Catholic Churchmen In Science [First Series]
James J. (James Joseph) Walsh
17 chapters
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17 chapters
CATHOLIC CHURCHMEN IN SCIENCE
CATHOLIC CHURCHMEN IN SCIENCE
[FIRST SERIES] SKETCHES OF THE LIVES OF CATHOLIC ECCLESIASTICS WHO WERE AMONG THE GREAT FOUNDERS IN SCIENCE By JAMES J. WALSH, K.ST.G., M.D., PH.D., LITT.D. Dean and Professor of Medicine and of Nervous Diseases at Fordham University School of Medicine; Professor of Physiological Psychology in the Cathedral College, New York; Member of A.M.A., N.Y. State Med. Soc., A.A.A.S., Life Mem of N.Y. Historical Society. SECOND EDITION PHILADELPHIA American Ecclesiastical Review The Dolphin Press MCMX. CO
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PREFACE.
PREFACE.
The following sketches of the lives of clergymen who were great scientists have appeared at various times during the past five years in Catholic magazines. They were written because the materials for them had gradually accumulated during the preparation of various courses of lectures, and it seemed advisable to put them in order in such a way that they might be helpful to others working along similar lines. They all range themselves naturally around the central idea that the submission of the hu
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I. THE SUPPOSED OPPOSITION OF SCIENCE AND RELIGION.
I. THE SUPPOSED OPPOSITION OF SCIENCE AND RELIGION.
A common impression prevails that there is serious, if not invincible, opposition between science and religion. This persuasion has been minimized to a great degree in recent years, and yet sufficient of it remains to make a great many people think that, if there is not entire incompatibility between science and religion, there is at least such a diversity of purposes and aims in these two great realms of human thought that those who cultivate one field are not able to appreciate the labors of t
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II. COPERNICUS AND HIS TIMES.
II. COPERNICUS AND HIS TIMES.
{13} All the vast and most progressive systems that human wisdom has brought forth as substitutes for religion, have never succeeded in interesting any but the learned, the ambitious, or at most the prosperous and happy. But the great majority of mankind can never come under these categories. The great majority of men are suffering, and suffering from moral as well as physical evils. Man's first bread is grief, and his first want is consolation. Now which of these systems has ever consoled an af
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II. COPERNICUS AND HIS TIMES.
II. COPERNICUS AND HIS TIMES.
The association of the name of Copernicus with that of Galileo has always cast an air of unorthodoxy about the great astronomer. The condemnation of certain propositions in his work on astronomy in which Copernicus first set forth the idea of the universe as we know it at present, in contradistinction to the old Ptolemaic system of astronomy, would seem to emphasize this suspicion of unorthodox thinking. He is rightly looked upon as one of the great pioneers of our modern physical science, and,
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III. BASIL VALENTINE, FOUNDER OF MODERN CHEMISTRY.
III. BASIL VALENTINE, FOUNDER OF MODERN CHEMISTRY.
{44} Let us, then, banish into the world of fiction that affirmation so long repeated by foolish credulity which made monasteries an asylum for indolence and incapacity, for misanthropy and pusillanimity, for feeble and melancholic temperaments, and for men who were no longer fit to serve society in the world. Monasteries were never intended to collect the invalids of the world. It was not the sick souls, but on the contrary the most vigorous and healthful the human race has ever produced, who p
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III. BASIL VALENTINE, FOUNDER OF MODERN CHEMISTRY.
III. BASIL VALENTINE, FOUNDER OF MODERN CHEMISTRY.
The Protestant tradition which presumes a priori that no good can possibly have come out of the Nazareth of the times before the Reformation, and especially the immediately preceding century, has served to obscure to an unfortunate degree the history of several hundred years extremely important in every department of education. Strange as it may seem to those unfamiliar with the period, it is in that department which is supposed to be so typically modern the--physical sciences--that this neglect
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IV. LINACRE: SCHOLAR, PHYSICIAN, PRIEST.
IV. LINACRE: SCHOLAR, PHYSICIAN, PRIEST.
{78} Linacre, as Dr. Payne remarks, "was possessed from his youth till his death by the enthusiasm of learning. He was an idealist devoted to objects which the world thought of little use." Painstaking, accurate, critical, hypercritical perhaps, he remains to-day the chief literary representative of British Medicine. Neither in Britain nor in Greater Britain have we maintained the place in the world of letters created for us by Linacre's noble start. Quoted by Osler in AEquanimitas . THOMAS LINA
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IV. LINACRE: SCHOLAR, PHYSICIAN, PRIEST.
