Science, Religion, and Saying Goodbye to the 19th Century

Friedrich Graetz's political cartoon (March 5, 1883): 'An appalling attempt to muzzle the watch-dog of science', from the cover of Puck magazine. (March 14, 1883) and see https://loc.getarchive.net/media/an-appalling-attempt-to-muzzle-the-watch-dog-of-science-f-graetz

I think the notion that someone can either be a Christian or appreciate the cosmic scale and wonders of God's creation is fading.

Sincerely believing in a conflict where champions of science and reason opposed the dark forces of religion didn't, arguably, start in the 19th century.

But that's when the idea got traction. In England and America, at any rate.

Even so, fallout from the 19th century could be worse. I could be living in a culture where religiously earnest folks insisted that diamagnetism is diabolical.

This week I'll be talking about faith, reason, cultural baggage, and why using my brain is a good idea.

More at A Catholic Citizen in America.

(Faith, reason, Victorian era politics and beliefs. Cultural baggage and why thinking is not a sin. John Henry Newman letter excerpt. Truth and Perspectives.)

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