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Tuesday, August 26, 2008 | Reason : In the News | print version Print | Comments |

Document The heretic

by Laura Miller - Salon

Thanks to SPS for the link.

http://www.salon.com/books/review/2008/08/25/bruno/index.html

The heretic

Giordano Bruno has been called a martyr to science and an occultist, but a new book argues that the brilliant philosopher's unconventional behavior did him in.


By Laura Miller

Aug. 25, 2008 | The bronze figure of Giordano Bruno that stands at the center of Rome's Campo de' Fiori may be the most successful commemorative monument in the world. The average statue in a park or square usually rates no more than a glance: Either you already know who the guy is, or you don't care. But the hooded and manacled effigy of Bruno, with its haunted stare, immediately catches the eye, and the gruesome story attached to it -- Bruno was burned at the stake in that very spot, for the crime of heresy -- cements him in memory. Practically every tourist who comes to Rome tromps through the Campo and hears that story, even if they've never heard of Bruno before. The students who commissioned the statue in the 1880s, as an emblem for freedom of thought and the division of church from state, really got their money's worth.

But who was Giordano Bruno, and why was he executed in the Campo de' Fiori in 1600? A common misperception mixes him up with Galileo, who ran into trouble with the church 16 years later for embracing the Copernican model of the solar system instead of endorsing the Aristotelian belief that the sun revolves around the Earth. (In fact, the two men shared an Inquisitor, the implacable Cardinal Robert Bellarmine, canonized by the Catholic Church in 1930.) Bruno, too, thought that the Earth circled the sun, and subscribed to many other than heterodox ideas as well: that the universe is infinite and that everything in it is made up of tiny particles (i.e., atoms), and that it is immeasurably old. But as Ingrid Rowland demonstrates in her new biography of the renegade thinker, "Giordano Bruno: Philosopher/Heretic," Bruno was no martyr for science. What got him killed was a murky mixture of spiritual transgression and personal foibles, combined with a large dose of bad luck.

Born in Nola, a small city near Naples, the precocious Bruno soon made his way to the regional capital where he became a Dominican friar, despite the fact that one of the more ecumenical Augustinian orders would probably have been a better fit. The Dominicans ran the best university, but their dry, hidebound scholasticism might have been custom-made to rub the imaginative Bruno the wrong way. Why he made this choice and did many other seemingly self-destructive or simply wrongheaded things remains something of a mystery, mostly due to a lack of documentary evidence. Even the records of his trial before the Inquisition in Rome got lost when bales of Vatican papers were carted off to France and back again during the Napoleonic Wars. Some of his surviving works feature autobiographical elements, but since these are poems or plays written in service of various philosophical and personal agendas, it's hard to know exactly which parts of them represent actual events.

One thing can't be doubted: Bruno thought most of his fellow friars were "asses"; in fact, the stupidity and incompetence of other philosophers and religious thinkers may be -- along with his own brilliance -- one of the most enduring themes in his work and life. From the beginning of his career, when he stripped images of the Virgin and saints from his cell at the convent of San Domenico Maggiore (implying that such things were idolatrous), he struck his colleagues as odd and (worse yet) "suspiciously like a Protestant." Trained in the rigorous syllogism-based reasoning of the scholastics, he soaked up the ecstatic Neoplatonic ideas of Augustinian mentors on the side. When a professor ridiculed the Arian heresy (which denies that God is divided into three persons, the doctrine of the Trinity) as "ignorant," Bruno defended the learning of its proponents (if not the heresy itself), and won himself a scolding that he considered unjust and brooded over for years.

Eventually, Bruno's unconventional behavior and ideas got him into enough trouble in Naples that he fled to Rome. (Investigators later found a copy of Erasmus' "Commentaries" -- on the Vatican's list of forbidden books -- hidden in his latrine.) In Rome, he so excited the interest of the Inquisition that he finally left Italy entirely, taking off his habit and living as a secular academic. Not long after that, he was excommunicated, and commenced a nomadic life, traveling from one European capitol or university town to another, seeking work and patrons. He had, as Rowland notes, a knack for making friends in high places, and an even more pronounced habit of quarreling with everyone else.

In Geneva, among Protestants whom he hoped to find more open-minded, he once again ran into irksome restrictions. Swiss professors could not be openly challenged in their classrooms, so Bruno decided to publish a broadsheet listing 20 errors of fact made by a particularly well-connected lecturer and wound up jailed for slander until he agreed to apologize to the offended party on his knees. Onward, then, to France, where he found favor with Henri III by promising to teach the court the secrets of "artificial memory," a method for memorizing prodigious amounts of material as well as a discipline associated with arcane powers.

Bruno's achievements in the "art of memory" were legendary. (The Dominicans had once sent him to Rome where he recited a psalm in Hebrew before the pope, then repeated it backward word for word.) It's this aspect of the philosopher's work that most interests scholars of the Renaissance today, particular the distinguished late British historian Frances Yates, author of "The Art of Memory" and other books on what's known as the hermetic tradition: gnosticism, Neoplatonism, magic and alchemy. Her 1964 book, "Giordano Bruno and the Hermetic Tradition," insisted that it was Bruno's interest in such forbidden matters that led to his execution. Rowland apparently doesn't agree, downplaying Bruno's contact with figures like the Elizabethan "magician" Dr. John Dee and arguing that Bruno's idea of magic was "pointedly natural and physical" rather than occult.

