The document discusses the Renaissance period from 1500-1660 AD as an exciting time in the history of science. It notes that in 1543, Copernicus published his theory that the sun, not the Earth, is at the center of the solar system. However, the Catholic Church publicly denounced Copernicus' theory as it disagreed with the accepted model at the time. The document also discusses how early scientists were also philosophers and theologians, and how philosophy and science have long been intertwined.
The document discusses the Renaissance period from 1500-1660 AD as an exciting time in the history of science. It notes that in 1543, Copernicus published his theory that the sun, not the Earth, is at the center of the solar system. However, the Catholic Church publicly denounced Copernicus' theory as it disagreed with the accepted model at the time. The document also discusses how early scientists were also philosophers and theologians, and how philosophy and science have long been intertwined.
The document discusses the Renaissance period from 1500-1660 AD as an exciting time in the history of science. It notes that in 1543, Copernicus published his theory that the sun, not the Earth, is at the center of the solar system. However, the Catholic Church publicly denounced Copernicus' theory as it disagreed with the accepted model at the time. The document also discusses how early scientists were also philosophers and theologians, and how philosophy and science have long been intertwined.
The document discusses the Renaissance period from 1500-1660 AD as an exciting time in the history of science. It notes that in 1543, Copernicus published his theory that the sun, not the Earth, is at the center of the solar system. However, the Catholic Church publicly denounced Copernicus' theory as it disagreed with the accepted model at the time. The document also discusses how early scientists were also philosophers and theologians, and how philosophy and science have long been intertwined.
The 16th and 17th centuries saw major developments in science, including Copernicus proposing the heliocentric model of the solar system and challenging the geocentric Ptolemaic view. Many scientists during this period were also philosophers and theologians, and there was not a clear distinction between the roles.
Copernicus placed the sun at the center of everything and assumed that the planets (including the earth) traveled around the sun, challenging the Ptolemaic geocentric view that placed Earth at the center.
Islamic scholars like Ibn Sina (Avicenna), Ibn al-Haytham, and Al-Biruni built upon Greek scientific processes and methods. Ibn al-Haytham is considered the first to define the modern scientific method, while Al-Biruni was the first to understand the importance of accounting for errors in experimentation.
The Renaissance: The “Golden Age” of
Science (1500 A.D. to 1660 A.D.)
The 16th and 17th centuries (1500 A.D. to 1700 A.D.) were incredibly exciting in the history of science. The excitement took off in 1543, when two very important works were published. The first (and most celebrated today) was published by Nicolaus Copernicus. It was a book that laid out his idea about the earth, sun, planets, and stars. Like Nicholas of Cusa, Copernicus believed that Ptolemy’s view of the universe was wrong.
Rather than placing the earth at the center of everything and
believing that the sun and the planets traveled around the earth, Copernicus placed the sun at the center of everything and assumed that the planets (including the earth) traveled around the sun. This view was called the heliocentric system, because Helios is the Greek god of the sun. Sometimes, however, it is called the Copernican system, in honor of Copernicus. Copernicus had actually completed his studies and written his book nearly 13 years before it was published. However, Copernicus delayed its publication because the Roman Catholic Church disagreed with the heliocentric system. This fact was a little ironic.
Copernicus himself was part of the church’s clergy
and had actually done his work at the request of the pope, who was the head of the Roman Catholic Church! Nevertheless, the Roman Catholic Church publicly denounced Copernicus’ work and put his book on their list of prohibited reading. From the foregoing, it is seen that until the 18th and 19th century, there was no real distinction between scientist and philosopher.
Many of the scientist-philosophers were also
theologians. Johannes Kepler who made observations of the heavenly bodies in the late 1500s desperately wanted to be a Minister. In a particularly revealing letter, he wrote, “I wanted to become a theologian. Science gave philosophy a way of empirically testing theories and concepts while philosophy has helped to develop the scientific method used today.
Philosophy also dictates what areas science
can and cannot test, delineating the boundary between physical and metaphysical questions. These boundaries and the rules governing research have developed over the centuries, and philosophy and science are intertwined. Philosophy is thought to have truly begun under Socrates who is considered the most famous and important philosopher of all time. He developed the socratic method, a general technique for looking at philosophical problems based on definition, analysis and synthesis. Back in Socrates time and up until the scientific revolution in the 17th Century, philosophy and science were often practiced by the same people. Science was called natural philosophy- philosophy about the world. The history and philosophy of science shows the development of the underlying methodology and foundations of the scientific process and shaped science, as we know it today.
