Science and Dogma: Tracing Natural Knowledge within Scholastic Theology (1545–1789)
SCIGMA investigates how natural knowledge influenced early modern dogmatic theology, revealing its role in shaping scientific inquiry and the path to secularization.
Projectdetails
Introduction
The early modern period is usually viewed as a time of profound change, including the so-called ‘Scientific Revolution’ and the Protestant/Catholic Reformation. Historians have linked these two seemingly disparate transformations in many different ways, but one important dimension is yet to be uncovered.
Main Hypothesis
SCIGMA’s main hypothesis is that natural knowledge significantly influenced dogmatics as a central branch of theology in the early modern university. University textbooks eagerly addressed many questions related to natural knowledge, such as:
- Can the bodily resurrection be understood from a physiological perspective?
- Which physics apply for the Eucharist?
While much has been written on the impact of theology on the natural sciences, SCIGMA will turn the tables to uncover their truly entangled relationship.
Research Agenda
The project will systematically investigate how naturalism and empiricism informed scholastic and dogmatic theology, from the Council of Trent to the French Revolution across all Western Christian denominations. Its research agenda will consider theology as a ‘scientia’ in the premodern university and therefore include it within the history of science and knowledge.
Goals
SCIGMA’s first goal is to discover the multiple and changing ways in which natural knowledge informed premodern scholastic theology, which sought a rational reconstruction of faith.
The second goal is to uncover what effective epistemological frameworks accommodated this interplay of empiricism and revelation.
The third goal is to trace how these epistemological frameworks were determined by their embedding within religious and secular institutions of learning.
Historical Analysis
This complex historical analysis will reveal the significant role of the ‘physico-dogmatic domain’ in institutional learning. Thereby, it sheds novel light on how premodern Western societies fundamentally reshaped scientific inquiry while being deeply religious – and ultimately paved the way to secularization and scientism in these societies.
Financiële details & Tijdlijn
Financiële details
Subsidiebedrag | € 1.492.832 |
Totale projectbegroting | € 1.492.832 |
Tijdlijn
Startdatum | 1-6-2025 |
Einddatum | 31-5-2030 |
Subsidiejaar | 2025 |
Partners & Locaties
Projectpartners
- FREIE UNIVERSITAET BERLINpenvoerder
Land(en)
Vergelijkbare projecten binnen European Research Council
Project | Regeling | Bedrag | Jaar | Actie |
---|---|---|---|---|
Traces de la Verité: The reappropriation of ancient wisdom in early modern natural philosophyVERITRACE analyzes the impact of ancient wisdom writings on early modern natural philosophy using digital techniques to reveal their influence on foundational scientific thinkers. | ERC Starting... | € 1.472.349 | 2023 | Details |
The Common Notion. Science and Consensus in the Seventeenth CenturyNOTCOM investigates seventeenth-century natural science's consensus models and collective inquiry methods to illuminate their impact on modern science communication and philosophy. | ERC Advanced... | € 2.274.814 | 2023 | Details |
Philology as Science in 19th-Century EuropeThe project examines the historical success of philology as a scientific discipline, aiming to bridge it with contemporary digital humanities through a comprehensive analysis of its methodologies and networks. | ERC Starting... | € 1.464.300 | 2022 | Details |
The Formal Turn - The Emergence of Formalism in Twentieth-Century ThoughtThis project aims to provide an interdisciplinary study of the emergence and implications of formalism in early 20th-century science and logic through historical and comparative analyses. | ERC Consolid... | € 1.987.840 | 2022 | Details |
Ethics and Moral Life in the 18th Century: A New Take on Early Modern EthicsThis project aims to re-orient early modern ethics studies by focusing on 18th-century moral philosophers' practical guidance on specific moral issues through a thematic and comparative approach. | ERC Advanced... | € 1.463.694 | 2025 | Details |
Traces de la Verité: The reappropriation of ancient wisdom in early modern natural philosophy
VERITRACE analyzes the impact of ancient wisdom writings on early modern natural philosophy using digital techniques to reveal their influence on foundational scientific thinkers.
The Common Notion. Science and Consensus in the Seventeenth Century
NOTCOM investigates seventeenth-century natural science's consensus models and collective inquiry methods to illuminate their impact on modern science communication and philosophy.
Philology as Science in 19th-Century Europe
The project examines the historical success of philology as a scientific discipline, aiming to bridge it with contemporary digital humanities through a comprehensive analysis of its methodologies and networks.
The Formal Turn - The Emergence of Formalism in Twentieth-Century Thought
This project aims to provide an interdisciplinary study of the emergence and implications of formalism in early 20th-century science and logic through historical and comparative analyses.
Ethics and Moral Life in the 18th Century: A New Take on Early Modern Ethics
This project aims to re-orient early modern ethics studies by focusing on 18th-century moral philosophers' practical guidance on specific moral issues through a thematic and comparative approach.