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Science, Philosophy, the Arts, and Religion Section 14.76 Munch, Edvard (1863-1944) The Scream (or The Cry) 1893 Introduction • Modern society put great faith in science • Scientific advances were broad based • Inner zone was epicenter of activity • From 1875-1905 patents tripled in US, quadrupled in Germany • Changing conceptions of science • The universe according to Newton was unquestioned • universe was regular, orderly, predictable • did not change over time • New views challenged the idea of a static universe The impact of evolution • 1859 Darwin The Origin of Species • he took Hegel idea of evolution in the metaphysical and the Enlightenment idea in progress and applied it to man • all species change with successive small changes • Unintelligent development • species did not change by intelligence or a purposeful activity but by chance • passed on changes to offspring • Natural selection and survival of the fittest • Most advantageous characteristics would prevail T.H. Huxley • Known as Darwin’s bulldog • Debated with the bishop of Oxford • Darwin is denounced for saying that human being came from monkeys • Fear that all human dignity, morality, religion would collapse • Darwin was an extension of the changing view of nature T.H. Huxley Old testament was increasingly challenged Animalistic characteristics of humans were recognized What was so unnerving about Darwinism was that Nature was no longer harmonious it really was red in tooth and claw Good and bad based on survival Change was everlasting and everything was relative to time, place, environment Short term success of a species or fitness Darwinism merged with Realpolitic (toughness of mind) Social Darwinism • Translated science into everyday life • Some people were superior to others • whites to blacks, Nordics to Latins, German to Slaves, to Jews • Upper class was most “fit” • Sir Francis Galton • Eugenics • Goddard, Henry Herbert, Ph.D. The Kallikak Family: A Study in the Heredity of FeebleMindedness. – In considering the question of care, segregation through colonization seems in the present state of our knowledge to be the ideal and perfectly satisfactory method. Sterilization may be accepted as a makeshift, as a help to solve this problem because the conditions have become so intolerable • Some nationalities better than others • Some nations better than others “In considering the question of care, segregation through colonization seems in the present state of our knowledge to be the ideal and perfectly satisfactory method. Sterilization may be accepted as a makeshift, as a help to solve this problem because the conditions have become so intolerable.” Mr. M comments: I know you center block quotes, but quotation marks should be used for all blockhead quotes. Genetics, Anthropology, and Psychology • Gregor Mendel (1822-1884) • Austrian monk experimented with cross pollination of garden peas in his Augustinian monastery • Discovered how heredity operates and how hybridization takes place • Published in 1866 • ignored until 1900 • Opened the door to the modern study of genetics Anthropologists • Examined the “races” and various cultures • Favored races • Some argued that whites were most competent and that Nordics or German and Anglo Saxons best • Race consciousness • Public became very conscience of race • Cultural anthropologists deflated some of this by saying that their studies indicate that no society was better than another Social relativism suggested varieties of humans were simply adapting and surviving Relativism No society is better than the next culture and morality, everything are adaptations Negation of values What was right and wrong was just psychological conditioning, opinion or point of view There are no absolutes Anthropology and religion • • • • Sir James Frazer (1854-1941) wrote The Golden Bough Compared various religions demonstrated that most sacred practices , rites and ideas of Christianity were not unique and could be found in numerous premodern societies • said there is a thin line between magic and religion • Undermined traditional beliefs Sir James Frazer Psychology • The study of human behavior, led to upsetting implications about the nature of human freedom and rationality in the 1870s • Wihelm Wundt (1832-1920) • German who first launched it as a science with new techniques • Ivan Pavlov • Animal and human behavior could be explained by conditioned responses • “conditioned” dogs to salivate automatically at the ringing of a bell • Conscious reasoning was challenged • Implied that training not choice or conscience reasoning governs human behavior Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) • A Viennese physician who founded psychoanalysis • Believed that certain forms of emotional disturbances like hysteria were traceable to early life experiences • Experimented with hypnosis and then developed Free Association or free recall • Bring repressed experiences to consciousness • 1900 The Interpretation of Dreams • Explored the role that the Unconscious plays in human behavior • Stressed dreams as a key to understanding the unconscious • Human behavior outside the conscious mind was suggested • Suggested humans were not essentially rational creatures • Challenged enlightenment assumptions The New Physics • 1890 saw a revolution in physics • Newton’s Principia defined the universe • Said the atom, the basic unit of all matter was like a hard solid unstructured billiard ball, permanent and unchanging • matter and energy were separate and distinct • Newton was challenged by Einstein after several developmental steps • Antoine Becquerel (French scientist) discovers radioactivity disputing Newton’s atom • Observed that uranium emitted particles or rays of energy • Pierre and Marie Curie • Developed the notion that