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Education Science

Pope Cancels Speech After Scientists Protest 1507

Reservoir Hill writes "Pope Benedict XVI canceled a speech at Rome's La Sapienza university in the face of protests led by scientists opposed to a high-profile visit to a secular setting by the head of the Catholic Church. Sixty-seven professors and researchers of the university's physics department joined in the call for the pope to stay away protesting the planned visit recalled a 1990 speech in which the pope, then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, seemed to justify the Inquisition's verdict against Galileo in 1633. In the speech, Ratzinger quoted an Austrian philosopher who said the ruling was 'rational and just' and concluded with the remark: 'The faith does not grow from resentment and the rejection of rationality, but from its fundamental affirmation, and from being rooted in a still greater form of reason.' The protest against the visit was spearheaded by physicist Marcello Cini who wrote the rector complaining of an 'incredible violation" of the university's autonomy. Cini said of Benedict's cancellation: 'By canceling, he is playing the victim, which is very intelligent. It will be a pretext for accusing us of refusing dialogue.'"
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Pope Cancels Speech After Scientists Protest

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  • Re:Dialoge? (Score:1, Informative)

    by easyTree ( 1042254 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @06:47PM (#22072732)
    Generally I find when talking with religious types that they do hold rational beliefs, lots of them. It's just that they don't all fit together into a coherent picture of the world; something which usually goes unnoticed.

    By the way, you spelt 'frist psot' wrong =)
  • Re:Dialoge? (Score:3, Informative)

    by erikvcl ( 43470 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @06:48PM (#22072762) Homepage
    I agree. I'm a Catholic and I think it's safe to say that the current papacy is an absolute joke. If it was just this issue, maybe we could give ol' Benedict a pass. But it seems like every month he says something ridiculous, ignorant, or backwards. It's like he just stepped out of the 17c.
  • The Galileo Myth (Score:5, Informative)

    by geoffrobinson ( 109879 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @07:00PM (#22072934) Homepage
    http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=OWU5ZDk3NGY3OGI4NDY1OTdmNzc2NmEzYjUzZWQxNWE= [nationalreview.com]

    The story of Galileo is a tad more complicated than the simplistic version we're used to. I'm no Roman Catholic, but this meme needs to be corrected.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @07:01PM (#22072942)
    It's not as simple as that. The pope wanted to come, make a speech and leave. No questions allowed, no debate. The physicists wanted to be able to respond and have a proper debate on his stance on scientific issues in general if he was to come at all. By backing off, the pope paints himself as the victim, avoiding a debate that would make him look like the medieval remain that he is.
    This has cause a big stir because, in general, the Italian political system is completely captive to the Vatican. Every day the media reports any move of word of the pope no matter how minor. Any talk show always has at least a priest as a guest. The church has huge properties and pays no taxes. The church get 0.08% of the tax collected unless one goes to great lengths to direct it somewhere else et.c etc.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @07:13PM (#22073084)

    Cini said of Benedict's cancellation: 'By canceling, he is playing the victim, which is very intelligent. It will be a pretext for accusing us of refusing dialogue.
    I am actually in La Sapienza university. I'm following the unfortunate unfolding of the events. The Pope cancelled the partecipation to avoid confrontation between the police and the "students" willing to "siege" (Their words http://it.youtube.com/watch?v=U6hfyz4LuIY [youtube.com] ) the Aula Magna where the meeting was scheduled. The decision came after the "students" occupied the Rectorate.

    More than refusing dialogue it looks to many of us as the Pope was forced not to be present under the menace of riots: One of the students stated "THERE IS NO DIALOGUE WITH THAT INDIVIDUAL" and the leader in his speech claimed the presence of many other collective outsiders to participate in the event to make it as much inhospitable as possible to the Pope. Last image is the invasion of the rectorate and a meal served outside the premises.

    I am disgusted to be italian in the same university as those.

