Reformation Europe in the 16th Cent. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Reformation Europe in the 16th Cent.

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Title: Reformation Europe in the 16th Cent.


1
Reformation Europein the 16th Cent.
  • The implications of a division in Christian Europe

2
  • Given the division between Catholics and the many
    Protestant sects, it was not as easy to control
    dogma. That does not mean that both Catholics
    and Protestants did not have dogma, they did
    moreover, religious toleration was not a feature
    of Reformation Europe. What was important here is
    that the monolithic structure of Christianity was
    destroyed, and that ipso facto allowed for
    greater individual freedom to pursue research in
    areas that challenged the status quo.

3
On the Catholic Church
  • Bear in mind that the Church was not completely
    hostile to science. Consider the work done
    (admittedly to determine the date of Easter) that
    required considerable care and insight, namely
    using cathedrals to measure the sun. The device
    the orb of the sun and the system and how it
    looks .

4
On the protestants
  • Even tho there is a clear movement among the
    educated still small numerically towardadopting
    a new cosmological perspective, consider this
    comment from Luther in one of his Advent sermons
    . . . said, "The heathen write that the comet may
    arise from natural causes, but God creates not
    one that does not foretoken a sure calamity."
    Again he said, "Whatever moves in the heaven in
    an unusual way is certainly a sign of God's
    wrath." What conclusions do you come to?

5
What was different was the following
  • The development of national, secular and
    centralized states whose structure was
    legitimized by the appeal to reason (rather than
    religious belief) idea idea of popular
    sovereignty will not come until the
    Enlightenment.
  • The growth of commerce and trade empowered a
    bourgeoisie that needed education to run its
    affairs, was more comfortable with "scientific /
    rational / empirical thinking secular
    bureaucrats and entrepreneurs rejected excessive
    intrusions of religious belief and the religious
    establishment.

6
The monopoly on knowledge by the priestly caste
was broken
  • Governments found they could legitimize
    themselves by supporting high culture. This led
    to the foundation of academies of science (very
    elitist) and eventually (after the French
    Revolution) to the reorganization of universities
    on a more secular basis.
  • Reinforced by the discovering of Roman law and of
    the scientific treatises (even of the twit
    Aristotle) of the Greco-Roman period. Such
    materials were secular in character and, by
    virtue of their antiquity provided an alternative
    to church authority.

7
Europe did not become "liberal" in our sense of
the word
  • Some areas (predominantly those with maritime and
    commercial establishments) were more receptive to
    new ideas than were others (where agriculture
    dominated and feudalism persisted) scholars
    moved to where they were at least tolerated if
    not valued.
  • Invention of the printing press gave new meaning
    to "open/public, sustained self-conscious
    reflection.

8
Higher Education
  • Universities remained very underfunded and very
    much under the control of clerics, both
    protestant and catholic.
  • Tho there were some exceptions (Padua had both
    Galileo and Vaselius as professors), they
    remained under the control of theologians of all
    faiths.
  • But there was competition.

9
The Jesuits, the Counter-reformation and Academies
  • Science was then supported primarily in the new
    Jesuit stations (like the Collegio Romano and on
    the square. Note the role of Jesuits in education
    between 1550 and 1615. Wherever the Jesuits went
    both in Europe and to the East, they stressed
    education and astronomy. But the end of the17th
    Cent the court astronomer of China was a Jesuit.
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