Still, the mental powers of Bruno and his fellow memory artists seem almost superhuman today. The basic principle, Rowland explains, is simple enough, "to link words with images." Nevertheless, the structures employed were mind-boggling: vast, elaborate patterns and nested wheels within wheels (like the color wheels used by visual designers) that could be used to juxtapose and rearrange huge quantities of information without recourse to any extra-mental form of storage (like writing). This ability makes the minds of Renaissance intellectuals radically different from our own, almost incomprehensibly so. Some of the more outlandish things that some of them believed -- such as the conviction that the universe is a series of rotating crystalline spheres with planets embedded in them, or that the space in outer space is a liquid -- seem merely eccentric by comparison.

Bruno's skill in the arts of memory was unparalleled, and he believed that such abilities bestowed some kind of power on those who mastered them. Random thoughts could be brought to "a distilled and developed order of conceivable species, arranged as statues, or a microcosm, or some other kind of architecture ... by focusing the chaos of imagination." Whatever that means, the discipline and practice required to master the arts were beyond the reach of most of Bruno's students, so he also taught astronomy and other forms of philosophy and natural philosophy (what we would call science) to wealthy Frenchmen. Religious tensions between Catholics and Protestants in France soon sent him scurrying to England, however, and there Bruno met with an unexpected setback while seeking employment at Oxford: The English found his small stature, volatile demeanor and Italian accent irresistibly comical. Soon, Bruno was offending his neighbors by writing satirical dialogues complaining that England's populace was "second to none that the Earth nurtures in her bosom for being disrespectful, uncivil, rough, rustic, savage, and badly brought up."

Rowland thinks that his rocky reception in England sharpened Bruno's ideas. There, but also later in Prague and Germany, he solidified his ideas about the cosmos. He reached his conclusions -- about the universe's infinite size and age -- largely through abstract contemplation. Unlike Galileo, Bruno had no gift for calculation or meticulous empirical observation; geometry and poetry were more in his line, and Rowland's own translations of his writings, amply quoted in this biography, testify to his literary talent. Bruno's mind inhabited the blurry territory between art and science, which at that time weren't seen as necessarily separated; his treatise "On the Immense," for example, is written in verse. Perhaps it's all the more impressive that, in spite of his own mathematical limitations, Bruno perceived the need for calculus (invented during the next century by Isaac Newton and Gottfried Leibniz) to deal with numbers of great and infinitesimal sizes.

With all these theoretical conclusions came an increasing skepticism about Christianity -- particularly the various sacraments and doctrines of the church. He doubted not only the Trinity, but the personhood of God, the divinity of Christ, the Virgin birth and the transubstantiation of the eucharist into the flesh and blood of Christ. He was a universalist, meaning that he believed all of creation (even heathens, unrepentant sinners and demons) would ultimately be reconciled with and forgiven by God, and he apparently believed in reincarnation. Yet despite what are, in toto, a sweeping array of exceptions to the church's creed, he continued to think of himself as a Catholic and intermittently petitioned learned officials to intervene on his behalf and revoke his excommunication.

Finally, in an act of profound miscalculation, Bruno returned to Italy in the employ of a Venetian nobleman who wanted to be taught the memory arts. The nobleman turned out to be a bit of a crank and incapable of the considerable discipline and effort required, but when Bruno tried to leave, his patron accused him of chicanery, locked him in the attic and ultimately turned him over to the Venetian Inquisition. The man also submitted a letter cataloging the philosopher's heresies, including Bruno's boasts of an ability to perform "magic" tricks exceeding the so-called miracles produced by Christ and "plans to make himself the head of a new sect under the name of a new philosophy ... he said that the Virgin could not have given birth, that our Catholic faith is full of blasphemies against God, that friars should have neither the right to debate nor incomes because they pollute the world and are all asses," and so on, much of it all too plausible, given Bruno's penchant for ranting about the idiocy of church figures.

Under the Spanish Inquisition a single anonymous denunciation was considered sufficient evidence of heresy, but both the Venetian and Roman Inquisitions required the public testimony of two witnesses in order to convict. The Venetians ultimately acquitted Bruno, but only after holding him for months, crammed in a cell with several other accused heretics, where tempers ran understandably high. Then they extradited him to Rome, a concession the Venetian republic would not ordinarily have made to Roman power, but that just so happened to be politically expedient at the time. The Romans held Bruno for a further eight years before convicting him of heresy and handing him over to secular authorities for execution. (The Inquisition itself was not supposed to shed blood; like American authorities today, who deliver accused terrorists to Egyptian prisons, they relied on outsiders to do their dirty work.)

It was what Rowland calls Bruno's "combative personality" that finally did him in. The Roman Inquisition, in an especially insecure and punitive mood on account of widespread Protestant agitation against the church, had only the Venetian nobleman's testimony against the philosopher. Then one of Bruno's former cellmates, a man he'd slapped during a dispute and who feared that Bruno had informed on him as well, stepped forward to relate the various blasphemies and heretical convictions Bruno had spouted during their time together behind bars.

