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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
8 pages in length. The writer discusses 8 separate points pertaining to Galileo's scientific contributions, including his trial, his views on religion and science, as well as the impact of the Scientific Revolution. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCGaleo.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
rationalism, which was a theory asserting that reason, in and of itself, was an entity of knowledge superior to and independent of sense perceptions. This concept served as the
beginning of unique aspirations within scientific societies and an original quest for truth that lay people such as the Grand Duchess could not ignore. Clearly, the climate for ideas prior
to 1615 was anything but liberal. Prior to Galileos explosive presence, society was ill equipped to determine the various mysteries of life; once he enlightened both notables and lay
people alike with his scientific understanding of the inexplicable and defined that which was beyond description, the frosty climate began to warm to the potential for great discoveries.
Such research - and their ultimate findings - proved beneficial to the social and political standings in that they produced more and more research to back up initial claims.
This birth of science was instrumental in establishing a basis for future exploration; without setting such groundwork, current scientists would not have been able to attain the lengths to which
technology has reached today. II. THE PROPER RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SCIENCE AND RELIGION The student will want to discuss how Galileo studied religion
with great interest and considerable depth. His ongoing quest was not only to determine the role of religion within social confines but also to establish the basis behind scientific
and religious association. Galileo attempted to piece together the connection between society as a whole and the ongoing part religion did or did not play within its scientific boundaries.
Writing in the late nineteenth century, Draper and White put forward an idea that was quickly embraced: the "warfare thesis," which suggests that science has always been in conflict
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