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#1 |
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Master Poster
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: On the corner of WALK and DON'T WALK
Posts: 2,000
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Ancient writings saved by early Christians?
At first glance, the manuscript appears to be a medieval Christian prayer book.
But on the same pages as the prayers, experts using a high-tech imaging system have discovered commentary likely written in the third century A.D. on a work written around 350 B.C. by the Greek philosopher Aristotle. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/n...otle-book.html I wonder if we would have these ancient writings if the Christian prayer book had not been written over them? I'm gonna guess no. Just because I figure MANY similar books that were not written over have vanished. Interesting that we have the tech know how to recover those writings! |
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#2 |
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Master Poster
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: Tucson, Arizona
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#3 |
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Master Poster
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: On the corner of WALK and DON'T WALK
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I think that goes without saying. (but glad you said it
)We know early Christians took over many worship places of "pagan" sects, and put their artifacts on top of, or in place of the earlier ones. And destroyed writings and what have you from other religions. But, do you think, in this case, the Christians did us a favor by overwriting the ancient text? I'm thinking yes. Now, I don't mean to imply they intended to do us a favor! Just that it worked out that way despite them
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#4 |
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Anti-homeopathy illuminati member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: UK
Posts: 26,555
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Doubtful. "Pagan" texts were not a significant ammount of those lost. Most of the suff that was lost was due to highly secular forces. if the general population can't read they are not going to look after any books. The church had a fair number of people who could read and while their preservation efforts were patchy they did a better job than anyone else in europe.
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#5 |
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Sarcastic Conqueror of Notions
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: A floating island above the clouds
Posts: 23,835
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And the worst of all was the guy who destroyed the Great Library at Alexandria, with god knows how many tens of thousands of ancient scrolls, was later made a saint by the Pope.
As far as preserving ancient cultures goes, it makes what the Taliban in Afghanistan did to those old statues pale to vanishing insignificance. I'm sure a detailed description of proto Christianity and proto Judaism existed in there, giving a complete taxonomy of the evolution of it all as it evolved from various other relgions in the region. But even if that wasn't there, it would still be invaluable for many other reasons, most of which we'll never know.
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![]() Erasing vs. destruction, I'll take erasing. Modern tech waves away the erasing with no problem. |
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"Great innovations should not be forced [by way of] slender majorities." - Thomas Jefferson The government should nationalize it! Socialized, single-payer video game development and sales now! More, cheaper, better games, right? Right? |
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#6 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Jul 2002
Posts: 4,940
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I'd have to agree generally here. As far as the preservation of ancient writings, Christianity seems to have had a net favorable impact. Without the monastic scriptoria, the universities and so forth, only a fraction of the known texts would likely have survived at all. In most cases, the earliest extant classical MSS are medieval copies. And some ancient works are known only from quotation in early Christian commentaries. Even for texts obviously inconsistent with - or even antipathetic toward - Christian belief (Celsus is a good example), the overall Christian tendency seems to have run more to preservation and analysis than to destruction.
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#8 |
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Master Poster
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#9 |
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Master Poster
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#10 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Jul 2002
Posts: 4,940
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Let's not forget that while the works on the recycled pages were by pagan authors, what was being recycled was older copies of those pagan texts made by Byzantine Christian scribes, probably not unlike the fellow who ended up recycling them a couple of centuries later. The real favor the Christians did us in this instance - and it was hardly inadvertent - was copying the pagan works down in the first place. If they hadn't made the copies, the works would have been lost for good long before the palimpsest had a chance to be made in the 13th century - so let's give credit where credit is due.
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#11 |
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Master Poster
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#12 |
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Master Poster
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: On the corner of WALK and DON'T WALK
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I suspect most of this is true, but I can't say that with authority.
We are however pretty sure that not everything passed down from the Christian Scribes was passed down with complete accuracy. Most scholars agree that what we have now for Josephus' Antiquities have at least some Christian modifications in the area of the The Testimonium Flavianum for an example. |
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#13 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Jul 2002
Posts: 4,940
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Speaking broadly, I daresay the answer is that they did it for the same basic reasons medieval monks and lay Christian scholars copied the available ancient Latin and Greek texts (literary, scientific, philosophical, theological, etc.) all over Europe. These were people who cherished knowledge and learning, and who couldn't just pop round to W.H. Smith's to buy a replacement when the library's edition of Archimedes started to get a bit dog-eared. More specifically, the Archimedes Palimpsest Project website indicates that the scavenged Archimedes manuscript (as opposed to the prayer book written on top of it) dates from the 10th century and was almost certainly written at Constantinople, which at the time was the pre-eminent center of Archimedes scholarship:
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You didn't think that the parchments themselves had been made and written on by ancient pagans, did you? Of course they were medieval copies of ancient works. The oldest existing versions of most ancient works are medieval, in fact. |
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#14 |
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Master Poster
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#15 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: The realm of ideas
Posts: 3,881
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Quote:
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__________________
"Help control the local pet population: teach your dog abstinence." -Stephen Colbert "My dad believed laughter is the best medicine. Which is why several of us died of tuberculosis."- Unknown source, heard from Grey Delisle on Rob Paulsen's podcast |
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#16 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Vancouver BC Canada
Posts: 5,966
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The Library had been destroyed many times by Hypatia's era. By then, it was a shadow of its original glory.
