1-Intellectual Revolutions That Defined Society.pptx

July 17, 2019 | Author: Chin Chin | Category: Scientific Revolution, Science, Knowledge, Justification, Truth
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INTELLECTUAL REVOLUTIONS THAT DEFINED SOCIETY Objectives 1. Discuss how the ideas postulated by Copernicus, Copernicus, Darwin, Darwin, and Freud contributed contributed to to the spark of scientific revolution 2. Analyz Analyze e how scientific scientific revolu revolution tion is done done in various various parts parts of the world world like in Latin Latin America, East Asia, Middle East, and Africa.

Scientific Revolution 

Science is as old the world itself.



No individual can exactly identify when and where science began.



Science is always interwoven with the society



An idea – ideas, theories, systematic explanations



An intellectual activity – systematic and practical studies



A body of knowledge – subject or a discipline, field of study, or a body knowledge that deals with the process of learning



As a personal and social activity – Activities to develop better understanding of the world around them; improve life and survive in life.

NATURAL AND PHYSICAL WORLD Seek answers to questions

NOBLE IDEAS|PHILOSOPHY alternative solutions or possible explanation “Humans also used religion to rationalize the origins of life and all lifeless forms. (STS, Serafica 2018)

Printing Machine

Traditions

EUROPE

Scholars

Intellectual Activities

Scientific Revolution • • • •

Period of Enlightenment Transformed the views of society Emergence of Birth of Modern Science Reflect, Rethink, Reexamine

Science Ideas

Scientific Revolutions

Humans

Society

-passion to know -passion to discover  

Scientists are not driven by clamor for honor and publicity. They are ordinary people doing extraordinary things. Some scientists were never appreciated during their times, some were sentenced to death, while others were condemned by the Church during their time. In spite of all the predicaments and challenges they experienced, they never stopped experimenting, theorizing and discovering new knowledge and ideas.

Nicolaus Copernicus 

De Revolutionibus orbium coelestium (On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres) 



Model of the universe in which everything moved around a single center at unvarying rates.

Thought Experiment 

Suppose there were an experience machine that would give you any experience you desired. Superduper neuropsychologists could stimulate your brain so that you would think and feel you were writing a great novel, or making a friend, or reading an interesting book. All the time you would be floating in a tank, with electrodes attached to your brain. Should you plug into this machine for life, preprogramming your life experiences?...Of course, while in the tank you won't know that you're there; you'll think that it's all actually happening...Would you plug in



?"



Imagine that you’re at the controls of a railway switch and there’s an out-of-control trolley coming. The tracks branch into two, one track that leads to a group of five people, and the other to one person. If you do nothing, the trolley will smash into the five people. But if you flip the switch, it’ll change tracks and strike the lone person. What do you do?



This one’s reminiscent of Plato’s Cave, another classic (and disturbing) thought experiment. Proposed by Thomas Nagel in his essay, “Birth, Death, and the Meaning of Life,” it addresses issues of non -interference and the meaningfulness of life.



He got the idea when he noticed a sad little spider living in a urinal in the men’s bathroom at Princeton where he was teaching.



The spider appeared to have an awful life, constantly getting peed on, and “he didn’t seem to like it.”



Gradually our encounters began to oppress me. Of course it might be his natural habitat, but because he was trapped by the smooth porcelain overhang, there was no way for him to get out even if he wanted to, and no way to tell whether he wanted to...

Would you help the spider get out or no?



So one day toward the end of the term I took a paper towel from the wall dispenser and extended it to him. His legs grasped the end of the towel and I lifted him out and deposited him on the tile floor.



He just sat there, not moving a muscle. I nudged him slightly with the towel, but nothing happened . . . . I left, but when I came back two hours later he hadn't moved.



The next day I found him in the same place, his legs shriveled in that way characteristic of dead spiders. His corpse stayed there for a week, until they finally swept the floor. 

Nagel acted out of empathy, assuming that the spider would fare better — and perhaps even enjoy life — outside of its normal existence. But the exact opposite happened. In the end, he did the spider no good.



This thought experiment forces us to consider the quality and meaningfulness of not just animal lives, but our own as well. How can we ever know what anyone really wants? And do our lives actually do us any good? It also forces us to question our policies of intervention. Despite our best intentions, interference can sometimes inflict unanticipated harm. It’s a lesson embedded within Star Trek’s Prime Directive — but as the Trolley Problem illustrated, sometimes inaction can be morally problematic.

Do you think the Church should intervene in scientific activities? 

Abortion



Same-sex Marriage



Contraceptions



Death Penalty

Assignment #2 

Make a Curriculum Vitae of Nicolaus Copernicus, Charles Darwin, and Sigmund Freud



Make a pictographic timeline for the Cradles of Early Science 

Mesoamerica



India



China



Middle East Countries



Africa

View more...

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