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Science and Religion, Refuting The LiesBy 
Dr. Peter MullenFri 
19 Oct. 2007
http://www.dailyreckoning.co.uk/article/scienceandreligionrefutingthelies0553.htmlSome of my most cheerful 
acquaintances as I go around the City are the street sweepers, cleaning up all 
the mess. I think I will apply to join their trade union, as I seem to spend 
much of my time cleaning up the intellectual detritus and philosophical rubbish 
which dirties all our lives. The biggest issue in public debate today is the 
relationship between science and religion. It is a difficult subject made 
treacherous by opponents of the Christian faith who spread lies about both 
Christianity and science with the deliberate aim of destroying our faith. Here, 
then, I want to nail some of these lies and make some corrections. The first big 
lie is that the scientific revolution of the Renaissance and the Enlightenment 
banished the gloom and superstition of the Dark Ages and the Medieval period. In 
fact the so-called Dark Ages were not dark at all: they were a period of 
astonishing technological progress...  The first big lie is that 
the scientific revolution of the Renaissance and the Enlightenment banished the 
gloom and superstition of the Dark Ages and the Medieval period. In fact the 
so-called Dark Ages were not dark at all: they were a period of astonishing 
technological progress. For example, the Battle of Tours in AD 732 was the first 
occasion when knights fought in full armour. They could do so because of the 
invention of stirrups and the Norman saddle. The ancient Romans had neither 
stirrups nor an effective saddle, so a knight trying to wield his lance would 
only fall off. 
 Developments on the battlefield showed European farming technologists how to 
invent the horse collar. This allowed the farmers throughout the continent to 
switch from using oxen to horses for ploughing with the result that there was an 
immense increase in food production. Also the ancient Romans shod their horses 
in sandals – Nero had some made in silver - which slipped off and caused the 
horses to go lame. The Dark Ages invented iron shoes by which horses could 
travel over hard ground and cover much more territory without injury.
 
 Other inventions which preceded the Renaissance by centuries were waterwheels, 
mills, camshafts. Mechanical clocks and the compass.
 
 The next big lie is that it was not until the voyages of Columbus and Magellan 
that we learnt the world is not flat but round. This is nonsense. Among the 
scholars of the Dark Ages who taught that the world is round were Venerable Bede 
– his dates 673-735; Bishop Virgilus of 
Salzburg – 8th century; Hildegaard of
Bingen – 
1098-1179 and St Thomas Aquinas.
 
 Copernicus is usually credited in the book of lies with overturning the silly 
flat earth view of the superstitious medieval church. Actually, Copernicus was 
taught the heliocentric theory by his medieval theological professors. Nicole 
d’Oresme (1325-1382) wrote: The earth turns, rather than the heavens. Oresme was 
the most outstanding of all the medieval scientists and he saw no conflict 
between science and religion. You may be interested to know that after teaching 
science as Rector of the University of 
Paris, he became Bishop of
Lisieux. And 
the universities themselves were not the product of the Renaissance: they were 
invented by the church.
 
 Then there is the lie that the Renaissance began with the contributions of 
Islamic philosophers or Byzantine survivors from the fall of Constantinople who 
had rediscovered classical Greek learning. This is not true either. The reason 
Greek learning had not been fully assimilated was that the language of the Dark 
Ages was Latin. The Renaissance was actually the creation of the church whose 
scholars for the first time between 1125 and 1200 translated most of the Greek 
manuscripts into Latin and made them generally available.
 
 Another big lie is that medical science was held back because the church 
wouldn’t allow the dissection of corpses. But it was medieval churchmen who 
permitted dissection and improved their knowledge of anatomy and pathology as a 
direct result. The Greeks, the Romans and the Muslims all forbade dissection 
because the dignity of the human body would not permit it. The church was not so 
hindered, because of course the church possessed the liberating doctrine of the 
immortal soul – what St Paul called the spiritual body. You want proof of all 
this? The Christian scholastic Mondino de’ Luzzi (1270-1326) wrote a textbook on 
the dissection of corpses.
 