    I'm disgusted as well to be forced to post as AC because they are VIOLENT-RED-FASCISTS supported by squatters in the SanLorenzo suburb next to the university.
  • by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @07:14PM (#22073096) Journal
    Going out and putting a gag on him, or making it illegal for him to speak. Other than that, it's a group of scientists who find his position on Galileo, and how that speaks to his views on science, troubling, and feeling that he really has no place speaking at an institution. The Pope has plenty of places he can say his spiel.
  • Re:Big Deal (Score:5, Informative)

    by Foobar of Borg ( 690622 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @07:14PM (#22073100)

    yet millions of people still think he knows more about science than the greatest experts in the various fields of science
    Um, Catholics don't care what the Pope has to say about scientific matters, nor is it relevant to his position. He is only considered infallible on issues of faith and morals, and even then it is only when it is done in an official capacity (ex cathedra as it is called). I think you are confusing the Pope with some nutter like Pat Robertson. Catholicism != Modern American fundie Evangelicalism.
  • by Scrameustache ( 459504 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @07:33PM (#22073364) Homepage Journal

    No one is censoring the Pope. Quite the opposite, the man gets far more attention than I think he deserves.
    He speaks for 1/7 people on earth [bbc.co.uk].
    Theoretically, since most baptisms are done without the consent of the subject.
  • Re:Real bias? (Score:5, Informative)

    by kindbud ( 90044 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @07:37PM (#22073430) Homepage
    Many scientists are pushing atheism as the new religion and they seem to want to force everyone to accept it.

    Atheism is not new, nor is it a religion.

    Silencing is the way of Hilter, Stalin, and others.

    The Pope has not been silenced, not one bit.

    It's exactly what the church did centuries ago to scientists and now its redeveloping on the other side of the coin.

    If ever the Pope is burned at the stake with scientists lighting the pyre, you'll have a point.
  • Re:Real bias? (Score:5, Informative)

    by langelgjm ( 860756 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @07:42PM (#22073480) Journal

    The public perception in many places is that Richard Dawkins is a spokesperson for scientists (with a position like Chair for the Public Understanding of Science at Oxford, perhaps the perception is warranted). When such a well-known public figure rags on religion as much as he does, it's no wonder that religious people feel threatened by science. In a very real sense, Dawkins does evangelize for atheism. This is one reason why people have started calling it a "religion."

    On the other hand, many extremely accomplished scientists (Stephen Jay Gould, to name one off the top of my head) have a view of religion that is fundamentally different from Dawkin's view, and not nearly as antagonistic.

  • Re:The Galileo Myth (Score:3, Informative)

    by Schraegstrichpunkt ( 931443 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @07:44PM (#22073506) Homepage

    The story of Galileo is a tad more complicated than the simplistic version we're used to. I'm no Roman Catholic, but this meme needs to be corrected.

    And you've provided absolutely nothing in the way of doing that, other than some rant by Jonah Goldberg that makes a bunch of claims without citing sources.

    Great job.

  • Re:Dialoge? (Score:5, Informative)

    by Goaway ( 82658 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @07:45PM (#22073508) Homepage
    No, they are not, except when explicitly claiming that particular power. And this has apparently been done exactly once since that particular dogma was instated in 1870.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papal_infallibility [wikipedia.org]
  • The Galileo Fact (Score:4, Informative)

    by Scrameustache ( 459504 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @07:54PM (#22073628) Homepage Journal

    http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=OWU5ZDk3NGY3OGI4NDY1OTdmNzc2NmEzYjUzZWQxNWE= [nationalreview.com]

    The story of Galileo is a tad more complicated than the simplistic version we're used to. I'm no Roman Catholic, but this meme needs to be corrected.
    From your link: "After Galileo went back to Padua, the leading scientific mediocrities started complaining. It was the scientists who said that challenging Aristotle was heresy -- not the Church."
    From the Chuch: 1571, Paul IV issues the first formal Index Librorum Prohibitorum, including such works as De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium by Copernicus.