IV. LINACRE: SCHOLAR, PHYSICIAN, PRIEST.
Not long ago, in one of his piquant little essays, Mr. Augustine Birrell discussed the question as to what really happened at the time of the so-called Reformation in England. There is much more doubt with regard to this matter, even in the minds of non-Catholics, than is usually suspected. Mr. Birrell seems to have considered it one of the most important problems, and at the same time not by any means the least intricate one, in modern English history. The so-called High Church people emphatica
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V. FATHER KIRCHER, S.J.: SCIENTIST, ORIENTALIST, AND COLLECTOR.
V. FATHER KIRCHER, S.J.: SCIENTIST, ORIENTALIST, AND COLLECTOR.
{109} Oportet autem neque recentiores viros in his fraudare quae vel repererunt vel recte secuti sunt; et tamen ea quae apud antiquiores aliquos posita sunt auctoribus suis reddere.--CELSUS de Medicina . {110} ATHANASIUS KIRCHER {111}...
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V. FATHER KIRCHER, S.J.: SCIENTIST, ORIENTALIST, AND COLLECTOR.
V. FATHER KIRCHER, S.J.: SCIENTIST, ORIENTALIST, AND COLLECTOR.
Except in the minds of the unconquerably intolerant, the Galileo controversy has in recent years settled down to occupy something of its proper place in the history of the supposed conflict between religion and science. In touching the subject in the life of Copernicus we suggested that it has come to be generally recognized, as M. Bertrand, the perpetual Secretary of the Paris Academy of Sciences, himself a distinguished mathematician and historian, declares, that "the great lesson for those wh
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VI. BISHOP STENSEN: ANATOMIST AND FATHER OF GEOLOGY.
VI. BISHOP STENSEN: ANATOMIST AND FATHER OF GEOLOGY.
{136} God makes sages and saints that they may be fountain-heads of wisdom and virtue for all who yearn and aspire: and whoever has superior knowledge or ability is thereby committed to more effectual and unselfish service of his fellow-men. If the love of fame be but an infirmity of noble souls, the craving of professional reputation is but conceit and vanity. To be of help, and to be of help not merely to animals, but to immortal, pure, loving spirits this is the noblest earthly fate.--BISHOP
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VI. BISHOP STENSEN, ANATOMIST AND FATHER OF GEOLOGY.
VI. BISHOP STENSEN, ANATOMIST AND FATHER OF GEOLOGY.
In the sketch of the life of Father Athanasius Kircher, the distinguished Jesuit scientist, mathematician, and Orientalist, I called attention to the fact that, at the very time when Galileo was tried and condemned at Rome, because of his abuse of Scripture for the demonstration of scientific thesis, a condemnation which has been often since proclaimed to be due to the Church's intolerant opposition to science, the ecclesiastical authorities at Rome invited Father Kircher, who was at that time t
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VII. ABBÉ HAÜY, FATHER OF CRYSTALLOGRAPHY.
VII. ABBÉ HAÜY, FATHER OF CRYSTALLOGRAPHY.
{168} They continue this day as they were created, perfect in number and measure and weight, and from the ineffaceable characters impressed on them we may learn that those aspirations after accuracy in measurement, truth in statement, and justice in action, which we reckon among our noblest attributes as men, are ours because they are essential constituents of the image of Him who in the beginning created not only heaven and earth, but the materials of which heaven and earth consist.--CLERK MAXW
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VII. ABBÉ HAÜY, FATHER OF CRYSTALLOGRAPHY
VII. ABBÉ HAÜY, FATHER OF CRYSTALLOGRAPHY
[Footnote 13: "Haüy" is pronounced a-ue (Century Dictionary), Nearly Represented By ah-we .] Modern learning is gradually losing something of the self-complacency that characterized it in so constantly harboring the thought that the most important discoveries in physical science came in the nineteenth century. A more general attention to critical history has led to the realization that many of the primal discoveries whose importance made the development of modern science possible, came in earlie
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VIII. ABBOT MENDEL: A NEW OUTLOOK IN HEREDITY.
VIII. ABBOT MENDEL: A NEW OUTLOOK IN HEREDITY.
There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers having been originally breathed by the Creator into a few forms or into one; and that, while this planet has gone circling on according to the fixed law of gravity from so simple a beginning, endless forms, most beautiful and most wonderful, have been and are being evolved.-- Closing sentence of DARWIN'S Origin of Species . {194} GREGOR MENDEL {195}...
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VIII. ABBOT MENDEL: A NEW, OUTLOOK IN HEREDITY.
VIII. ABBOT MENDEL: A NEW, OUTLOOK IN HEREDITY.
[Footnote 14: The portrait of Abbot Mendel which precedes this sketch was kindly furnished by the Vicar of the Augustinian Monastery of Brünn. It represents him holding a fuchsia, his favorite flower, and was taken in 1867, just as he was completing the researches which were a generation later to make his name so famous. The portrait has for this reason a very special interest as a human document. We may add that the sketch of Abbot Mendel which appears here was read by the Very Rev. Klemens Jan
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