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1.
Stud Hist Philos Sci ; 105: 74-84, 2024 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38754360

RESUMEN

This paper takes its cue from an unpublished manuscript by the Victorian polymath William Stanley Jevons (1835-1882). I elucidate how he attempted to integrate science and religion through natural theology. I argue that Jevons's manuscript shows that he took the theory of probability to be the most appropriate tool for finding evidence of divine design in natural phenomena. Jevons thus took part in the nineteenth-century natural theology debate, specifically between William Whewell and Charles Babbage. This debate was about both how to interpret the analogy between natural and human contrivances, and about the tools which should be used in natural theology. After introducing the manuscript, I present Jevons's religious ideas about Unitarianism and the relationship between chance and design in his writings. I show Jevons's commitment to natural theology and his idea that humans, due to their finite intellect, should use the theory of probability to investigate divine providence. I then compare Jevons's position to Whewell's and Babbage's Bridgewater Treatises. I show how they had different conceptions of natural theology compared to Jevons, and different ideas about the tools that should be used to investigate natural laws.


Asunto(s)
Teología , Historia del Siglo XIX , Teología/historia , Religión y Ciencia , Probabilidad
2.
Ann Sci ; 77(4): 524-548, 2020 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32845817

RESUMEN

One of the most influential imagined histories of science of the nineteenth century was John Tyndall's Belfast Address of 1874. In that address, Tyndall presented a sweeping history of science that focused on the attempt to understand the material nature of life. While the address has garnered attention for its discussion of the conflict at the centre of this history, namely between science and theology, less has been said about how Tyndall's history culminated with a discussion of the evolutionary researches of Charles Darwin. Tyndall presented Darwin as a revolutionary scientific practitioner, whose virtues of patience, self-denial, and observation led him to his epochal theory of evolution and thus justified the extension of science into realms previously under the purview of theology. Tyndall was criticized at the time for his 'vulgar admiration' of a man of science who was still very much alive, and who could not possibly live up to such 'fulsome adulation'. What such critics failed to realize, however, is that Tyndall had historicized the living Darwin within the context of his own philosophy of history that he cultivated years before, a philosophy that integrated the moral lives of heroic individuals within a progressive history of science itself.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Biología/historia , Historiografía , Filosofía/historia , Teología/historia , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia Natural/historia
3.
Ambix ; 67(1): 88-99, 2020 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32090708

RESUMEN

Paracelsus was not only a reformer of medicine with a preference for medical alchemy, but also emerged as a radical church reformer. However, he only rarely used the imagery of alchemy as a parable for theological salvation. Fire as the driving force for every alchemical process was also suitable as an image for the purification of souls. A central idea of alchemy, to transfer a substance from its still impure original state into the purified final state, was very much in line with Paracelsus's doctrine of the Last Supper, according to which the mortal human who had descended from Adam is to be brought to a new birth through baptism with the Holy Spirit. As an alchemist, Paracelsus was keenly interested in the transfiguration of Christ, which he first explained alchemically, but later magically, probably according to the model of Giovanni Pico della Mirandola.


Asunto(s)
Alquimia , Filosofía Médica/historia , Teología/historia , Historia del Siglo XVI , Religión y Medicina
4.
Med Sci (Paris) ; 36(1): 63-68, 2020 Jan.
Artículo en Francés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32014100

RESUMEN

Our knowledge of the young Mendel's life prior to his admission to the monastery comes essentially from the curriculum vitae submitted in 1850. His first biographer Hugo Iltis used this document as a sort of autobiography, although the document contained various voluntary omissions and inaccuracies. We have sought the reasons for these and in so doing have discovered why Mendel's entry into religion had become ineluctable.


TITLE: Gregor Mendel fut-il soumis à la corvée avant de devenir moine en 1843 ? ABSTRACT: Après avoir suivi brillamment deux ans de cours préparatoires à la formation universitaire qui devait le mener au professorat, Gregor Mendel entre subitement dans un monastère augustin en 1843. A-t-il renoncé à son projet professoral pour devenir prêtre ou a-t-il seulement repoussé ce projet ? Afin de déterminer les raisons de son comportement, nous étudions dans cet article ses années de formation secondaire, en complétant et en corrigeant les données d'un curriculum vitae rédigé par lui-même en avril 1850, pour le joindre à une demande d'habilitation à l'enseignement secondaire.