    Galileo was 7 when that happened. Stop listening to people who are arguing that it was ok to censor the man's empirical proof of a heretical scientific theory.
  • Re:Dialoge? (Score:3, Informative)

    by Entropius ( 188861 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @07:59PM (#22073674)
    Then those conclusions weren't rational. They might have been correct, but they weren't rational.
  • by Empiric ( 675968 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @08:02PM (#22073716)
    The reality isn't Heliocentrism or Geocentrism, it's arbitrary-centrism. There is no objective "fact" mandating the body you choose as "the center", all the bodies are in motion in a wider context of the universe. It's just simplest (and therefore most conducive to human psychology and conceptualization) to use the system that provides the least-complex description of their respective movements.

    Weird that we have scientists actively discarding science that's been clear at least since Einstein's Relativity, for the sole purpose of maintaining a stance that lets them "stick it to religion" over a largely-misrepresented (misrepresented in terms of the sharp "science versus religion" duality that's commonly touted, if you know the actual history--e.g. Galileo had permission to publish, and it only became in issue when he presented his theory in a politically-inflammatory fashion) wrong of history.

    Since, I think, many will reject this post out-of-hand in that it fails their criterion of "seems to be being said by a theist", I suggest reading Robert M. Pirsig for a philosophical perspective on this very same question. Good reading there on Euclidian-versus-Riemann geometry, too.
  • Re:Dialoge? (Score:5, Informative)

    by Entropius ( 188861 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @08:03PM (#22073742)
    1. The establishment clause only applies in the USA.
    2. The establishment clause only prohibits the government from opposing religion. As long as their actions are otherwise legal, people can criticize the Church all they want.
    3. If someone says grass is blue, it is within societal norms to laugh at them. But mysteriously it's not okay to do so if they say the world is 6000 years old.

    Saying "Black people are inferior" is bigoted. Saying "Statistically, black people in the USA are more likely to commit robbery" isn't, since it's a statement of fact.

    Saying that the Bible is two-thousand year old fiction produced by goat herders is a statement of fact. It is verifiably not true.
  • Re:Once again we see (Score:3, Informative)

    by GaryPatterson ( 852699 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @08:05PM (#22073764)
    Galileo had evidence to support his theory, while the other scientists relied on dogma and tradition as their evidence. I use the term "scientists" loosely because those people were clearly not scientists in any sense we understand today. Making Galileo out to be a crank scientist who turned out to be right is a pretty damaging view of one of the great scientists of his age.

    Condemning someone to Hell was not something to take lightly back then. We can say things today like "it'd be pretty bad I guess, if you believe in all that stuff," and think it was nothing much. It was a massive thing, barring Galileo from Heaven for eternity. Since the word of the Pope is infallible, the later apology won't allow Galileo back to Heaven. As an atheist, I can think it was all a bit silly, but back then it was deadly serious and the ramifications were truly terrible in their belief system. Again, I think you're greatly underestimating this.

    Lastly, what would a conservative Pope come to a university for? He has many, many venues to speak from should he choose to. Instead he chose a place where he knew he would be challenged by opposition. And be clear - the Pope won't be argued with, he does not debate, so the opposition would not get any 'right of reply' or option to answer claims made by the Pope in that university. The scientists would not have a chance to let their ideas compete with the Pope's (whose are well-known anyway) in this sort of dialogue. They would be told what is right and that's the end of it.

    I suspect that the Pope, the political animal that he is, wanted exactly this outcome so that he could put about the idea that science is intolerant of different ideas. His goal is to bring people back to the church, and this will help slightly.
  • Re:Real bias? (Score:5, Informative)

    by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @08:08PM (#22073802) Journal
    Is disbelief in Zeus mean you're a Hellenic paganist? Does disbelief in witchcraft mean you're an occultist?

