unit 3: do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

20
Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

Upload: hilary-gallagher

Post on 17-Jan-2016

214 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

Unit 3:Do you think there is a

conflict between science and religion?

Page 2: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

Let’s consider one story that is often

given as an example of

conflict between science and religion

Page 3: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

Galileo Galilei1564-1642

Born in Pisa, Italy

a Christian…

and an early scientist.

He enjoyed maths, experimenting with falling objects and observing planets.

Page 4: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

Galileo Galileiwas placed under house arrest because he published his ideas about how the planets moved, even though he had promised to stop writing.

Page 5: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

Common view

Science and religion

are in conflictwith

each other.Ouch!

Page 6: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

What did Galileo do wrong?

General belief at the time was that the earth was fixed and the sun went around it.

Earth

Sun

Page 7: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

What did Galileo do wrong?

By watching Jupiter and its moons with his newly built telescope, Galileo proposed that the earth went around the sun.

Earth

Sun

Page 8: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

What did Galileo do wrong?

This new theory challenged church teaching. Some passages in the Bible seem to suggest that the earth doesn’t move.•‘the world is firmly established, it cannot be moved.’•‘[the LORD] set the earth on its foundations; it can never be moved.’•‘the sun rises and the sun sets, and hurries back to where it rises.’

Page 9: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

What did Galileo do wrong?

…but Galileo didn’t have enough evidence to prove his point. So the church told him to shut up until he did…

…but Galileo wouldn’t…

The church wouldn’t reinterpret passages from the Bible without strong evidence…

Page 10: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

What did Galileo do wrong?Instead he wrote ‘The Dialogues’, a book that continued to present his ideas,

…so the church placed him under house arrest.

but this time he also included a simple-minded character called Simplicio who used words originally written by the Pope…

Page 11: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

What was he locked up for?

• Getting his science wrong?• Breaking an order to stop talking about

the new ideas of way planets move?• Being an Italian?• Speaking out when he hadn’t got all

the data he needed to prove his point?• Defending a view that the church said

was contrary to scripture?

Page 12: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

Thomas Huxley

versus

Samuel Wilberforce

1860 – a debate at Oxford

Page 13: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

The popular view

An ignorant Bishop was put in his place by a knowledgeable scientist.

However…

the reality was more complex.

Page 14: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

Wilberforce was keen to defend the Bible and his Christian understanding of the world.But he didn’t feel that he had been presented with compelling evidence.

How much evidence do you need before you change your mind?

Page 15: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

Huxley wanted to replace what he saw as superstitious religion with a new age of science.He was convinced that even without all the evidence, he had seen a wonderful idea.He did all he could to argue the case.

Page 16: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

Oxford - 30 June 1860 • More than 700 people came.• The Bishop criticised the evidence for

Darwin’s theory.• Huxley was not particularly good at

countering the Bishop’s points.• Others in the audience did a better job

of arguing for gradual change of species.

• Most people who came supported the Bishop.

Page 17: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

Oxford - 30 June 1860

ConclusionIt was an important debate in the

history of evolution.

But it was not one that at the time was seen as a case of Church versus Science.

It was more a case of science under scrutiny.

Page 18: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

Instructions for hot-seating activity

Page 19: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

You will need to:• Work in groups of 4• Choose a historical figure each and read your

role cards• Put one person in the hot-seat at a time• The rest of the group ask questions about what

happened, how you acted and what your motives were

• You must answer in role• Nominate one person to take notes• Take turns until everyone has had a turn in the

hot-seat

Your task is to explore the debates between pairs of historic figures.

Page 20: Unit 3: Do you think there is a conflict between science and religion?

Replay

End