Your link was entirely bogus; what do you expect? You clearly just scratched around for any old source to support your predisposition. Galileo WAS NOT EVER threatened with torture and/OR death; you are clearly stuck in an atheistic time warp; true scholarship had long ago debunked this nonsensical tripe.
Kynaros wrote:Hilarious. I think it's about time you started giving me some sources for your fanciful claims before you take the high & mighty attitude. And apologist websites/books won't count.
I gave you the name of a very good book, which carries with it an extensive bibliogrophy in support. You'd do very well in life to read books and make informed judgements rather than hastily scrathing around, linking me up with ill-informed nonsense. Now, read these links through; one or two are quite extensive, but they are all very clear and concise. Treat yourself to the truth...
http://article.nationalreview.com/26661 ... h-goldberg
"Yes, Galileo was eventually found guilty of heresy. But his problems stemmed first and foremost from jealous fellow-scientists. Galileo's first muzzle was one he put on himself. In 1597 he wrote a letter to Johannes Kepler (the first big Copernican and discoverer of the three laws of moving planet stuff). In the letter, Galileo told Kepler that, yeah Copernicus got things right, but he thought the Aristotelian academic establishment would have a cow if he said so publicly... The head of the Inquisition was a Galileo supporter, who hoped to get the whole thing over with quickly by just giving him a formal reprimand. Unfortunately, rabble-rousers and opportunists turned the heat up. The trial is very complicated but the result was that Galileo got house arrest, which is where he did all of his research anyway. He was permitted to correspond with any scientist he wanted and he wrote the Dialogue Concerning Two New Sciences while under the Man's thumb."
http://townhall.com/columnists/DineshDS ... lileo_myth
"Galileo Was A Victim of Torture and Abuse: This is perhaps the most recurring motif, and yet it is entirely untrue. Galileo was treated by the church as a celebrity. When summoned by the Inquisition, he was housed in the grand Medici Villa in Rome. He attended receptions with the Pope and leading cardinals. Even after he was found guilty, he was first housed in a magnificent Episcopal palace and then placed under “house arrest” although he was permitted to visit his daughters in a nearby convent and to continue publishing scientific papers."
<<You'll also find that the author briefly address the Huxley "Put-Down" myth in the famous Huxley/Wilberforce debate. I have further reading material on this, so just ask and I'll provide you with some.>>
http://www.ips-planetarium.org/planetar ... lileo.html
"Unfortunately, history does not support such a picture. Galileo may not have been guilty of heresy, but he was guilty of several other things: (l) some of his scientific "facts" were wrong; (2) he claimed to have proof when no proof existed; (3) he was unaware of Kepler's exposition of planetary motion, though Kepler's book was in his own bookcase; and (4) he had made enemies—bitter enemies—quite needlessly... Nor was the Roman Church the main villain in the piece. Galileo's real enemies were the university professors. They, quite understandably, resented Galileo's outright rejection of their revered Aristotle, whose concepts constituted almost everything they taught. And they fumed at their inability to answer Galileo's arguments rationally. For twenty years they debated him and lost. Eventually, when Galileo embraced Copernicism, they were able to enmesh the clerics in their battle."
http://www.traditioninaction.org/Histor ... lileo.html
"Pope Urban VIII only broke his good relations with Galileo when the latter wrote the book Dialogo, or Massimi Sistemi, in which he tried to ridicule the Aristotelian-Thomist philosophy in dealing with the systems of Ptolemy and Copernicus. Only then, in 1633, did the Pope deliver him to be judged by the Holy Inquisition for the second time... He was judged and politely obliged to abjure his errors. Galileo himself acknowledged that he was treated indulgently by the Inquisition throughout the affair. The condemnation prescribed prison, but it was not put in practice. He passed the year 1633 with the Archbishop of Sienna. Afterward, he was allowed to live in the beautiful villa Arcetri, near Florence, where he soon recovered entire liberty. He was never prevented from pursuing his studies and investigations in science."
Are you suggesting there exists some natural scientists who are complaining God is impeding their work?
Kynaros wrote:[Uhm, yes? The religious ones at least. How many "medical miracles" stories have you heard? God doing anything at all would be him infringing on the natural sciences, since the laws of physics are supposed to be the same everywhere, and a miracle would cause that to not be the case.
None of this is "infringing" on the natural sciences; you're truly paranoid. If a scientist is also a Christian, and he believes some thing to be the work of God, then how does this "infringe" on the natural sciences when the natural sciences are not being impeded, restricted, or hindered in any way? You clearly DON'T BELIEVE that God exists, and therefore you do not subscribe to any notion of God "doing anything," right? So why are you like a frantic dog, chasing its tail around and around in a circular frenzy?