    Atheism is the disbelief in God. It has no meaningful tenets, no dogma, no holy books, no ceremonies, no rites, no declarations of faith, no churches, no temples, no leaders, no hierarchy and no common moral code. In short, it has none of the hallmarks of a religion.
  • Re:Dialoge? (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @08:14PM (#22073880)

    Pope John Paul forgave Galileo for what exactly?

    He didn't forgive him, he said that Galileo was right. Which seems a little odd, since so far as I can work out, Galileo's last stated position was in support of geocentrism.

    Forgave him for being unjustly persecuted and placed under arrest by the Catholic Church?

    He was arrested for breaking the law. Maybe you don't believe that heresy should be illegal (I certainly don't), but his arrest was no more unjust than say someone being arrested today for smoking cannabis.

    It would seem to me it is the Church that needs to ask for forgiveness from Galileo, not give it.

    I think you'll find that's exactly what JPII did. Maybe you shouldn't go off the rails at a third party just because a poster you are responding to has poor expression?

  • the 6 million mark (Score:2, Informative)

    by orzetto ( 545509 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @08:22PM (#22073984)

    But last time I checked, there were not 6 million scientists killed after which the Pope denied it.

    You are obviously aware that the Pope served in the Wehrmacht, his previous employment was as head of the Inquisition (which did in fact kill a few people in its heyday), forbids the use of condoms and family planning resulting in disease and famine, goes around dressed in gold (that's the first vice-boss who dresses better than the boss), that through history the catholic church has in fact persecuted scientists like Galileo, whose trial the current Pope considered "fair", and that exact quotation was the cause for the initial protest, aren't you?

  • Re:Real bias? (Score:3, Informative)

    by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @08:34PM (#22074134) Journal
    Atheists *disbelieve*. It may seem a bit of semantics, but it's the nuance that counts.
  • Re:Once again we see (Score:5, Informative)

    by orzetto ( 545509 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @08:36PM (#22074156)

    In a local article about this, I read that a former Pope FOUNDED the school, which I find quite ironic.

    Not just any pope either, it was Boniface VIII [wikipedia.org]. Dante [wikipedia.org] hated him and destined him to his hell for simony (with the other damned asking "Is Boniface here yet?"). Since Dante's Inferno is the most read of the three books of the Commedia [wikipedia.org] and compulsory reading for high-school students in Italy, pretty much every Italian connects Boniface VII with corruption, greed, hypocrisy and lust for power. Which brings us back to the current pope...

  • by Vellmont ( 569020 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @08:39PM (#22074218) Homepage
    For those of you that don't know, The National Review is a conservative magazine that publishes political opinion pieces. It's not exactly a scholarly journal of well researched historical fact.

  • Re:Once again we see (Score:5, Informative)

    by YA_Python_dev ( 885173 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @09:10PM (#22074744) Journal

    did you notice how the scientists played it so that he couldn't win? [...] it seems that they believe that their ideas can only stand if they suppress competing ideas.

    You're wrong: this professor and a lot of professors and students asked the cancellation of the invitation to the Pope from the university chancellor to speak without a debate. The invitation wasn't cancelled at all, and now they're trying to portait the Pope as a victim (successfully, judging from a number of apologist comments even here on /.), which is why the professor is complaing.

    And they didn't suppress his ideas at all: on the contrary they have on Italian media much, much more space than science, other religions and atheism combined togheter. We see the Pope every day on almost every Italian TV channel, sometimes for hours without interruptions! They simply asked that the university do not give implicit scientific legitimacy to his extremist ideas without a debate, at the most important ceremony of the year!

    If you don't live in Italy you may not understand how strong is the offensive from the Vatican against women, gays, lesbians, science, atheists and pretty much anyone who doesn't bow. Please read my previous comment [slashdot.org] about this. This IS NOT ABOUT RELIGION: is about money, power and the violated rights of actual people in Italy and elsewhere.