Their fellow prisoners confirmed that Bruno had cursed God, Christ and the church. Of course, many Italians (then and now) have been known to do this in moments of pique, but the Inquisition also had ample evidence of the philosopher's contempt for friars, Jesuits, scholastics and other church figures (not to mention his very real objections to key Christian doctrines) in his printed works. He had vented as much bile as the most virulent Internet troll, but he was much more eloquent and far from anonymous. Eventually, he ran out of friends and second chances.

The last straw was Bruno's refusal to accept the authority of the Inquisition itself. Even so, his rebellion was peculiarly Catholic: He kept insisting he'd recant if the pope personally confirmed to him that his beliefs were heresy. This infuriated Cardinal Bellarmine, known for his conviction that harsh punishments make good teachers. Sixteen years later, Galileo managed to elude the more extreme penalties meted out by Bellarmine and company with a public (and essentially politic) repudiation of his heliocentric views; he lived to fight another day under a relatively comfortable house arrest. Bruno was characteristically less prudent, and died naked and gagged (by some accounts with an iron spike through his tongue), in flames.

As Rowland points out, Bruno, irascible as he was, had committed no crime, not even the disruption of mass, a common practice by militant Protestants of the day (and also punishable by death). He "had done nothing in his life except talk, write and argue." When his fate was pronounced, he told his condemners, "You may be more afraid to bring that sentence against me than I am to accept it." It took a long time for that to prove true, yet thanks to those idealistic 19th-century students, everyone who comes to Rome to behold the splendor of the Vatican is also presented with a reminder of its bloody, repressive past. Every year, on the anniversary of his death, free-thinking Romans cover his statue with flowers. While the church has since expressed "profound regret" for his persecution (which it simultaneously tries to palm off on "civil authority"), this can't be comfortably reconciled with the canonization of Bellarmine a mere seven decades ago. Dead 400 years and largely unread but immortalized nevertheless in bronze, Giordano Bruno is still a thorn in their side.

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1. Comment #237177 by Sage on August 26, 2008 at 6:53 am

"You may be more afraid to bring that sentence against me than I am to accept it."
Just, wow.

Other Comments by Sage

2. Comment #237178 by theocide on August 26, 2008 at 6:53 am

Wow, I can barely remember where I left my keys!

Other Comments by theocide

3. Comment #237184 by Cartomancer on August 26, 2008 at 7:04 am

 avatar
Rowland apparently doesn't agree, downplaying Bruno's contact with figures like the Elizabethan "magician" Dr. John Dee and arguing that Bruno's idea of magic was "pointedly natural and physical" rather than occult.
I'm not comfortable with applying that distinction to the thought world of sixteenth century Europe. Most Renaissance magi and their medieval predecessors conceived of magic in physical, almost scientific terms. The magical arts were simply the unlocking of the secrets of nature and bending them to the will of the practitioner, a description which could still just about fit science and technology today. "Occult" simply meant "hidden" or "secret", as opposed to apparent and obvious. Furthermore the late medieval and early modern concept of natural science included a spiritual, incorporeal and non-physical dimension which we today would consider the province of metaphysics or religion. It was perfectly reasonable, for instance, to discuss what kind of incorporeal substance the various parts of the human soul consisted of. Peter Abelard in the twelfth century even speculated that daemons achieve their suggestions to the souls of mortals through the alchemical properties of rocks and plants, and Roger Bacon in the thirteenth was convinced that, through magnifying the astrological properties of the right stars with an appropriate optical array of mirrors and lenses, the flaws and weaknesses in the human body could be eradicated and immortality achieved.

Such speculations were commonplace. The attentions of the inquisition were not drawn because one's science was overtly magical, they were drawn because somebody thought you were trying to go beyond what human beings should know and transgress the realm of divine knowledge. Knowledge of the workings of nature was not necessarily a transgression, but sometimes it could be, especially if nobody liked you and you were the sort of non-conforming troublemaker who picked fights all the time (Abelard and Bacon were like this too in their own ways).

Other Comments by Cartomancer

4. Comment #237185 by SamKiddoGordon on August 26, 2008 at 7:05 am

 avatarYou wonder what he might have contributed had he lived in another time.

Other Comments by SamKiddoGordon

5. Comment #237188 by rod-the-farmer on August 26, 2008 at 7:11 am

 avatarWhen can we expect the decanonisation of Bellarmine ? Oh, they don't do that ? Just a sort of apology they burned Bruno at the stake ? Sorry I asked..

Other Comments by rod-the-farmer

6. Comment #237199 by jshuey on August 26, 2008 at 7:30 am

 avatarWhat amazes me in reading the above is how little the religious have changed in their disdain for and treatment of those who don't share their beloved delusions.

We should all give thanks (though to whom or what I can't say) that neither the Vatican nor the Republican Party of Texas have their own armies.

Other Comments by jshuey

7. Comment #237216 by Ishruul on August 26, 2008 at 8:11 am

 avatar3. Comment #237184 by Cartomancer

HOW DARE YOU!!! Heretic, face the jugment of god by his purifying fire laced with his purifying gasoline and divine motor oil.

Face the new age inquisition (brought to you in part by the Creationism's Fundation for a 15B.C. Modern Age).

