Galileo, Knowledge and Power

i-e82f1ec1f4938cdd9ac9a6a96a9f9aae-galbuzz.jpg

Galileo transformed Western knowledge, but the Catholic Church vehemently opposed his "heretical" heliocentric observations. Inspired by author Thomas Dixon, ScienceBloggers debate whether the Church's beef with Galileo was motivated by political power or by the competing principles of science and religion. On EvolutionBlog, Jason Rosenhouse writes that while the conflict was "played out in the political arena," it was actually ideological in nature since it pitted the Pope's "privileged relationship with God" against science's popular means to knowledge. On The Questionable Authority, Mike Dunford warns that "the Galileo affair was almost irreducibly complex," but adds that when one group tries to impose its worldview on another, it's essentially a political action. Finally, Coturnix goes a step further on A Blog Around The Clock, asserting that "every conflict is a political conflict," and "some conflicts are also superficially about facts about the world." Power dynamics notwithstanding, one thing's for sure: Galileo and his telescope changed the way even Popes look at the heavens.

Links below the fold.

More like this

Does anything strike you as odd about the following sentence: Historians have shown that the Galileo affair, remembered by some as a clash between science and religion, was primarily about the enduring political question of who was authorized to produce and disseminate knowledge. It comes from…
Jason Rosenhouse asks us if we think there's anything wrong with the following sentence, taken from Thomas Dixon's book Science and Religion: A Very Short Introduction: Historians have shown that the Galileo affair, remembered by some as a clash between science and religion, was primarily about…
My post about science/religion disputes has prompted responses from my SciBlings Bora Zivkovic and Mike Dunford (here and here respectively. Since they are among my favorite bloggers, it pains me to have to disagree with them. Alas, disagree I must. I will begin with Bora, since I fear he has…
In a recent post, my SciBling Jason Rosenhouse with whom I usually agree on these matters, voices a strong disagreement with this quote (from Thomas Dixon's book Science and Religion: A Very Short Introduction, published by Oxford University Press in 2008): Historians have shown that the Galileo…