S
sapr333
Guest
not sure about this one happy. also this jogged me to reply to some other posts here, with reference to galileo, one of my heroes.
to the best of my knowledge, and from what has been widely documented, galileo escaped the inquisition, by rescinding his theories of heliocentric solar system, and publicly conforming the the official catholic doctrine of that time - re geocentric system.
galileo had friends in the high places of the italian city states, who shielded him from the charges of heresy by the inquisition, but for the price of his, he silenced himself.
except on his deathbed, after receiving the extreme unction at his death bed, he is said to have whispered 'but the earth still revolves around the sun'
copernicus, in poland, and kepler in germany, were too far away from the clutches of the inquisition and hence maintained their dignity.
infact, most of ancient greek and roman thoughts were burnt by the medieval catholic church. what was left, was in the old library of alexandria, and was preserved by muslim arabs
the western world rediscovered those texts during and after reformation, and over the past few centuries claimed to be inheritors of graeco-roman civilization.
i have always wondered, why the arabs did not build upon the knowledge of aristotle or ptolemy, for after all they were physically closer to those folks than those in western europe. i forget the name of the englishman who brought this hope... for he was wondering this topic in the context, that had the arabs furthered their learning, the shires of oxford and cambridge would have been topped by the cresecent and not the cross. one of history's unanswered 'what if's
Shri.Kunjuppu, I perfectly buy your point..esp, the last paragraph..
Thats why I quote here often IBN, a greatest Islamic Arabic philosopher.theologian, who's writing 'On Quest for God'were once burnt and made an outcast, later only to be copied by the Catholic Church,to an extend baptising him from Ibn to Avvero..