Other Comments by Ishruul

8. Comment #237217 by Sargeist on August 26, 2008 at 8:12 am

 avatarCartomancer,

Reading your comment, I was suddenly struck by how the anti-stem cell movement is carrying on those wonderful 16th century traditions!

Also reminded me of the conversation with Richard Leakey in the Darwin programme (whose 3 parts I finally managed to watch back-to-back last night - and it was fab) when he mentions that humans and chimpanzees might be able to, you know... And I suddenly thought to myself: Yeah! Now that would be a brilliant experiment to try. Get some eggs from a human, get some sperm from a chimp (just stand in front of one at the zoo long enough with a cup in front of you should do the trick), mix'em up in a tube, and Bob's your uncle. Great stuff. Then I started thinking about why it is that I really, honestly, do not have any problem at all with that kind of experiment, and yet so many other people would.

Odd, huh?

Other Comments by Sargeist

9. Comment #237220 by moderndaythomas on August 26, 2008 at 8:16 am

 avatarjshuey

I'll second that. I can imagine a day when reason and enlightenment will have to do more that just converge at a site like this one. I only hope that I'm overreacting some.

Other Comments by moderndaythomas

10. Comment #237230 by Bruno on August 26, 2008 at 8:32 am

A hero of mine since boyhood, I chose to take his name as my username for this website. "A thorn in their side," indeed.

Other Comments by Bruno

11. Comment #237242 by huzonfurst on August 26, 2008 at 8:46 am

Sargeist (#8), it makes me wonder if breeding humans with chimps has already been done in secret. Extreme capitalists would love it for the slave labor potential, and Bushite governments for all the obedient (and expendible) soldiers it might produce.

Wait a tick - where did all these creationists really come from...?

Other Comments by huzonfurst

12. Comment #237248 by Sargeist on August 26, 2008 at 8:53 am

 avatarHi huzonfirst,

I know you were joking, but I would think that no one in the Western world has done it, if only because of the rather strict laws about animal experimentation.

You also need the human eggs to try it with. The reason I said human eggs and chimp sperm rather than vice versa was that chimp sperm would be easier to get than chimp eggs, I think, again because of the aforementioned laws.

(I am, of course, just guessing and opining about all that stuff)

Of course, fertilising (or trying to fertilise) the egg is not the good bit; doing it under controlled conditions to see what happens in micro detail would be the good bit.

A shame I did not do any biology post-GCSE. I have no idea if different numbers of chromosomes are a barrier to reproduction. I suppose that people with various chromosomal trisomies can reproduce with "normal" people.

Other Comments by Sargeist

13. Comment #237250 by beeline on August 26, 2008 at 8:54 am

 avatarWikipedia has this amusing list of things that got him in trouble. Reading it now, it's hard to imagine how he could have been less 'erroneous'.

Holding opinions contrary to the Catholic Faith and speaking against it and its ministers.

Holding erroneous opinions about the Trinity, about Christ's divinity and Incarnation.

Holding erroneous opinions about Christ.

Holding erroneous opinions about Transubstantiation and Mass.

Claiming the existence of a plurality of worlds and their eternity.

Believing in metempsychosis and in the transmigration of the human soul into brutes.

Dealing in magics and divination.

Denying the Virginity of Mary.

Sounds like a bit of a big-mouth, but he clearly had a clear-mind as well.

Other Comments by beeline

14. Comment #237252 by Sargeist on August 26, 2008 at 8:55 am

 avatar
Sounds like a bit of a big-mouth, but he clearly had a clear-mind as well.

Noooooo! You've jinxed us all!

Other Comments by Sargeist

15. Comment #237283 by shemp333 on August 26, 2008 at 10:01 am

 avatarWow! What a fabulous story, and one I never heard before. Keep articles like this coming!


Richard should consider himself lucky to not have been around in those days....

Most of us as well. We must stay vigilant forever I'm afraid.

Other Comments by shemp333

16. Comment #237288 by rod-the-farmer on August 26, 2008 at 10:13 am

 avatar

Bob's your uncle

Correction...

Bonobo's your uncle.

Other Comments by rod-the-farmer

17. Comment #237303 by Quetzalcoatl on August 26, 2008 at 10:33 am

 avatar
Sounds like a bit of a big-mouth, but he clearly had a clear-mind as well


And having a clear mind obviously makes him a clear thinker.

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18. Comment #237309 by Ishruul on August 26, 2008 at 10:38 am

 avatar11. Comment #237242 by huzonfurst

Has you requested, here's the awful, yet funny, truth.

http://www.experienceproject.com/stories/Love-Weird-Facts/210461

He he! Reality is hilarious, but they should have used great apes, like gorilla, not chimps.

Other Comments by Ishruul

19. Comment #237314 by Vaal on August 26, 2008 at 10:44 am

 avatar10. Comment #237230 by Bruno
A hero of mine since boyhood

Me too! What a shame he isn't alive today. I am sure that he would be an atheist, and would be a superb ally in the debating halls against the willfully ignorant such as D'souza. Oh, and of course, Mr Robertson :)

This is a man who put his fingers up to the authorities and died an appalling vicious and sadistic death, burned alive with an iron spike forced through his tongue, and yet, the church is trying to canonize the man who murdered him. These are the self same people who have the nerve to preach to the rest of us about morality!

