Title: The Dark Ages
1The Dark Ages
-
- The Period from 500 AD to 1000 AD has
traditionally been called the Dark Ages
- Recent scholarship indicates that the Dark Ages
in Germanic Europe had a period of cultural
revival called The Carolingian Renaissance
beginning in 800AD - The only Roman institution that survived was the
Church and it survived in a weakened form for
centuries
2Life During the Dark Ages
-
- The decline of almost all major cities, e.g.
Vienna, Frankfort, Bath, and Lyons - The decline in the craft areas and the resulting
reduction of middle class citizens - The decline of central government and the
emergence of medieval feudal system - decline of education throughout society. Most
nobles could not read many priests could hardly
write their name. The vast majority were
illiterate. (est. of 98-99 of the population)
3Life During the High Middle Ages 1000 AD to 1300
AD
90 of the people were Peasants a)
Freemen b)Serfs 2-3 of the people were
Nobles 1)Duke 2) Count 3) Marquis 4) Baron 5)
Knight 5 or so were Craftsmen or Shopkeepers a)
Guild members b) semiskilled workers
4The Economic RevivalofThe Cities
1) Increased Trade a) Royal governments could
enforce the peace b) Rising Populations c)
Reappearance of clerical and professional
people d) stable coinage and adoption of Islamic
banking practices 2) a more peaceful
environment a) Church enforced the peace Peace
of God and Truce of God b) The Crusades c) The
Return of Roman Law
5The First Universities in Europe
- First were in Italy Bologna and Salerno
- First were devoted to Law and Medicine
- University of Paris in 1200. Students studied
law, philosophy, and theology - Students came mostly from the Middle Classes or
Poor. The usual time for a bachelors degree was
five years. Examinations were oral and given when
the student thought he was prepared for them.
6Medieval Science
- Introduction of Arabic Numbers and Algebra
- The start of chemistry with alchemical
interests - Geography made progress because of commercial
interests and Muslim maps. - Medicine did not advance beyond the Muslims and
the Greeks. At the first medical school, Salerno,
the first teachers all came from Muslim
countries. - The academic emphasis was on the Arts and
Humanities not the Sciences. All the great
teachers of Middle Ages were professors of
theology, e.g. Abelard, Magnus, and Thomas Aquinas
7What was Reborn in The Renaissance?
- Art that dealt with the lives and acts of
ordinary people as well as the traditional
religious topics. Much art reveals a love of good
looks, fine clothes, beauty and worldly success - The Revival of Classical Learning
- The Renaissance Man the individual who is an
expert on everything, a man of universal
education. - The Idea of a Liberal Education. The return of
the classical curriculum of grammar, rhetoric,
logic, arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, and music
8The Men Who Made The Scientific Revolution
- Copernicus
- A brilliant student, he mastered all the
scientific knowledge of his time medicine, law,
mathematics and astronomy - Using Ockhams Razor, Copernicus wanted a more
elegant explanation than the ptolemaic one. - Published after his death, he proposed his theory
as an hypothesis and not a reality. - One flaw in his hypothesis was his retention of
the idea of perfectly circular motion. -
9The Men Who Made The Scientific Revolution
- Tycho Brahe
- Born into great wealth from the time of his
adulthood he was independently wealthy - Backed by the King of Denmark, Brahe established
an observatory on an island near Copenhagen. - His discovery of a New Star caused a great
controversy since it challenged ancient thinking. - Brahe wanted a system that would combine
Copernicus and Ptolemy. - A new king cut Brahes funding and he moved from
Denmark to Prague where he met Kepler -
10The Men Who Made The Scientific Revolution
- Johannes Kepler
- Born to poor, but noble parents, he wanted a
church career, but his atronomical work brought
him to the attention of Brahe. - Fortunately or unfortunately, Brahe died during
the second year of Keplers employment. - Keplers contribution is his three laws of
planetary motion. (The one you should be most
aware of is his first law that planets move in
elliptical orbits. - Kepler is an important precursor to Newton.
11The Men Who Made The Scientific Revolution
- Galileo
- The leading physicist of his age
- He understood that mathematics is the language of
nature, the language of science. - His astronomical observation overturned Aristotle
and Ptolemy. The heavens are not flawless. - Galileos condemnation by the church had a
chilling affect on science in southern Europe. - Galileos experience with the Inquisition drove
him from astronomy to mechanics .
12The Men Who Made The Scientific Revolution
- Galileo (part 2)
- To a great extent invented the scientific method
of hypothesis, experiment, conclusion - His rejection of Keplers elliptical orbits is
his greatest intellectual error. - His Dialogue on the Two World Systems presented a
debate between supporters of Copernicus and
Ptolemy - Galileo was one of the giants that made the
Newtonian Scientific Revolution possible.
13The Men Who Made The Scientific Revolution
- Descartes
- The Father of Modern Philosophy
- After Descartes, theology is not the dominant
discipline of learning or even philosophy - He established rationalism as the main focus of
French philosophy and consequently European
Philosophy. - His mathematical discoveries made Newtons
achievement possible. He is the second giant. - His philosophy, however, retarded the growth of
French Science.
14History of Physical SciencePhysical Science
105Fall 1999