Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
From Magic to Science or The Ancients & The Moderns The Scientific Revolution 16 th and 17 th Centuries
2
How do we explain change? Your car won’t start: what do you do? You get sick: what do you do?
3
Medieval Cosmology Earth is fixed, unchanging, center of universe Heavens surround earth; Moon and stars move in fixed patterns set by God Genesis describes creation Task for people: explain change, I.E., Any deviation from ‘normal’
4
Sources of Medieval World View Bible Scholastic Theology (Aquinas) The ‘Ancients’: –Aristotle –Church Fathers
5
The Medieval Order or The Great Chain of Being God Pope and Kings Priests and Nobles Men Women Children Animals Plants Rocks
6
Explaining Change: Medieval Style God’s intervention: deus ex machina –Storms ruin crops; you get sick: God is angry –Harvest is plentiful; you have lots of children: God is pleased
7
Explaining Change: Medieval Style Magic: some occult force –You don’t have children: you are bewitched –Your house burns down: someone put a curse on you –You get sick: your enemy is a witch
8
Scientific Revolution brings a new way of thinking about the world around us and our relationship to the world.
9
Structure of Scientific Revolution People start asking questions and make discoveries which raise problems for the existing world view. As more and more discoveries challenge the accepted cosmology, more people ask more questions. Finally, someone synthesizes all the pieces into a new world view. See Thomas Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions.
10
16 th & 17 th Century Questioners Methodology: –Francis Bacon (1561-1626): Observe & Experiment Develop Hypothesis Test: More Observation & Experiments –William Harvey (1578-1657) Anatomical Studies demonstrate circulation of blood
11
Challenges to the Old Cosmology Reliance on Observation Causes Trouble: –Galileo (Italian, 1564-1642) Observations confirmed heliocentric universe Arrested and ordered to recant What’s the problem?
12
A New Philosophy Descartes (French, 1596-1650) –Radical Doubt –“Cogito, ergo sum”:“I think, therefore I am.” –Impact of this insight?
13
New Understanding of Human Mind John Locke, English, 1632-1704 Essay Concerning Human Understanding Human Mind is a tabula rasa at birth We learn by experience Impact of this concept?
14
By 1690: New Method: Scientific Method Trust in Sense Knowledge Heliocentric Cosmology New Philosophy New Understanding of Human Body New Understanding of Human Mind
15
Synthesis: Isaac Newton English, 1642-1727 Mathematician and Alchemist Principia Solved the problem of motion: World is not static but constantly in motion! Describes gravity Impact?
16
Newton’s World: A giant machine whose parts work together God: the maker of the machine
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.