Religion, isn't it wonderful.

Other Comments by Vaal

20. Comment #237319 by Don_Quix on August 26, 2008 at 10:51 am

 avatarGreat article! I've always found Bruno fascinating.

I also learned something new. In my hometown there is a locally well-known Catholic university called Bellarmine University. Up until today, I had no idea that it was named after none other than Saint Bellarmine (aka Cardinal Robert Bellarmine), the inquisitor of Galileo and the (indirect) torturer and murderer of Bruno. Somehow I doubt most of the students at Bellarmine are aware of this either. In fact, I'm sure old Saint Bellarmine is looked upon quite favorably in most Catholic circles.

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21. Comment #237395 by D'Arcy on August 26, 2008 at 12:20 pm

 avatar
Soon, Bruno was offending his neighbors by writing satirical dialogues complaining that England's populace was "second to none that the Earth nurtures in her bosom for being disrespectful, uncivil, rough, rustic, savage, and badly brought up."


So what's changed? Stiff upper lips encouraged by the English public (private) schools, in order to breed a person who could ruthlessly run the British Empire?

As Rowland points out, Bruno, irascible as he was, had committed no crime


But it wouldn't stop the Catholic Church from burning YOU given the chance. It hasn't changed. I can see Donahue with his box of matches, no tinder box, to drag it out.

Other Comments by D'Arcy

22. Comment #237450 by 8teist on August 26, 2008 at 1:55 pm

 avatarWhat a wonderful thing the love of christ is .

And the church wonders why people consider them to be a pack of assholes,unfortunately I believe they would return to this sort of behaviour in a heartbeat if they thought they could get away with it.



Another book I have to buy .

Other Comments by 8teist

23. Comment #237502 by Goldy on August 26, 2008 at 3:25 pm

 avatar
Soon, Bruno was offending his neighbors by writing satirical dialogues complaining that England's populace was "second to none that the Earth nurtures in her bosom for being disrespectful, uncivil, rough, rustic, savage, and badly brought up."

And we still are :-D
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/24/world/europe/24crete.html?_r=1&ref=europe&oref=slogin

"They scream, they sing, they fall down, they take their clothes off, they cross-dress, they vomit," Malia's mayor, Konstantinos Lagoudakis, said in an interview. "It is only the British people ?quot; not the Germans or the French."


Comment #237499 by richardoakes
Not the Richard Oakes of Blackjack Avion fame, are you?

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24. Comment #237515 by Greywizard on August 26, 2008 at 4:03 pm

It took a long time for that to prove true, yet thanks to those idealistic 19th-century students, everyone who comes to Rome to behold the splendor of the Vatican is also presented with a reminder of its bloody, repressive past.


From this it sounds like the Vatican has put its blood repressive past behind it. Not so. It continues in its evil ways. It refuses abortion to little girls. It refuses the condom to people who are threatened with HIV and other diseases. It refuses the comfort of dying to those who are suffering unendurably. No. No. The Vatican continues in its bloody, repressive ways.

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25. Comment #237516 by Border Collie on August 26, 2008 at 4:05 pm

 avatarWell, only four hundred years ago ... from pyros to pedos in just a few short centuries ... I'd say it wouldn't take much for them to move backwards ...
I might start to feel comfortable after four thousand years ...

Other Comments by Border Collie

26. Comment #237523 by Styrer- on August 26, 2008 at 4:45 pm

What a wonderful piece of writing by Laura Miller. Seriously well-crafted and so engaging that its flow was enough to carry me on a wave of interest until the last full-stop.

And thanks to you, Carto, for the reservations - may I ask if you'd come across Bruno before and if Laura's write-up confirms or counters any opinion of the fellow you'd previously held?

In any case, I raise my glass tonight to Giordano Bruno, a man I'd never heard of before reading this article. To a man whose superbly belligerently brilliant brain is sorely and sadly missed today.

*glasses clink*

Best,
Styrer

Other Comments by Styrer-

27. Comment #237540 by Cartomancer on August 26, 2008 at 5:23 pm

 avatarIt's quite hard not to come across Giordano Bruno if you're studying intellectual history, though he is rather late for me (I looked at the early modern period as an undergrad, that was about the last time. I get a bit queasy past about 1350). The article seems well-researched, particularly with regard to the more traditional scholastic cast of Bruno's formal studies, and I especially approve of the fact that it attributes his downfall mostly to his own bombastic inability to play by other people's rules. It's a well-worn gripe of mine that people too often think the Renaissance happened out of thin air; that suddenly everyone dropped their shovels, clapped themselves round the head for not realising how frightfully medieval they used to be, then took off writing humanist tracts on civil government and discovering heliocentricity. In this model the persecuted humanistic thinkers like Bruno and Gallileo suddenly become martyrs for forward-thinking rationalism against a corrupt tableau of turgid medieval backwardness. It didn't happen like that. Medieval thought gave way slowly and gradually to change, there was never a flash of lightning and suddenly the renaissance was born. Much of renaissance culture consciously departed from the medieval, and even parodied and demonised the medieval past, but it would never have happened were it not for the underlying medieval sensibilities in the population of Europe as a whole. Aristotelian natural science would never have been superceded were it not for the medieval centuries people spent pressing it to see how far it could go. The search for Greek texts and Greek culture would not have happened were it not for the groundwork done during the middle ages and distinctively medieval developments in literary studies and the grammatical arts. The world was a radically different place in 1500 to how it had been in 500AD, but that's because it had seen a millennium of gradual medieval progress, not a few decades of radical renaissance restructuring. People like Bruno were able to reap the benefits of that progress, progress which included the development of the very universities in which he learned and taught and the orders mendicant which provided him the necessities of life to engage in those studies.

