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The Sight Of Science

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 5.84
  Total Words: 1460
  Total Characters: 8180
  Number of Sentences: 64


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 22.81
  Characters per Words: 5.6


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 41.25
  Fog Scale Level: 16.93
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 13.17  

The Sight of Science


     It is a truth universally acknowledged that he whose mind is ahead of
his time and above that of his peers may not be understood by his fellow people
and be subject to critisizm and persecution. Galilei Galileo, Francis Bacon, and
Rene Descartes were among the first to break away from the conventional views of
their times to find a place for science in a society and propose the way it
should be practiced. All three authors agree on some points but differe markedly
on others. Bacon insists on the importa nce of experimentation and relative
uselessness of senses and experience, while Decartes thinks them imporatnt for
understanding of nature. Galileo stresses the need for separation of science and
religion, while Descartes deems the correctness of the method of scientific
thought to be most important. Yet all three writers agree that natural science
should be freed of the grip of theology and human ethics, what sets them apart
from previous generations of scientists and thinkers.
     In his Discoveries, Bacon goes at great length  to discuss the influence
the prescientfic mode of thinking has had on generations of scientists, and
tries to Descartes asserts that the mathematical method of examining the
relationship between objects and expressing them in concise formulas, applied to
the entire realm of knowledge, permits him to exercise his own reason to the
best of his ability. Since nothing in philosophy is certain, it is evident that
he must discover his own philosophical principles.
     Galileo's views on science and religion, as seen from his Letter to the
Grand Dutchess Christina are very radical for his times. He suggests that
physical sciences must be separated from theological studies because the goals
of the two disicplines are totally different: theology is concerned with
salvation of the soul, while the sciences are concerned with understanding of
nature. He believes that the clergy apply faith where ther is none...

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