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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
4 pages in length. The writer briefly discusses the impact of modernity upon religion, as well as the response Catholic intellectuals gave to pluralism and pragmatism. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCmodrelig.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
resistance and revolution, recooperation and universalism all played an integral role within the ultimate rise of the post-modernism movement. During the Scientific Revolution, 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 role 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 with religion (Lindberg,
2002). Clearly, the undercurrent of tension between science and Catholicism was based upon how science is a foundation of undeniable proof, while religion is grounded in the concept of
belief. As a representation of the need to break free, the Enlightenment was both a philosophic and scientific movement that was instrumental in
questioning -- and ultimately rejecting -- what had come to be conventional social, scientific, religious and political ideas to make way for a new, more modernistic approach. During this
period, there was a particular emphasis placed upon rationalism, which was a theory asserting that reason, in and of itself, was an entity of knowledge superior to and independent of
sense perceptions. The Enlightenment served as the beginning of unique aspirations within scientific societies and an original quest for truth. Working hard
to remove any relations between science and theology, Galileo may have understood the connection Danish Lutheran Tycho Brahe made between his development of astronomy and any religious implications, but he
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