And, as Abelard and Roger Bacon and William of Ockham show, he was not the first and would not be the last prominent intellectual to cause trouble in Europe.

As for the Inquisition as we know it, that was mostly an early modern, not a medieval institution. Medieval inquisitions were decentralised, usually local operations under the control and authority of a bishop. They were usually conducted against mass heretical movements like the Cathars and Waldenses, rather than errant individuals, and although torture was not uncommon from the middle of the thirteenth century, judicial execution was exceedingly rare. It was only with the founding of the centrally run Spanish Inquisition in 1478, and the Papal Inquisition itself in 1542 that inquisitorial scrutiny and incidents such as the execution of Bruno became at all common, mostly in response to the challenge of protestant churches. Even then fewer than 2% of the cases in extant inquisition records ended with execution, and we can be fairly sure this is not selective because the completeness of inquisition records is almost without parallel in continental European sources from the time.

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28. Comment #237570 by Styrer- on August 26, 2008 at 6:53 pm

Comment #237540 by Cartomancer on August 26, 2008 at 5:23 pm

Thanks.

Certainly my own battle to retain anything useful from history lessons at school (taught as they were along lines of 'remember this or fail your test') shows itself as 'this or that character started the Renaissance' and 'this or that character represents the end of medieval thinking'. Specific humans identifying peaks of intellectual historical importance, to whom we should pay careful attention and whose birth dates we must remember on pain of E grades, were the mainstay of my high school historical inquiry. There was no intimation - such as you excitingly offer as an alternative - that such historical transitions were difficultly won through the hard-fought battle of little no-names, collectively and anonymously driving themselves forward until such time that one person could claim all the credit, secure his or her place in history and take up predominant place in an 'O' Level syllabus demanding that easy transitions be the compulsory answer to which all students should aspire.

I suspect I would have taken to history rather more willingly had I had a teacher who had your perspicacity and passion. And who was prepared to pedagogically piss all over such 'O' Level requirement.

Finally - if I may ask another question! - your description of the post-1542 inquisition seems not to hold to the oft-offered atheistic point that these were horrendously murderous days. Has, for example, Harris in 'The End of Faith' made too much of those times in service of his argument, in your opinion?

Best,
Styrer

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29. Comment #237588 by prettygoodformonkeys on August 26, 2008 at 7:27 pm

 avatar(disclaimer: drinking)

I love Bruno even more now.

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30. Comment #237599 by Cartomancer on August 26, 2008 at 7:47 pm

 avatarI have not read Sam Harris on the Inquisition, but I do think that the violence and murderousness imputed to them is routinely exaggerated. Of course the whole project of an inquisition is irredeemably illiberal, unenlightened and totalitarian, however light the touch of its execution happens to be. I have to say that for fear of being misconstrued as an Inquisition apologist. Nevertheless, they do not compare at all unfavourably in terms of violence output with secular law enforcement in the early modern period - the officially sanctioned inquisitors anyway, the mavericks and local amateurs were probably not nearly as circumspect. The early modern period was a considerably bloodier and more violent age in general than today, probably even more so than the middle ages. It was a time of increasing state power, bureaucracy, military expenditure and social control - both secular and religious. I would say that the post-1542 Inquisition was almost certainly a lot more invasive and intrusive than its medieval predecessors, and with an official Index librorum prohibitorum in place also much more of a factor in shaping intellectual culture. But it wasn't the bloody-handed juggernaut it is often made out to be by hollywood, the media and perhaps even by some atheist writers.

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31. Comment #237617 by Styrer- on August 26, 2008 at 8:29 pm

Quite. And a bloody-handed mini-metro, with one driver, unarmed, in all its tiny proportions to a juggernaut, would be enough to lay enough blame on a religiously-inspired inquisition for us atheists to shout 'religious foul!'

The totting up of religious/secular deaths of course doesn't work, but perhaps you'd clarify for me the idea of 'they do not compare at all unfavourably in terms of violence output with secular law enforcement in the early modern period - the officially sanctioned inquisitors anyway'. Were the justifications for these (secular) killing behaviours a hang-over from more religiously-based behaviours? Or were they the result of explicitly secularly-based fervour, quite distinct from religious notions completely?

I would find the latter quite hard to believe. It would be my guess that the lens of secular reason was still somewhat clouded by the previous unclear but deadly focus of the religiously hell-bent. Would Hitchens' notion of the usefulness of the religiously credulous in advancing non-religious (Stalinist) plans play a part at all here, or is it wrongheaded to apply it here to the violence in the early modern period of those in charge of 'secular law enforcement'?

