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Does Modern Science owe a debt to the Bible?
Stephen Snobelen, Assistant Professor of History of Science and Technology,
University of King’s College, Halifax, Canada
"Here is a final paradox. Recent work on early modern science has demonstrated a direct (and positive) relationship between the resurgence of the Hebraic, literal exegesis of the Bible in the Protestant Reformation, and the rise of the empirical method in modern science. I’m not referring to wooden literalism, but the sophisticated literal-historical hermeneutics that Martin Luther and others (including Newton) championed. It was, in part, when this method was transferred to science, when students of nature moved on from studying nature as symbols, allegories and metaphors to observing nature directly in an inductive and empirical way, that modern science was born. In this, Newton also played a pivotal role. As strange as it may sound, science will forever be in the debt of millenarians and biblical literalists."
qx - and your qualifications as a science historian are . . .?
Justin - Now that would be the genetic fallacy would it not?
Aggy - True, but I think what those early scientists did deduce from the Bible was the distinction between the physical and the spiritual, the Creator and the Creation. A proper interpretation of the Bible effectively demystified the natural world apart from origins and made it "discoverable."
4 Answers
- ?Lv 79 years agoFavorite Answer
If you read it the debt is to the people who interpreted the Bible not to the Bible itself.
- Anonymous9 years ago
I sort of have to agree with Aggy on this one.
We could also attribute it to those people's devotion to the Bible and their zealous desire to discover the true and undiluted meaning of the Bible...but it *is* sort of a stretch to attribute this to the Bible itself.
- Jim
- Anonymous9 years ago
I'm actually from Halifax and I can assure you King's College sucks