DiscoverIn the Beginning, there was ... Philosophy.Episode 25: How dark were the Middle Ages?
Episode 25: How dark were the Middle Ages?

Episode 25: How dark were the Middle Ages?

Update: 2025-07-07
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There is the rather common view that the Middle Ages were an age of darkness, ignorance and religious intolerance. But how true is this image? This episode introduces the Middle Ages (1000 AD-1543) as a period of intellectual vitality. It gave rise natural philosophy, which is the precursor of modern science. It accomplished two things. The first task was to make the Bible and Christian religion compatible with the authoritative teachings of Aristotle. This compromise was achieved by two remarkable scholars: Albert the Great (Albertus Magnus, 1200-1280) and Thomas Aquinas (1224-1274). The second task was to recognise Aristotle's errors and develop alternative explanations of the observable events in the natural world. Such alternative explanations were developed by John Buridan (1300-1361) and Nicola Oresme (1325-1382), amongst other scholastic philosophers. Both were followers of William of Ockham's philosophy of nominalism (1287-1347) and the maxim called Ockham's razor.

Literature:

A. C. Crombie: Augustine to Galileo (1959)

J. Hannam: God's Philosophers (2009)


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Episode 25: How dark were the Middle Ages?

Episode 25: How dark were the Middle Ages?

Friedel Weinert (Emeritus Professor of Philosophy, University of Bradford)