Best,
Styrer

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32. Comment #237702 by jeepyjay on August 27, 2008 at 4:09 am

 avatarCartomancer wrote:
It's a well-worn gripe of mine that people too often think the Renaissance happened out of thin air; that suddenly everyone dropped their shovels, clapped themselves round the head for not realising how frightfully medieval they used to be, then took off writing humanist tracts on civil government and discovering heliocentricity. In this model the persecuted humanistic thinkers like Bruno and Gallileo suddenly become martyrs for forward-thinking rationalism against a corrupt tableau of turgid medieval backwardness. It didn't happen like that. Medieval thought gave way slowly and gradually to change, there was never a flash of lightning and suddenly the renaissance was born.


I agree that the process was gradual, but at the time of Bruno, certainly from 1600 to 1660, there was arguably a sudden acceleration. I offer this chronological summary:

1572 Rafael Bombelli (1526 - 1572), Algebra, uses negative and complex numbers.
1576 Thomas Digges (1546 - 1595), wrote on the Copernican system within an infinite universe.
1573 Tycho Brahe (1546 - 1601), De Nova Stella, reported on a supernova seen in 1572.
1577-80 Francis Drake (c.1540 - 1596), circumnavigation 1577-1580.
1582 Giordano Bruno (1548 - 1600), De Umbris Idearum 'The Shadow of Ideas'.
1582 Richard Hakluyt (1552 - 1616), historian, geographer, Divers Voyages 1582,
1584 Bruno 'On the Infinite Universe and Worlds'.
1588 Tycho Brahe, De Mundi Aetherei and used parallax to prove that a comet observed in 1577 was beyond the atmosphere.
1596 Johannes Kepler (1571 - 1630), Mysterium Cosmographicum.
1596 Ludolf van Ceulen (1540 - 1610), On The Circle, computed pi to 35 decimal places.
1598 Tycho Brahe, Astronomiae instauratae described his accurate instruments and observational methods.
1599 Hakluyt Principal Navigations.
1600 William Gilbert (1540 - 1603), De Magnete.
1600 Bruno burnt at the stake for heresy on the orders of the Catholic Inquisition.
1604 Kepler, Astronomia Pars Optica 1604.
1605 Miguel de Cervantes (1547 - 1616), Don Quixote Part 1.
1606 Kepler, De Stella Nova.
1609 Kepler, Astronomia Nova gave the first two laws of planetary motion.
1610 Galileo Galilei (1564 - 1642), Sidereus Nuncius 'Starry Messenger' 1610, reported the first telescopic discoveries, including moons of Jupiter,
1611 Kepler, Dioptrice
1612 Claude Gaspar Bachet Sieur de Meziriac (1581 - 1638), Problèmes plaisans et delectables.
1615 Cervantes, Don Quixote Part 2.
1614 John Napier (1550 - 1617), natural logarithms.
1615 Kepler, Nova Stereometria Dolorium, uses primitive calculus to estimate volumes of revolution of wine barrels.
1616 William Shakespeare (1564 - 1616).
1617 Henry Briggs (1561 - 1630), decimal logarithms.
1619 Kepler, Harmonice Mundi, includes work on polyhedra, and the third law of planetary motion relating size and period of orbits.
1620 Francis Bacon (1561 - 1626), Novum Organum.
1621 Kepler, Epitome Astronomiae 1621 influential textbook.
1627 Kepler, Rudolphine Tables accurate astronomical data.
1628 William Harvey (1578 - 1657), On the Motion of the Heart.
1631 William Oughtred (1574 - 1660), Clavis Mathematicae, slide rule.
1632 Galilei, Two World Systems.
1635 Bonaventura Cavalieri (1598 - 1647), Geometria indivisibilibus.
1636 Pierre De Fermat (1601 - 1665), Ad Locos Planos et Solidos Isagoge, circulated in manuscript form, printed 1679.
1637 Rene Descartes (1596 - 1650), Discourse on Method.
1639 Blaise Pascal (1623 - 1662), Essay on Conics.
1640 Galilei, Two New Sciences.
1642 Rembrandt van Rijn & (1606 - 1669), painter, The Night Watch.
1651 Thomas Hobbes (1588 - 1679) Leviathan, political philosophy.
1654 Pierre de Fermat (1601 - 1665), number theorist. Correspondence with Pascal on probability.
1656 John Wallis (1616 - 1703), Arithmetica Infinitorum.
1660 Foundation of the Royal Society.
1661 Robert Boyle (1627 - 1691), The Sceptical Chymist.
1673 Christian Huygens (1629 - 1695), Horologium Oscillatorium.
1669 Niels Stensen (1638 - 1686), Prodromus, recognised that fossil shells in rock strata must have been laid down on the seabed, and that lower levels without fossils must predate the existence of life.
1687 Isaac Newton (1642 - 1727), Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy.

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33. Comment #237828 by Cartomancer on August 27, 2008 at 8:26 am

 avatarI don't think anyone would deny that the pace of intellectual change (it's a rather outdated, whiggish thing to call it "progress" these days) is itself variable. We have terms like Renaissance for a reason, and quickenings of intellectual activity certainly do occur thanks to favourable societal conditions. One can look to fifth century Athens or Ptolemaic Alexandria or the height of the caliphate in Bagdhdad, or the Carolingian renaissance or the twelfth-century renaissance. My point was simply that the period we generally refer to as "the Renaissance" - the quattrocento or Florentine renaissance and its aftermath - would not have happened were it not for the groundwork put in by scholars of previous ages. A quickening of learning generally requires knowledge to be in a position to quicken, a certain critical mass of scholarship and ideas to be available.