Asunto(s)
Docentes/historia , Monjes/historia , Clase Social/historia , Teología , Trabajo , República Checa , Docentes/educación , Historia del Siglo XIX , Humanos , Filosofía/historia , Impuestos , Formación del Profesorado/historia , Teología/educación , Teología/historia , Trabajo/economía , Trabajo/historia
5.
Med Humanit ; 46(3): 299-310, 2020 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31350305

RESUMEN

Whether physician-assisted dying should be legalised is a major debate in medical ethics and much has been written on it from both secular and religious perspectives. Less, however, has been written on one of the potential consequences of legalised physician-assisted death: whether those who undergo this procedure will be given funerals by religious groups who oppose the practice. This article investigates the Catholic Church's attitude to the burial of suicides, and how Catholic canon law has approached the question of ecclesiastic funerals for suicides throughout its history. From the sixth through the late 20th century, the Church technically did not bury anyone who willfully committed suicide. Broad shifts in the cultural attitude towards suicide, due in large part to new understandings of mental illness as disease, had a powerful effect on Catholic thought and practice in modernity, and the Church eventually dropped the ban on funerals for suicides from its law code altogether in the 1980s. The legalisation of physician-assisted death, however, raises again the possibility of a prohibition on funerals. The Church was able to drop its restrictions on funerals since suicide was seen as an act beyond the control of the deceased and thus worthy of mercy and compassion. In cases of physician-assisted dying, the patient must have consciously and willingly agreed to the procedure, undermining this understanding of suicide. The history of canon law on suicide funerals reveals the complexity of the Catholic attitude towards suicide and provides an important context to the current debate around physician-assisted death, and conflicts between medicine and religion more broadly.


Asunto(s)
Actitud Frente a la Muerte , Entierro , Catolicismo/psicología , Suicidio Asistido/psicología , Suicidio/psicología , Catolicismo/historia , Disentimientos y Disputas/historia , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Humanos , Suicidio/historia , Teología/historia
6.
J Med Biogr ; 28(2): 75-82, 2020 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30165759

RESUMEN

Sir Charles Bell, a 19th century surgeon, anatomist and artist, was heavily influenced by the religious practice of Natural Theology, a belief which implied that the world is created by an Intelligent Designer. In the 18th century, William Paley, later Rector of Bishop Wearmouth, wrote the seminal book about Natural Theology. Charles Bell who practised in London and Edinburgh used his artistic skills to underline his teaching of anatomy and surgery. Later, Bell wrote one of the eight Bridgewater Treatises on the Hand. Bell went on to illustrate the final edition of Paley's Natural Theology in which he demonstrated that proof of Design were to be found in the animal frame, reflecting his earlier work on art and human structure. It is concluded that Charles Bell and William Paley's ideals were in harmony with each other, holding the same belief about Creation. This paper argues that Bell's understanding and devotion to Natural Theology allowed him to accurately explain function, realism and expression in the human body, all revealing the direct influence of the Divine Creator.


Asunto(s)
Anatomistas/historia , Arte/historia , Cirujanos/historia , Teología/historia , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Londres , Escocia
8.
Uisahak ; 28(1): 239-290, 2019 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31092808