Recall that Julius Caesar is also accused of setting fire the library in an attempt to get out of a sige by the Egyptian monarchy. I believe that would have been around 48BCE. 47? That was one of the big discoveries by Gibbon that interplayed with the Enlightenment: the Romans were not the epitome of civilization. And not everything bad that had happened in the late classical era since Caesar was the fault of the Roman monarchy, barbarians, or Christian theocracy. Ordinary Romans had destroyed and disassembled Rome, its buildings, books, and other treasures, fighting in 1,000 years of petty theft and clan warfare. |
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"Sometimes it's better to light a flamethrower than curse the darkness." - Terry Pratchett |
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#17 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: The realm of ideas
Posts: 3,881
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__________________
"Help control the local pet population: teach your dog abstinence." -Stephen Colbert "My dad believed laughter is the best medicine. Which is why several of us died of tuberculosis."- Unknown source, heard from Grey Delisle on Rob Paulsen's podcast |
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#18 |
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Master Poster
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#19 |
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Anti-homeopathy illuminati member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: UK
Posts: 26,555
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Why not? to an extent they needed it. The bible meant they needed to know how to read and the management of a large relgious establishment would ensure practical aplication of such.
But Archimedes was an important part of the philospophy of the time and the science. When the Venerable Bede wrote that the like a playground ball that wasn't from careful measurements of the sun but from Archimedes. For theology you need philosophy. For building on a reasonable scale geometry comes in handy. Then you have the more dirrectly practical aplications such as an Archimedian screw. Aditionaly everyone else was worse. At least the monks would know that a book could be something other than fuel for a fire and would be able to read them. The same could not be said of wider society. |
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#20 |
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Sarcastic Conqueror of Notions
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: A floating island above the clouds
Posts: 23,835
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__________________
"Great innovations should not be forced [by way of] slender majorities." - Thomas Jefferson The government should nationalize it! Socialized, single-payer video game development and sales now! More, cheaper, better games, right? Right? |
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#21 |
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Master Poster
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Kadath in the Cold Waste
Posts: 2,822
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Yes Sagan was completely wrong in that clip from Cosmos, I saw it too, and recently spent some time explaining why it was cobblers over on Dawkins.net. History was not Sagan's strong suit, and his researchers clearly did not check! Whenever it is watched by friends I also have to explain what Neo-Platonism was, and why most atheists today would be less than enthusiastic about Hypatia's beliefs, and the point that her death was universally mourned in all the sources we have about it - all Christian chronicles. She was killed by a mob, to the great distress of all the Church chroniclers, who praise her intelligence, virtue and dignity. She was also incidentally very elderly, which makes her cruel death all the more horrific I think.
I see the multiple burning of the Library is already clarified - yes, and I'm getting really bored with correcting this. Can't someone edit re-runs of Cosmos to get rid of it, or issue a correction at the end? Incidentally I would not trust The Dark Side of Christian History on anything. Review to follow, and maybe Skepticwiki article on what is wrong with this book in terms of factual content. ![]() cj x |
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I'm an Anglican Christian, so I declare my prejudice here. Please take it in to account when reading my posts. "Most people would rather die than think: many do." - Betrand Russell My dull life blogged http://jerome23.wordpress.com |
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#22 |
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Master Poster
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#23 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Vancouver BC Canada
Posts: 5,966
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Yes, by every measure, the late antiquity period - basically up to 480ish - could be described as Christianity-based-on-Roman/Greek philosophy. Every educated Roman would have had to learn his Plato and Pliny, and needed to explain virtue ethics backwards and forwads. After the collapse of Western Roman governance, this ended quite abruptly, and the Church was all that remained of civilization in Europe, preserving these ideals as best they could. The Eastern Roman tradition could arguably have been preserving these up to the 11th century. People quibble about this.
The fundamental conflict that skeptics refer to between church and science didn't materialize until the period of the Reformation. The ramifications of the Thirty Years War included a retrenchment of religious dogmatism, and the regard for religious dispute as political/military threat. This was not just a Catholic thing. Even among scientists, the first challenge was to explain why you're rejecting Ptolemy, rather than why you're defying the Church. Arguably, the Church's obsession with preserving these old texts was itself a roadblock for scientific progress. Most of the destruction was conducted by the pagan conquerors of Rome, which would include pretty much everybody but the Goths, who were Christianized and seemed to be what I refer to as "soft sackers" of Roman cities, basically stealing gold and jewels, rather than destroying things. The other major players were Visigoths and Vandals in Gaul, Hispania, Africa, and Italia in particular, who more or less raped, killed, and burned anything that was Rome, replacing it with despotic regimes that had no time for book learnin'. Surprisingly, another force for preserving these texts was the Moslem Arabic (Moorish) conquerors who swept through North Africa, right up to Spain. When the Christian forces liberated Toledo from Moorish control in around 1085, they found a huge collection of Roman and Greek works, which is why the Spanish Alfonso dynasty is often considered the crucible of modern astronomy. |
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__________________
"Sometimes it's better to light a flamethrower than curse the darkness." - Terry Pratchett |
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#24 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Jul 2002
Posts: 4,940
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