Markham J.
Geller: Zur Rolle der antiken Astrologie in der Vorbereitung einer sŠkularen Naturwissenschaft
und Medizin
The Persian period in the Near East (from c. 500 BCE)
represented the first example of globalisation, during which advanced cultural
centres from Egypt to Afghanistan were united under a single rule and common
language. Paul Unschuld has drawn
attention to a scientific revolution in the late first millennium BC, extending
from Greece to China, from Thales to
Confucius, which saw natural law replace the divine law in
scientific thinking. This paper argues for new advances in astronomy as the
specific motor which motivated changes in scientific thinking and influenced
other branches of science, including medicine, just as the new science of
astrology, which replaced divination, fundamentally changed the nature of medical
prognoses. The secularisation of science was not universally accepted among
ancient scholars, and the irony is that somewhat similar reservations accompanied
the reception of modern quantum physics.
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