Article ID: CBB000831451

Pariška obsodba leta 1277, potentia dei absoluta in rojstvo moderne znanosti (2007)

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Vesel, Matjaž (Author)


Filozofski Vestnik
Volume: 28, no. 1
Issue: 1
Pages: 19-40


Publication Date: 2007
Edition Details: [Translated title: The Paris condemnation of 1277, potenita dei absoluta, and the birth of modern science] In Slovenian.
Language: Slovenian

Still present in the historiography of medieval and early modern science is the thesis, originally formulated by P. Duhem and advocated today by E. Grant in a more moderate form, according to which the Paris condemnation of 219 propositions in 1277 entails an affirmation of potentia dei absoluta, which led to a criticism of Aristotelism and, consequently, to the birth of modern science. The author argues that this thesis can not stand the test of critical examination. The discussion about the dialectics of God's powers (potentia dei absoluta -- potentia dei ordinata) began a good half century before the condemnation, which, on the other hand, does not represent the decisive factor in promoting this distinction. By comparing the discussion on the plurality of worlds before and after the condemnation, it can be shown that Aristotle's understanding of the unity of our world was, from the theological perspective (what God might have done), in fact brought into question before the condemnation, but that before and after the condemnation nobody believed that there in fact exists more than one world. The critique of Aristotle is epistemologically limited to considerations par esbatement or secundum imaginationem: what God with his potentia dei absoluta might have done. On the basis of Galileo's reflection on the epistemological status of the concept of potentia dei absoluta, the difference between medieval and modern, i.e. Galilean, science can be shown. According to Galileo, the task of science is not to explore what God might have done, but what God actually did.

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Authors & Contributors
Osler, Margaret J.
Ansari, Mohammad Sadegh
Sorokina, Maria
Polloni, Nicola
Wünsch, Thomas
Wels, Volkhard
Journals
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
Indian Journal of History of Science
European Legacy
Bruniana & Campanelliana: Ricerche Filosofiche e Materiali Storico-testuali
Publishers
Brill
Yale University Press
Lit
Koerner
Johns Hopkins University Press
Harrassowitz
Concepts
Science and religion
Theology
Aristotelianism
Astrology
Philosophy
Epistemology
People
Galilei, Galileo
Thomas Aquinas, Saint
Newton, Isaac
von Lübeck, Johannes
Suhrawardī, Yaḥyá ibn Ḥabash
Spinoza, Baruch
Time Periods
Medieval
Early modern
Renaissance
17th century
16th century
14th century
Places
Europe
Italy
Padua (Italy)
Baghdad (Iraq)
Eastern Europe
India
Institutions
Jesuits (Society of Jesus)
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