RESUMEN

In their embryology, Aristotle and Galen greatly disagreed on the role of human derived materials like menstrual blood and vaginal secretion (called by them female sperm or semen). This gap made those two ancients also disagree on their understanding of mother's role in the generation of the human body in her womb. During the Middle Ages, especially during the thirteenth century, the scholastics drew on those two ancient thoughts for some rational underpinnings of their philosophical and theological doctrines. However, the manners of adoption and assimilation were varied. For example, Albert the Great strived to reconcile the two in the image of Avicenna, one of the main and the most important sources of Galenist medicine in the thirteenth Century. By contrast, those scholastics who played an important role in the controversy over plurality/unicity of the substantial form, drew on their disagreements. For example, pluralists like Bonaventure, William of la Mare, and Duns Scotus appealed to Galenist medical perspective to underpin their positions and paved ways to decorate Virgin Mary's motherhood and her active contribution to the Virgin birth and to the manhood of her Holy Son. in contrast a unicist like Thomas Aquinas advanced his theory in line with Aristotelian model that Mary's role in her Son's birth and manhood was passive and material. Giles, another unicist, while repudiating Galenist embryology with the support of Averroes's medical work called Colliget, alluded to some theologically crucial impieties with which might be associated some pluralists' Mariology based on the Roman physician's model. In this processus historiae, we can see not only the intertwining of medieval medicine, philosophy, and theology, but some critical moments where medicine provided, side by side with philosophy, natural settings and explanations for religious marvels or miracles such as the Virgin birth, the motherhood of Mary, the manhood of Christ, etc. Likewise, we can observe two medieval maxims coincide and resonate: "philosophia ancilla theologiae" and "philosophia et medicina duae sorores sunt."


Asunto(s)
Embriología/historia , Filosofía/historia , Teología/historia , Historia de la Medicina , Historia Antigua , Historia Medieval
9.
PLoS One ; 14(2): e0201424, 2019.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30794540

RESUMEN

The reliquary of Jacques de Vitry, a prominent clergyman and theologian in the early 13th century, has experienced several transfers over the last centuries, which seriously question the attribution of the remains to the late Cardinal. Uncertainty about the year of his birth poses an additional question regarding his age at death in 1240. The reliquary, located in the Saint Marie d'Oigines church, Belgium, was reopened in 2015 for an interdisciplinary study around his relics as well as the Treasure of Oignies, a remarkable cultural heritage notably built from Jacques de Vitry's donation. Anthropological, isotopic and genetic analyses were performed independently on the remains found in the reliquary. Results of the analyses provided evidence that the likelihood that these remains are those of Jacques de Vitry is very high: the remains belong to the same human male individual and the historical tradition about his age is confirmed. In addition, a separate relic (left tibia) was analysed and found to match with the remains of the reliquary (right tibia). The unique Jacques de Vitry's mitre, made of parchment, was sampled non-destructively and the extracted parchment collagen was analysed by a proteomic method in order to determine the animal species. The results showed that, surprisingly, not all parts of the mitre were made from the same species. All together, these findings are expected to fertilize knowledge carried by historical tradition around the relics of Jacques de Vitry and his related cultural heritage.


Asunto(s)
Autopsia/métodos , Clero , Proteómica/métodos , Religión y Ciencia , Teología/historia , Animales , Antropología Cultural , Bélgica , Cromosomas Humanos Y/genética , Clero/historia , Pruebas Genéticas , Historia Medieval , Humanos , Estudios Interdisciplinarios , Masculino , Datación Radiométrica
10.
Ann Sci ; 76(3-4): 267-302, 2019.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31987012

RESUMEN

Following Galileo's trial of 1633, the Jesuit theologian Melchior Inchofer, author of the most negative reports used by the Roman Inquisition against Galileo, repudiated the Copernicans for the 'heresy' of the soul of the world (anima mundi), in an unpublished manuscript. I show that Inchofer's arguments applied far more to the beliefs of Giordano Bruno than to those of Galileo. Since antiquity, various Christian authorities had repudiated several beliefs about the anima mundi as 'heretical', hence I review their critiques against Pythagoras, Origen, and Peter Abelard, for allegedly asserting animistic beliefs about the Earth, or a universal spirit, or that souls move the heavenly bodies. Still, in the Renaissance such beliefs were defended by several advocates of Copernicus, including Bruno, William Gilbert, Johannes Kepler, and Philips Lansbergen, who all claimed that Earth moves because it has a soul. By comparing Inchofer's works and some of the Roman Inquisition's earlier censures against Bruno, I argue that the repudiation by many prominent Catholic theologians of pagan notions of the anima mundi as heretical contributed partly to the later theological opposition to the Copernicans.


