Scientific Revolution
Essay by cassandre • September 16, 2013 • Essay • 428 Words (2 Pages) • 2,646 Views
The scientific revolution was a new way of thinking about the natural world. That way was based upon careful observations and a willingness to question accepted beliefs.
In issue 12 two men are discussing the opposing views of the topic "Was the Scientific Revolution Revolutionary?" Herbert Butterfield supports the yes side of the topic, and Steven Shapin supports the no side of the topic. Both historians question the idea and try to back up their view with facts and opinions from our own history and idea's from the great thinkers of yesterday.As these scholars replaced old assumptions with new theories, they lunched a change in European thought thst historians call the scientific revolution.
The progress of logic and knowledge of the physical world during the Scientific Revolution was constantly at odds with the oppositional force of religion and mysticism. During the Middle Age, science was undertaken more often in the library than in the laboratory. Even Nicolas Copernicus was content to synthesize the ideas and records of others rather than to directly collect and test his own data. Similarly, other fields of science were dominated by study of the classics. However, during the later sixteenth century, attitudes toward additional authority were changing. Men were no longer content to rely on ancient authority for the truth. The scientific revolution was a turning point because it provided intellectual inspiration to the enlightenment its foundation is base on the belief that observation and experience, not religious and political authorities were an accurate path knowledge. Scientific historians sometimes use the advancement of physics as the measure of how far thought had progressed during the Scientific Revolution, due to the field's relation to the other major fields of study. The scientific revolution was a major event that changed history by having goals, new ideas and opinion. The Church had been the most stable feature of the previous millennium, defining the phenomena of the often hard to understand natural world, and in essence telling the common churchgoer what to believe. The Scientific Revolution brought many new ideas and beliefs not only to Europe but the entire world. The most widely influential was an epistemological transformation that we call the "Scientific Revolution." In the popular mind, we associate this revolution with natural science and technological change, but the scientific revolution was, in reality, a series of changes in the structure of European thought itsel
The scientific revolution was constituted precisely through the development of our modern notion of science or, more precisely, of physics taken, as the pradigm science .
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