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Loading... Flat Earth: The History of an Infamous Ideaby Christine Garwood
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. This is a very important book of intellectual history. It should be read along with James Barr's Fundamentalism and the works of Richard Rorty. This book clearly illustrates that the Protestant sola scripura program is dead. (Not that the authoritarian Roman Catholic program is any more alive.) The quibble that I have with this book is that it seem to imply that there is no logical problem with mainstream Christianity's adherence to the Bible and its loyalty to science. ( )To many this will be a ‘Gosh! Really?’ book as it debunks ‘facts’ we have known all our lives and deconstructs the whole ‘Religion is the Enemy of Science’ hypothesis. The Greeks proved the world was round and in the Dark Ages that remained the general opinion – even St Thomas Aquinas believed the world was a globe, but that all mankind lived on the ‘up side’. It was not until the Victorian Age when some disgruntled scientists with an anti-religious agenda promulgated the myth that until the voyage of Columbus, the world was considered flat. In a weighty, well-researched and very readable tome, Garwood examines these and other delusions no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0312382081, Hardcover)Contrary to popular belief fostered in countless school classrooms the world over, Christopher Columbus did not discover that the earth was round. The idea of a spherical world had been widely accepted in educated circles from as early as the fourth century b.c. Yet, bizarrely, it was not until the supposedly more rational nineteenth century that the notion of a ?at earth really took hold. Even more bizarrely, it persists to this day, despite Apollo missions and widely publicized pictures of the decidedly spherical Earth from space. Based on a range of original sources, Garwood’s history of ?at-Earth beliefs---from the Babylonians to the present day---raises issues central to the history and philosophy of science, its relationship to religion and the making of human knowledge about the natural world. Flat Earth is the ?rst de?nitive study of one of history’s most notorious and persistent ideas, and it evokes all the intellectual, philosophical, and spiritual turmoil of the modern age. Ranging from ancient Greece, through Victorian England, to modern-day America, this is a story that encompasses religion, science, and pseudoscience, as well as a spectacular array of people and places. Where else could eccentric aristocrats, fundamentalist preachers, and conspiracy theorists appear alongside Copernicus, Newton, and NASA, except in an account of such a legendary misconception? Thoroughly enjoyable and illuminating, Flat Earth is social and intellectual history at its best. (retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 22:54:20 -0500) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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