  • by erikvcl ( 43470 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @09:14PM (#22074786) Homepage
    I disagree with your first statement; I believe that Galileo had more proof than the church had. Of course, I can't understand how the model of the solar system is a theological issue either..

    I completely agree with your second statement. And that's many years of Catholic school talking. Generally speaking, Catholics don't believe in creationism or its variants. They don't believe in literal interpretation of the bible either.
  • Re:Dialoge? (Score:1, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @09:58PM (#22075298)
    Saying that the Bible is two-thousand year old fiction produced by goat herders is a statement of fact.

    I'm not sure the word 'fact' means what you think it means.

    1. There are 66 books in the bible, the oldest of which were written around 1500 BCE (and even those were based on earlier writings). The newest ones were written around 100 CE. Most of the Old Testament is over three thousand years old.
    2. There are many references to real places and people in the Bible. The Bible isn't one coherent story. Some books are biographical in nature, about real people. Some are fiction. You can't really discount the entire thing as a work of fiction.
    3. The books of the bible were written by many different people. Some of them were goat herders maybe. Most were not.

    I get the feeling you don't know much about the history of the Bible. You should read up on it someday to avoid sounding like you don't know what you're talking about. Here's a good link with some relatively impartial information:

    http://www.straightdope.com/mailbag/mbible1.html [straightdope.com]
  • by YA_Python_dev ( 885173 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @10:07PM (#22075408) Journal

    The connection between religion (even in times past) and the flat earth is hugely exaggerated.
    Maybe. But the Bible was written by people conviced that the Earth was flat. It's never said explicitly (why say something so "obvious", after all), but it's implicit in a number of passages, e.g.: "[T]he devil taketh him up into an exceeding high mountain, and sheweth him all the kingdoms of the world, and the glory of them" (Matthew 4:1-12). How can you see the whole Earth from a high mountain if it's spherical? There's something very similar also in Daniel 4:10-11. And let's not speak about the "four corners of the Earth" (Isaiah 11:12, and a lot of other places: I can probably find a dozen or so of "corners" and "edges" of the Earth in the whole Bible).

    please stop propagating factless myths.
    Please read the Bible. The whole thing. Sorry but it's really that bad.
  • by pbhj ( 607776 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2008 @11:38PM (#22076278) Homepage Journal
    Galileo's falling out with the Catholic Church may have been vital - but it sure wasn't about the church accepting a proven point of heliocentricism.

    Corpenicus' work proposing the heliocentric hypothesis was after all church sponsored (as was Galileo) and indeed inscribed, IIRC, to the pope of the time.

    Galileo had been wrong before, apparently he believed comets to be an atmospheric phenomenon and the great _scientific_ minds of the time were as yet unconvinced. The church was leaving the question of geo- and heliocentricism open rather than making a decree as to the truth of one or other. Galileo by all accounts didn't like that. Despite being called in to the vatican he went ahead and published non-latin work to tell the masses that his theory was the truth - this shows he wasn't trying to convince the learned scholars, incidentally. Kepler had already published on much of the stuff Galileo worked on anyway so the papacy was hardly keeping things in the bag. Possibly the church was wary of following Kepler's hypotheses which appear to have been founded on a sort of Platonic helio-mysticism (eg http://galileo.rice.edu/sci/kepler.html [rice.edu]).

    Fine, the papacy over-reacted to Galileo. We got it.

    Incidentally - was Galileo right? Is the sun "fixed". I don't think so. Indeed I'm happy with both geocentric and heliocentric descriptions; but in a "sol" centred frame of reference I'm happier with heliocentric maths (though one of the problems with heliocentricism apparently was that it failed to be as accurate as Ptolemy's tables).