Asunto(s)
Fenómenos Astronómicos , Catolicismo/historia , Planeta Tierra , Religión y Ciencia , Teología/historia , Europa (Continente) , Historia del Siglo XVI , Historia del Siglo XVII
11.
Prog Brain Res ; 243: 3-22, 2018.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30514529

RESUMEN

Ventricular localization, or cell theory, is first attested in Christian texts of the fourth and fifth centuries CE. It remained dominant in learned medicine until the seventeenth century. Contrary to common representation, the earliest theorists of ventricular localization were not trying to displace the faculties of the rational soul from the substance of the brain to the empty spaces and spirit within. Rather, they considered the substance and structure of the brain vital to the operations of the soul. Late antique accounts of ventricular localization envision the ventricles as "instruments" of the soul. These instruments are best imagined through the ancient figure of the lyre, as hollow structures that resonate with the passage of air and the movement of strings, or nerves.


Asunto(s)
Encéfalo/fisiología , Ventrículos Cerebrales/fisiología , Filosofía Médica/historia , Teología/historia , Animales , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagen , Historia Antigua , Humanos
12.
Hist Psychiatry ; 29(4): 409-423, 2018 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30028219

RESUMEN

In their commentaries on the Sentences, Richard of Middleton, John Duns Scotus, William Ockham and Gabriel Biel reflect whether mentally-disturbed people can receive the sacraments (Baptism, Eucharist, confession, marriage) and fulfil juridical actions (make a will or take an oath). They consider that the main problem in 'madmen' in relation to the sacraments and legal actions is their lack of the use of reason. Scotus and Ockham especially are interested in the causes of mental disorders and the phenomena which happen in madmen's minds and bodies. In considering mental disorders mostly as naturally caused psycho-physical phenomena, Scotus and Ockham join the rationalistic mental disorder tradition, which was to become dominant in the early modern era and later.


Asunto(s)
Cristianismo/historia , Trastornos Mentales/historia , Enfermos Mentales/historia , Teología/historia , Historia Medieval , Humanos , Enfermos Mentales/legislación & jurisprudencia
13.
Hist Psychiatry ; 29(2): 165-186, 2018 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29300104

RESUMEN

No matter from which perspective Witelo, Oresme and Gerson approach mental disorders, they think that madness usually has a bodily, such as a humoral or organic, origin. They do, however, consider divine or demonic causes as possibly being behind immediate causes. According to Witelo and the Parisians, because of a change in the body, madmen's sensory fantasy is disturbed and in this situation their intellect does not act normally, and their will lacks freedom. It is important to realize that, according to the medieval writers, mentally-disordered people have not lost any parts of their soul or their basic potencies. If this were the case, they would not be human beings by definition.


Asunto(s)
Trastornos Mentales/historia , Filosofía/historia , Teología/historia , Historia Medieval , Humanos
14.
J Relig Health ; 56(1): 47-54, 2017 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26077450

RESUMEN

This paper is an attempt to provide its readers/listeners the views of Taha Jabir Al-'Alwani on Ethics of Disagreement in Islam. Taha Jabir Al-'Alwani is one of the renowned scholars and reformists of the contemporary Muslim world. He presented in terms of views on the ethics of disagreement in Islam, an explanation of the etiquette envisioned by Islam for all those engaged in discourse and intellectual dialogue, and he also exposes a higher number of principles and purposes of the Shariah which provide Muslims with perspectives far vaster than those afforded by pedantic debate over points of law and procedure or fine distinctions between conflicting theological arguments. Above all, he analyzes that what today is going in the world is totally a contrast trend to the teachings of Qur'an and Sunnah. After stressing the paramount duty of affirming the oneness of Allah (Tawhid), both the Qur'an and the Sunnah stress on one thing above all: the unity of Muslim Ummah.


Asunto(s)
Ética/historia , Islamismo/historia , Teología/historia , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Irak , Masculino , Estados Unidos
15.
Ann Sci ; 74(1): 64-82, 2017 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27800706

RESUMEN

Edwin Grant Conklin, renowned US embryologist and evolutionary popularizer, publicly advocated a social vision of evolution that intertwined science and modernist Protestant theology in the early 1920s. The moral prestige of professional science in American culture - along with Conklin's own elite scientific status - diverted attention from the frequency with which his work crossed boundaries between natural science, religion and philosophy. Writing for broad audiences, Conklin was one of the most significant of the religious and modernist biological scientists whose rhetoric went well beyond simply claiming that certain kinds of religion were amenable to evolutionary science; he instead incorporated religion itself into evolution's broadest workings. A sampling of Conklin's widely-resonant discourse suggests that there was substantially more to the religion-evolution story in the 1920s US than many creationist-centred narratives of the era imply.


