It is hard to notice the same enthusiasm among Leo's successors of the past century — or indeed even an awareness that the the implications of the
phenomenal rise of science might be passing the Church by.
With the
relentless rise of science, we have slowly peeled back the obscuring layers, revealing vital intangibles at the very heart of reality, a grand triumph for nothing.
Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research) Professor James McCluskey welcomed the news and said the outcome was particularly pleasing given the
continuing rise of science and life - sciences research in the Asia - Pacific region.
Taken to refer to the history of ideas, they seem to name the periods before, during, and after the Enlightenment; but taken to refer to the history of events, they seem to name the period from creation to
the rise of science, the period from the rise of science until World War II, and the period since the war.
This didn't matter too much until
the rise of science exposed an insufficiency.
The rise of science was partly driven by this longing to go deeper, to understand more of the world in which we exist.
The rise of science is associated with the decline of religion.
This body of literature has generated some useful hypotheses about the effects of Puritanism on
the rise of science, its legitimation of revolutionary dissent, and the qualities of religious rationality, to mention only a few of the themes that have been pursued.
Historians find
the rise of science indebted to the legacy of the Middle Ages for belief in the intelligibility of the universe and faith in man's ability to understand.
A number of historians have stressed the contribution of the Judaeo - Christian perspective to
the rise of science.
The death of God,
the rise of science, and the command economy yielded «scientific socialism.»
There were, of course, many other factors that contributed to
the rise of science, including trade, changing social patterns, and Renaissance interests.
In the past whenever Catholic theology failed to take into account the issues raised by current intellectual developments (such as
the rise of science, the Enlightenment and historical criticism) it began to lag behind the times and thereby lost a great opportunity for growth.
The trouble with the Church today is too much accommodation to secular values which are, of course, much influenced by
the rise of science.
The Beatified Scientist An important part of combating the myth of the opposition of faith and science is a proper historical appreciation of the irreplaceable contribution of men of faith to
the rise of science and its great leaps: scientists who rigorously studied the natural world precisely because it is God's own order given to the world that makes it rational and worthy of investigation.
The rise of science on the one hand and of a market economy and industrial capitalism on the other have been important elements in that complex.
Since
the rise of science, as a more productive way to construct worldviews, the many, many religious conco «ctions, all competing for primacy, will be gone in another 5000 years, and the «Epoch of Religion» will be long gone.
Such attitudes were compounded with the philosophers of the eighteenth century writing their own «whiggish» version of scientific history in which the rejection of the Church provided the counterpoint to
the rise of science.
The modern worldview has come to mean the view that has become increasingly dominant since the seventeenth century with
the rise of science.
The problems in any literalistic understanding of religious language, which were identified long before
the rise of science, have been more generally acknowledged in an age of science.
Was it simply
the rise of science in the last three centuries?
Salomon Bochner, The Role of Mathematics in
the Rise of Science (Princeton, New Jersey Princeton University Press, 1966), 195.
In a timely piece for the Year of the Priest, Joseph Laracy shows that Monsignor Georges Lemaitre is a recent and significant example of the importance of Catholic priests to
the rise of science.
The second myth about
the rise of science is that Westerners only picked up the baton from the ancient Greeks, or, as has been more recently alleged, the Islamic caliphate.
The rise of science in the 19th century began to mark anxiety as «neurasthenia ``, a physical rather than mental ailment.
Secularization and
the rise of science mean fewer people are connected through places of worship.