Lets look briefly at few entries on that list.

Bombelli's algebra would not have been possible were it not for the advances in mathematics brought about by mathematicians like Leonardo Fibonnaci at the beginning of the thirteenth century, the "Merton Calculators" of the early 14th century (Bradwardine, Heytesbury), Parisian mathematicians such as Nicole Oresme, and indeed the translation of Al-Khwarismi's al-Kitāb al-muḫtaṣar fī ḥisāb al-ğabr wa-l-muqābala by Robert of Chester in the 1140s.

The Copernican system of cosmology would not have been possible were not the inadequacy of the Ptolemaic system apparent. Ptolemy's Almagest was only translated into Latin in the 1150s and 1160s by Henricus Aristippus and later Gerard of Cremona. It was explored and assessed by John of Sacrobosco in the 1230s, and its efficacy began to be doubted by the 14th century with Oresme, and Nicholas of Cusa in the 15th. Copernicus' ideas did not spring ex nihilo, indeed the anonymous additional preface with which they were first published suggested that they were simply a new take on the ideas of the 4th century writer Martianus Capella, who had suggested that Mercury and Venus at least orbited the sun, not the earth.

Voyages of discovery such as Drake's and geographical writings such as Hakluyt's have their medieval predecessors also, in men such as Marco Polo and Leif Eriksson, and books such as Albertus Magnus' De Natura Locorum. Admittedly Mercator's projection of the globe was a huge improvement on the old OT maps in common medieval circulation, but accurate mathematical mapping of land masses wasn't unknown to the thirteenth century, as the many navigational portolan charts which survive attest.

The infinity of the universe and the possible existence of other worlds were common speculations in late thirteenth century quodlibet collections. Robert Grosseteste speculated on the possibility of counting in infinities long before George Cantor showed how it could be done, and Robert Kilwardby wrote on the subject of other worlds in De Universali and De ortu scientarum. Indeed the proscriptions of 1277 in Paris forbade scholars from suggesting that god could not create other worlds.

The astronomy of Galileo would not have been possible without telescopes for collecting data. Telescopes, likewise, would not have been possible without the mathematical understanding of optics that came to Europe in the thirteenth century - with the translation of Alhacen's optical works in the 1170s or thereabouts, and the science of Perspectiva in the writings of Roger Bacon, Witelo of Silesia and John Pecham (who also wrote a short treatise about the nature of the stars). Kepler's optics would not have been possible without this groundwork - indeed these were the optical texts Kepler himself would have studied at the university of Tubingen.

I should finally mention perhaps the most significant technological invention of all as far as the quickening of learning in the early modern period goes - the printing press. It is hard to overstate how important it was that books could now be standardised in published editions and circulate far more widely than when scholars had to rely on hand-copied manuscripts. It also increased the survival rate of texts markedly, which is why it seems like so much more was being written across Europe than had been written in the medieval centuries.

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34. Comment #237987 by D'Arcy on August 27, 2008 at 1:31 pm

 avatarIn England at least, "the pace of intellectual change", required the first Poor Law of 1563. No wonder with the enclosures and hitherto yeoman farmers chased off the land by economic pressures and soldiers.

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35. Comment #238288 by ConsciousMachine on August 28, 2008 at 12:04 am

 avatarCartomancer -
Thank you so much for the history lesson. It is good to be reminded from time to time what every naturalist thinker should keep in mind. Namely, that changes generally happen gradually and in small measured steps and that the brief explosions of change "quickenings" as you call them occur as a result of previous factors laying the groundwork so to speak for those explosions.

SamKiddoGordon �quot;
You wonder what he might have contributed had he lived in another time.

Very little perhaps? There are plenty of high IQ people out there today who are "just" earning a living, and not accomplishing anything of any great historical importance. Who is to say whether Bruno would just been one of these as opposed to a Hawkins or Dawkins or Dennet? In addition to a clear mind and innate ability there are a host of environmental factors, knowledge base factors and sheer dumb luck (or call it serendipity if you like) that combine to shape the trajectories of each of our lives.

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36. Comment #238467 by DanielK on August 28, 2008 at 7:44 am

 avatarThere's a 3-4m tall wooden statue dedicated to Bruno at the Potsdamer Platz Underground station in Berlin. I'm not one for modern wood statues, but it's certainly impressive and makes visitors stop and read the plaque.

It think it reads: "You may be more afraid to bring that sentence against me than I am to accept it" in French, German, English and Italian. Not entirely sure which quote it was at the moment.

Everybody agrees that the church (Catholic in particular) is responsible for horrible crimes, but few people probably could cite a specific example of a real person, burned at the stake. I hope a lot of people read this article.

daniel

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37. Comment #241592 by Enlightenme.. on September 2, 2008 at 5:39 pm

 avatar^ Obviously we need to be careful not to mention Bruno's first name if we don't want to get hit with more gi0rdan0 spam!

The printing press - Punctuated Equilibrium?

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