Asunto(s)
Biología/historia , Filosofía/historia , Religión y Ciencia , Teología/historia , Evolución Biológica , Cristianismo , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Estados Unidos
16.
Nuncius ; 31(1): 11-31, 2016.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27071298

RESUMEN

This paper, which presents first results of a wider book project, will reconstruct the influence of the so-called 'radical wing' of the Reformation, above all Anabaptism, Socinianism, and Antitrinitarism, on the tradition of natural philosophy that had established itself in particular in Veneto through the works of Pietro Pomponazzi, Agostino Nifo, and Giacomo Zabarella. Italian physicians and foreign students at the University of Padua developed theories that anticipated many scientific innovations of the 17th century (especially with regard to blood circulation). Often they were forced into exile, persecuted by the Inquisition and by political authorities of Protestant territories. In my article, I would like to give an overview of the education and European peregrinations of some of these heterodox physicians, in whose work medical, theological, and philosophical theory, religious dissent, conversion, and exile were remarkably entangled. I will focus on their international correspondence networks and on their relationship with political and religious authorities, with diplomats and with physicians from other confessions.


Asunto(s)
Historia de la Medicina , Filosofía/historia , Médicos/historia , Ciencia/historia , Teología/historia , Historia del Siglo XVI , Italia , Universidades/historia
17.
Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci ; 58: 24-32, 2016 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26775028

RESUMEN

We can trace the "evolutionary epic" (named by E. O. Wilson, 1978) back to earlier writers, beginning with Robert Chambers (1844). Its basic elements are: fixation on seeing human history as rooted in biology; an aspiration toward telling the whole history of humankind (in its essential features); and insistence on the overall coherence of the projected narrative. The claim to coherence depends on assuming either that the universe possesses an "embedded rationality," or that it is guided by divine purpose. This article proposes the term "idealism" to refer to these two assumptions taken together, for in practice they were closely linked. Nietzsche (1881) was perhaps the first thinker to point out the evolutionary epic's dependence on such an idealism, and he also pointed out that the assumptions of embedded rationality and of divine purpose are closely connected. Darwin's theory of descent with modification (1859) was sharply inconsistent with these assumptions: he was not an "idealist" in the sense indicated here, and not a proponent of the evolutionary epic. Proclaiming his "materialism," Wilson (1978) failed to acknowledge that the epic depends on idealist assumptions; other adherents of the genre (M. Dowd, L. Rue) resurrect (knowingly or not) its theological roots.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Teología/historia , Animales , Europa (Continente) , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Filosofía/historia , Religión y Ciencia , Estados Unidos
18.
Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci ; 58: 56-63, 2016 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26762897

RESUMEN

Many profess faith in the universal rule of deterministic law. I urge remaining agnostic, putting into nature only what we need to account for what we know to be the case: order where, and to the extent that, we see it. Powers and mechanisms can do that job. Embracing contingency and deriving order from powers and mechanisms reduces three kinds of problems: ontological, theological, and epistemological. Ontologically, there is no puzzle about why models from various branches of natural and social science, daily life, and engineering serve us in good stead if all that's happening is physics laws playing themselves out. Also, when universal laws are replaced with a power/mechanism ontology, nothing is set irredeemably by the Big Bang or at some hyper-surface in space-time. What happens can depend on how we arrange things to exploit the powers of their parts. That may be put to significant theological advantage. The epistemological problem comes from philosopher of physics, Erhard Scheibe. Given what we take physics to teach about the universality of interaction, there is just one very large object - the entire universe - to be governed by laws of nature. How then do we ever learn those laws?


Asunto(s)
Naturaleza , Filosofía , Animales , Evolución Biológica , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Conocimiento , Filosofía/historia , Ciencia/historia , Teología/historia
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