atoms were complex and released energy as they decayed • Max Planck (German physicist) describe the release of energy as quantum • energy was emitted or absorbed in specific and discrete unites or bundles (quantum) and not emitted smoothly • Niels Bohr (Danish physicist) suggested atoms consisted of nucleus and surrounded by electrically charged electrons (electricity) • like a mini solar system • Indications are that matter was transmutable (alchemy) • Convertible into energy Albert Einstein (1879-1955) • German born Jewish genius • developed the theory of relativity in a series of paper (1905-1916) • e=mc2 • Space, time and motion are not absolute • Relative to the observer and the observer’s movements • Unified field theory • Gravitation, electromagnetism, and subatomic behavior • The orderly Newtonian universe was being replaced by a messy, relativistic space-time continuum • Werner Heisenberg “uncertainty principle” • Velocity and position of the individual electron Trends in philosophy and the arts Agnosticism • Most intellectuals of this time were positivists • Belief that scientific methods provide the only positive knowledge of the world • Anything unknowable to science is therefore unknowable period • Herbert Spencer (1820-1903)and Ernst Haeckel (18341919) • English and German positivist who popularized agnostics • Agnosticism: God is un-provable • they were strong believers in evolution • evolution of society was toward the increasing freedom of the individual • Governments exist to maintain freedom and justice • Governments should not coddle the weak and unfit • But he did believe that altruism and charity were ethical virtues that had evolved in the fittest Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900) • German philosopher who developed the Superman theory • Was a radical thinker and had a low opinion of modern, democratic society • Superman was • a noble being who would create new ethical values and philosophical truths • Would dominate the masses • Most values (love, helpfulness, patience, hope, humility, Christian ethnic) are slave moralities of the weak to disarm the strong • the Superman would possess courage, intellectual excellence, character (Lion, Scarecrow, and Tin Man all in one) • human beings are driven more by their instincts (their Will to Power) than by reason or rational • he was considered unbalanced and insane The Arts • Portrayal of social problems • Emile Zola in France & Henrik Ibsen in Scandinavia turned to the portrayal of social problems to produce realistic literature dealing with the themes of life (Industrial strife, strikes, prostitution, divorce, insanity) • reflected the new attitudes (Relativism, irrationalism, social determinism) • Focused on unconscious mind • No Absolutes!! • Paul Gaugin – Painter who fled to South Seas, abandoned his family and modern Europe and this new attitude Fringe • some art became incomprehensible to the average person • Books without punctuation • Atonal music • Abstract paintings and sculpture • Munch, Van Gogh • Art was not “for” something • Art was for the sake of art and artists The Churches and the Modern Age • Threats to religion • More threatened after 1860 than ever (Darwinian evolution) • So many fundamental premises of traditional religion had been directly question or outright denied (Creationism, uniqueness of Christian tenants) • Bible was studied in a technical historical sense • David Friedrich Strauss (1808-1874) wrote Life of Jesus – explained miracles of Jesus as myth • Ernest Renan (1823-1892) – Gave secular explanations to the Old and New Testament • Material progress more important to people than religion L'Antechrist By Ernest Renan (1873) Challenges to Protestantism • Church attendance began to decline • Protestantism traditionally emphasized their own private judgment over the authority of the clergy • Were divided into two groups • Modernists • Aware of scientific contradictions • saw the Bible as an Allegory • Customary observance by people whose minds were elsewhere • Fundamentalists • Literal and unchallenging • Revival after WWI Catholicism resists • 1864 Pius IX he wrote Syllabus of Errors • Denounced current ideas of science • gave a long list of wrong current ideas including rationalism and science • was a warning to Catholics • 1854 the dogma of the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary was announced as truth • 1870 Vatican I • first since Council of Trent • Council proclaimed the dogma of papal infallibility • when pope speaks ex cathedra (on matter of faith and morals) – speaks with a a final and supernatural authority that can’t be questioned Pope Pius IX 1846-1878 Vatican City • 1870 as Vatican Council was sitting Italian State took Rome (taking Pope’s temporal power but actually enhancing his spiritual) • Lateran treaty of 1929 papacy recognized the Italians state and Italy conceded the existence of a Vatican City (1 square mile) • Rerum Novarum • Leo XIII (1878-1903) upheld private property but found fault with capitalism for its poverty and insecurity • It also criticized socialism b/c of its materialism and antireligious • Recommended that Catholics form their own socialist parties Jewish Emancipation • Science and secularism had same dissolving effect on Orthodox Judaism (sparked Reform Judaism) • Liberalism allowed them to be accepted and blend into most European countries • A fear of assimilation – would lead to a loss of Jewish identity • Anti-Semitism also was a barrier to assimilation – Russian pograms, Dreyfus case, ethnic theories of pure race, social Darwinism Hungarian Jewish journalist Theodor Herzl observed first hand as a reporter in Vienna the Dreyfus affair founded the Zionist movement which called for the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine where all world Jews might find refuge