Science could not exist without philosophy,
and even the experiments underway in the Large Hadron Collider owe homage to Aristotle, Bacon and Kuhn. Beginnings - Aristotle's Empiricism vs Plato's Forms The history and philosophy of science, certainly in the Western world, begins with the philosophers of Ancient Greece.
Whilst many other philosophers contributed
to the very beginning of the scientific process, the genesis of science began with the contrast between Platonism and Aristotleism. Plato (428 BC - 348 BC) had the belief, that humanity was born with an innate knowledge of everything, and that learning was a process of unlocking the memories.
His argument was that everything had a
perfect potential abstract form, and that any knowledge gained through observation and experiment was filtered by the senses. Empirical knowledge, according to Plato, was mere opinion. Therefore, he reasoned, that pure knowledge could be advanced by deduction alone. Aristotle (384 - 322 BCE), by contrast, believed that Plato had everything the wrong way around, and that knowledge could only be gained by comparing it with what was already known and perceived.
For example, Plato's famous idealized
Republic required a perfect Philosopher King to rule it, with wisdom and benevolence. He argued that because such a perfect human being could exist, therefore such a king would be possible to find. Aristotle countered this concept by stating that because he had never seen or heard of such a human in recorded history, then it was an impossible concept. He believed that inductive reasoning was required to establish some basic premises before scientific demonstrations.
Between the two schools of thought, the idea
of deductive reasoning emerged, which has remained a cornerstone of the scientific method. This idea remained a common theme throughout the history and the philosophy of science. Aristotle used the term 'first principles' to illustrate his belief that gathering knowledge was a process of gaining experience, building upon what is already known to be true.
Even in the modern world, each scientific field
has its own unique first principles upon which research is built, postulates that cannot be deduced and act as a foundation. Aristotle still used deduction for building up his view of the universe, believing that every phenomenon could be explained through reason, as long as the first principles were sound. The split is why Aristotle is referred to as the Father of Science and Plato as the Father of Philosophy, with Aristotle credited as the initiator of the scientific method.
Throughout history, science has built slowly
upon knowledge of what is already known, measuring phenomena and trying to uncover the rules governing them. In this way, humanity undergoes a gradual accumulation of knowledge. Aristotle believed in observational science, and performed many measurements and observations, including describing the hydrological cycle and undertaking taxonomic work, separating many animals into families according to shared characteristics.
It will be wrong to say that Plato has no place in
science; for example, physicists generating beautiful and elegant mathematical theories to explain the cosmos are far closer to Plato than Aristotle. They generate theories and empirical scientists follow behind, attempting to prove or disprove them. The Romans were the next to take the burgeoning science, developing the scientific method of the Greeks.
The Romans, as their architecture and engineering
shows, were far more interested in the empirical applied side of science, using mathematics and practical knowledge to create some great technological advances. They did not, however, have too much of a contribution to the philosophical side, simply building upon the methods used by Aristotle and Ptolemy.
Their contribution to practical science was immense, but
they had a minimal effect upon the history of the philosophy of science, leaving the field largely devoid of momentum for hundreds of years. The Islamic Contribution to the History of the Philosophy of Science The Islamic world took up the baton and preserved the philosophical knowledge of the Ancient Greek philosophers, adding to it techniques and philosophies learned from the Vedics in India.
Whilst there were many Islamic scholars
generating and developing ideas, a few of the names became enshrined within the history and philosophy of science. The great scientist and polymath, Ibn-Sina (980 - 1037), also known as Avicenna, built upon the scientific processes postulated by Aristotle, but was one of the first philosophers to bring the metaphysical issue of God into the picture. He believed that general and universal questions were the first stage, and experiments uncovered the truth.
Ibn al-Haytham is commonly regarded as the first
scholar to define the modern scientific method, laying down the steps of the scientific process and attempting to unite the induction of predictions and generalizations with the deduction of experiments. He also pointed out that scientists should not regard themselves as infallible, and that they should be open to criticism.
The other great contributor to the history and
the philosophy of science during the Islamic Golden Age was Al-Biruni, who was the first philosopher to understand the importance of errors within scientific experimentation. He understood that any experiment would contain small and random fluctuations, and that repeated experimentation was the only way to neutralize these inaccuracies.