    ---
    Some comparative sources:
    http://galileo.rice.edu/bio/narrative_7.html [rice.edu]
    http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/06342b.htm [newadvent.org]
  • by salveque ( 1221584 ) on Thursday January 17, 2008 @01:05AM (#22076928)

    Galileo Galilei was right and the Bible is wrong!
    No. The bible never states that the Earth is flat. Galileo was right but that doesn't mean that the Bible was wrong. The flat Earth belief was around before the Bible and was simply the belief at the time.
  • Re:Dialoge? (Score:3, Informative)

    by Foobar of Borg ( 690622 ) on Thursday January 17, 2008 @01:39AM (#22077152)

    "God says priests can't marry"
    Priestly celibacy is not considered a point of dogma. It is merely a rule, and thus subject to change. It is not a matter of "God says", but rather a matter of "the Church does things this way for now". So yes, you can argue that priests should not have to be celibate and still be a good Catholic. In fact, in some rites of the Catholic Church (such as the Byzantine rite), you *can* get married as a priest. Also, if you are a married Protestant minister who converts to Catholicism, you can remain married and be a priest even in the Roman rite.
  • by orzetto ( 545509 ) on Thursday January 17, 2008 @02:53AM (#22077522)

    He was drafted into the army by a fascist state. Not something he had any choice over or should be blamed for.

    Some people, at the risk of their lives, defected. He stayed in the system. Many others did, like Nobel laureate Günther Grass [wikipedia.org], but Grass lived an entire life of anti-fascist political activity afterwards. Another Nobel laureate, Dario Fo [wikipedia.org], was drafted but defected at the first occasion to join the resistance. Note that Fo was born in 1927, less than one month before Benedict XVI, and Grass is only six months older.
    And anyway, the point was to point the irony with the six-million figure indicated by the parent post, when Ratzinger was among those that helped establish that tally.

    the activities [of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith] we now associate with "the Inquisition" ended centuries before Ratzinger's birth.

    They are not allowed to torture people anymore with the comfy chair, but their main activity is still censorship and repression of free thought within the Church. He could have chosen to be a missionary like Mother Theresa, but preferred the activity of a censoring bureaucrat.

    He holds no legal authority outside a few blocks in Rome.

    Man, I am Italian and I wish it were like that. He has far more authority in the country than politicians. He says what he wants, and politicians usually give it to him because too few dare to tell him to mind his business, even though the separation of state and church should be a principle in the agreements the Italian state has with the Vatican. Partly it's because being "catholic", over here, is like being "patriotic" in the US. He is currently attacking the Italian abortion law: instead of simply telling catholics not to have abortions, he wants to make it illegal for everybody. Some people still remember how it was before the abortion law: double as many abortions and all performed by untrained, shady figures, resulting in women dying every year.

    Yes, the Pope does wear papal vestments, although "dressed in gold" is another exaggeration.

    I probably did not finish the thought in my original post. It is not just that the pope is actually dressed in clothes that would cover significant charity projects and probably save hundreds of lives from starvation, the Church as a whole is actually a quite greedy parasite. They get about 0.8% of the Italian income tax and all their activities (including the for-profit ones) are tax-exempt, which in the last 20 years has allowed them to amass a fortune. Weren't these the guys who should preach poverty?

  • Re:Dialoge? (Score:3, Informative)

    by jotok ( 728554 ) on Thursday January 17, 2008 @03:28AM (#22077716)
    Really? Where in your pantheon do the philosophers who developed the idea of empiricism fit?
  • Re:Dialoge? (Score:1, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 17, 2008 @03:54AM (#22077834)

    One also forgets that the Church was Gallileo's employer (he taught at a Catholic university.)
    Galileo used to teach in the University of Padua [wikipedia.org] (where I'm studying now), which is renown for having been under the Venice Republic protection, thus independent from the Roman Church.
  • by SigmundFloyd ( 994648 ) on Thursday January 17, 2008 @04:31AM (#22078026)

    He had a looking glass he could point at the sky,
    And cardinal Bellarmino, Galileo's main inquisitor whose stance has been defended by Ratzinger, refused to even look through it when invited to do so, rejecting Galileo's claims on theological grounds.

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