 Ah but what about the Galileo affair? Everybody knows the church persecuted 
Galileo. Well, he was disciplined but this was rather for the way he arrogantly 
presented his ideas than for the ideas themselves. When Galileo published his 
book Assayer in 1623 he dedicated it to his friend Cardinal Barberini who went 
on to become Pope Urban VIII. Barberini enjoyed it because of the many skits 
Galileo had included in it about the Jesuits. As William Shea said, Galileo had 
no doubts about God. Had he been less devout, he could have refused the summons 
to Rome –
Venice 
offered him asylum, but he turned it down. What about Galileo himself then, 
always presented as a rebel against the church? What were his core beliefs? 
Fortunately, we have Galileo’ written record and this is what he wrote: The book 
of nature is a book written by the hand of God in the language of mathematics.
 
 Let’s turn to Isaac Newton. 
He wrote a great deal of theology and said nice things about God, but those who 
hate Christianity tell lies about Newton too: they say he only pretended to be 
devout for politeness’ sake and for a quiet life. Fortunately, John Maynard 
Keynes bought all Newton’s papers in the 1930s and discovered what Newton wrote, 
not for appearance’s sake but in private letters to his friend Bentley. Newton 
wrote:
 
 The true God is a living, intelligent, powerful being…he governs all things and 
knows all things that are done or can be done…he endures forever and is 
everywhere present…
 
 So how about that other controversy, Darwinism and the theory of evolution? It 
turns out that the severest critics of Darwinian theory are not theologians but 
Darwinians in our own time expressing doubt about their own methods. So Stephen 
Gould denied that great bedrock of the theory of evolution – the missing link 
between old species and new. Gould wrote as follows: The evolutionary diagrams 
that adorn our textbooks are based on inference not the evidence of fossils.
 Modern Darwinians and Paleontologists such as Steven Stanley have declared 
openly that the lack of fossil evidence for the theory of evolution has been 
suppressed from the time of Darwin himself onwards. Niles Eldridge said 
recently, We paleontologists have said that the history of life supports the 
principle of gradual transmutations of species all the while knowing that really 
it does not.
 
 Please don’t get me wrong. I’m not about to sign up to Bible-belt literalism. I 
think some theory of the gradual development of life on earth is still the best 
hypothesis available. But Darwinism does not even begin to explain how inanimate 
matter could have turn into life and how primitive and microscopic life forms 
could turn into creatures with the mind and consciousness of Bach and Einstein.
 
 There is no conflict between science and Christianity. The conflict is between 
Christianity and ideological atheists such as Rousseau, 
Voltaire, Diderot and T.H. Huxley, 
right down to that prince bigot of our own time, 
Richard Dawkins. These people lie 
about the history of science as a way of attacking the faith. But in all the 
statistical surveys of working scientists you find that the majority of them are 
believers – moreover that those who belong to the so-called hard sciences such 
as physics and mathematics are the firmest believers.
 
 It is not only that there is no conflict between Christianity and science: 
without Christianity, there would be no science. No other civilisation or 
culture, ancient or modern has invented science – only the Christianity of the 
Dark Ages and the Medieval period. This is because Christianity has declared 
since the opening verse of St John’s gospel that God is reasonable. And this 
reasonable God made the world in his own reasonable image: to be discovered and 
understood by the rationality he has implanted in us by his Spirit.
 
 Let me end by quoting two authors, one ancient and one modern. A.N. Whitehead, 
co-author with Bertrand 
Russell of Principia Mathematica says:
 
 There is but one source for science: It must come from the Medieval insistence 
on the rationality of God.
 
 Finally, against irrationality and superstition, from 
St Augustine:
 
 Heaven forbid that God should hate in us that by which he made us superior to 
the animals! Heaven forbid that we should believe in such a way as not to accept 
or seek reasons, since we could not even believe if we did not possess rational 
souls
 
 
 Regards,
 
 Peter Mullen
 For The Daily Reckoning
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