History and the Roman Catholic Church

2797 Words6 Pages

Christianity most specifically, the Holy Roman Catholic Church has been involved in the world throughout time. Since Christianity, when if first became a major religion in society the involvement of the Roman Catholic Church has affected many areas of history. The Roman Catholic Church has affected the world historically, as demonstrated by it's impact upon the historical figures like Hypatia, Joan of Arc, and Jan Hus, historical events such as the Salem Witch Trials, and many other eras and events. The Roman Catholic Church slowed down scientific advancement during the Middle Ages when they had the greatest control over society, due to their personal beliefs. Finally, the Roman Catholic Church for a time changed the world ethically for women and homosexuals, although this is not inclusive. Without the extreme control the Roman Catholic Church had, the world would be a completely different place to live in. To prove this, topics such as the effect the Roman Catholic Church has had throughout history, how science has been affected by the Roman Catholic Church, and how the Roman Catholic Church has affected society ethically to a small and temporary degree.

During the 4th century in Alexandria, Egypt, there was a woman by the name of Hypatia of Alexandria. Hypatia taught the philosophy of Neoplatonism- which was the philosophy laid out by Plato in the 3ed century- mathematics, and astronomy, and was one of few women to be considered a true scholar. She taught students and political figures, and was rumored to have written the theory of the original geocentric model of the Earth, along with other commentaries that were lost. Due to Hypatia's scholarly status in the city of Alexandria, and because she would go out into the city and ...

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Walker, Jim. Scientific Advancement. 20 Jan 2010. Graph, Digital File. http://www.nobeliefs.com/comments10.htm

The graph shows how science was held back during the dark ages, which was during the Roman Catholic Church's time of power. It also shows when science took off again, around the Renaissance when the church was losing power.

The information was useful because it was not necessarily biased with the article it was written with and it was cut and dry of what happened. The graph was also very simple to read and not hard to see how one thing affected another.

The site it came from is credible because of its use of citations at the bottom of the page and how they are marked out the citations throughout the paper. The graph is also a nice touch, because it gives a nice perspective of how science and the Roman Catholic Church worked when the two came at odds.

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