This is actually similar to the medieval Catholic church’s position on astrology, at least if you understand “scientific” to mean “what passed for scientific during the middle ages”.
It would amuse me if there was a sizable population that thought astrology was scientific and rejected it on that basis because they don’t trust science.
This is actually similar to the medieval Catholic church’s position on astrology, at least if you understand “scientific” to mean “what passed for scientific during the middle ages”.
What evidence are you aware of that the Church condemned those particular propositions for being “science” (natural philosophy), rather than for being “errors” (falsehoods)?
What evidence are you aware of that the Church condemned those particular propositions for being “science” (natural philosophy), rather than for being “errors” (falsehoods)?
My point was that the church considered the evidence for the propositions suspect since it was merely “science” (natural philosophy).
This reminds me of an old priest who pointed out that people who don’t believe in God tend to believe in astrology and other superstitions, and said that was because “people have to believe in something or another”. However weird that might look now, I still think that among the demographics he was familiar with (people growing up in a smallish town in Italy in the early 20th century) his observation (about the correlation, not about its cause) was likely not wrong.
I wonder if it ever crossed his mind that “What I believe is equivalent to astrology and other superstitions.” Did he just think he was lucky to have slotted the truth into his belief-hole?
This is actually similar to the medieval Catholic church’s position on astrology, at least if you understand “scientific” to mean “what passed for scientific during the middle ages”.
TheOtherDave:
Eugine_Nier:
What evidence are you aware of that the Church condemned those particular propositions for being “science” (natural philosophy), rather than for being “errors” (falsehoods)?
My point was that the church considered the evidence for the propositions suspect since it was merely “science” (natural philosophy).
I’m pretty sure I understood your point. I was asking for some reasons to think your point is true.
This reminds me of an old priest who pointed out that people who don’t believe in God tend to believe in astrology and other superstitions, and said that was because “people have to believe in something or another”. However weird that might look now, I still think that among the demographics he was familiar with (people growing up in a smallish town in Italy in the early 20th century) his observation (about the correlation, not about its cause) was likely not wrong.
I wonder if it ever crossed his mind that “What I believe is equivalent to astrology and other superstitions.” Did he just think he was lucky to have slotted the truth into his belief-hole?