingly without rhyme or reason, he selected the only surviving copy of Archimedes' work off of a shelf, cut the pages in half, rotated them, and scraped the ink off the surface. Forward 600 years, and Johan Ludwig Heiberg, a Danish philologist, discovered it in a library in Constantinople. After bringing it to the attention of the international community, the book was lost again until sold at auction.
My point about Archimedes' lost works, and the burning of Alexandria, for that matter, is I believe that religion impedes progress. How many hundreds of years ahead would we be if calculus had been brought to fruition over 200 years before Isaac Newton, instead of being turned into a smudged prayer book? Or had Alexandria not been razed because Julius Caesar and Emperor Aurelian were pricks, ultimately attributed to religious ideals?
Source: https://www.sciencenews.org/article/prayer-archimedes
It's often the outcasts, the iconoclasts ... those who have the least to lose because they
don't have much in the first place, who feel the new currents and ride them the farthest.
don't have much in the first place, who feel the new currents and ride them the farthest.