(March 27, 2025) The Reformation only challenged the Catholic Church's thought control, it did not challenge using the Bible as the main source for community knowledge. Seeing nature as such a community knowledge source only came about during the Enlightenment.
A well stated overview of the Enlightenment published in 1966:
The first battle between nature and the Bible would be over the question of whether the earth moved. The Christians viewed the earth as immovable because the Bible said so:
Also 1 Chronicles 16:30, Psalm 93:1, Psalm 96:10.
Yet developing observations and theories about nature indicated that the earth moved.
The original 1386 clock mechanism used by Salisbury Cathedral in England. It still works. Photo from: https://www.greatdays.co.uk/tour/stonehenge-steeples/attachment/the-oldest-working-mechanical-clock-1386-in-the-world-at-salisbury-cathedral/
(March 23, 2025)
The Enlightenment era would not have been possible without the Medieval Motion Paradigm Shift brought about by mechanical clocks. Previously all motion on earth was thought to be the result of divine powers, either from by the Druid magical motion powers (astrological and emotional) or from the Christian God and Devil (via spirits, souls, and demons). After the paradigm shift motion could be an atheistic natural mechanism not requiring any divine power .... like a clock. Only with the wide adoption of mechanical clocks could this paradigm shift occur as people began to experience atheistic mechanical movements. This shift allowed the church to back down because a Pagan deity did not replace the Christian god. The church simply ignored the Bible passages about motion it had once so zealously defended. The Christian god now became the designer of nature.
Yet, the widespread adoption of mechanical clocks in Europe had to wait until 1360 CE when Henry de Vick in Paris started making a simple and adjustable verge and foliot mechanism for use on weight-driven mechanical clocks (the mechanism itself was invented around 1280 CE). The foliot was a horizontal bar with weights near its ends affixed to a vertical bar called the verge which was suspended free to rotate. The verge escapement caused the foliot to oscillate back and forth about its vertical axis. The rate of the clock could be adjusted by moving the weights in or out on the foliot. Over the next 300 years every town of any size built a town clock in the central square, usually associated with the town's church.
(March 27, 2025) Any claim that the earth moved was viewed as Pythagorean and heretical. Christians got most of their information about the Pythagoreans from Aristotle. He wrote:
"Star" is the Greek word ἀστήρ ("aster" as in astronomy) which means any heavenly body.
"Fire is the Greek word φωτιά ("fotia" as in photograph) which has been traditionally translated as either fire or light.
The most complete statement about the Pythagorean conception of the universe is found in a surviving summation of old Greek texts done by Joannes Stobaeus around 400 CE. It says:
(1) Aristotle (350 BCE) On the Heavens, Book 2, Part 13. Online at https://classics.mit.edu/Aristotle/heavens.2.ii.html
(2) Original in Stobaeus, Eclogarum Physicarum, translated by August Meinekie (ed) Ioannis Stobaei Eclogarum Physicarum et Ethicarum, vol. 1 (1860). I found it in: Phythagoras or Christ by Alberto A. Martinez (2022) Saltshadow Castle, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
(March 25, 2025) The Pythagoreans were devoted to the celestial light fate powers of Selu/Selene because they did not think the emotion class of motion powers were pure enough (Selene means "powers of Selu" in Akkadian). This is a consequence of their contact with Zoroastrian Dualism. Her male complement was the dark, new moon and eye pupil god Su who represented the emotion sources magic including that aimed at affecting fate (astrology magic).
Greek ἑστία (Estia, Hestia) is the Akkadian phrase ES.T meaning "Spiritual-fluids of astrology magic." Spiritual fluids were emanations such as the light and heat from hot coals and the sun. Emanations are not the same as the "expulsions" which are the actual flames of a fire.
Selu/Selene was called "Vesta" in Latin. Vesta is the Akkadian phrase US.T meaning "Binders of Astrology-magic." This word has the essentially the same meaning as Estia/Hestia. She was the goddess of fate for family and society and was guardian of the family hearth which protected the family. This hearth fire was not the element of fire/flame. In Rome, her main priestesses were the state sponsored Vestal Virgins. Being virgins they had nothing to do with fertility and life powers.
(July 7, 2022, updated March 26, 2025) Perhaps everyone has heard of the time-space continuum from Einstein's Relativity Theory. This is the foundation of both the universe and mathematics because it has the property that some smaller interval always exists. If a system needs it then it can pop into existence. The classic example of a continuum is the mathematical curve defined by 1/x shown to the left. Because the curve is symmetric around the point (1,1) as many points can exist between 0 and 1 as between 1 and infinity.
With no hard minimum length, lengths can only be defined in a relative fashion by ratios from geometry or from wave functions (musical harmonics, quantum mechanics). That is, by comparison of a reference length to another. The reference length can be called 1. All other numbers can then be defined by a ratio making process. Mathematics can thus be used to approximately describe the workings of continuums.
Historically, this insight was first made by the Pythagoreans. The first Pythagorean who wrote anything down was the Greek Philolaus who began his book (only now exists in small fragments) with a bold statement about this insight:
Here the continuum is called an "unlimited" and the "limiting" processes were the ratios defined from geometry and musical harmonics.
In regards to the Pythagorean theorem assigned to them, they may or may not have invented it but its use of geometric ratios would naturally have associated it with the Pythagoreans.
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy - Philolaus (Sept 2003, revised September 2024). Online at: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/philolaus/
(March 30, 2025)
Bruno was born in 1548 in the town of Nola near Naples. At the age of 17, he entered the Dominican Order at the monastery of San Domenico Maggiore in Naples, taking the name Giordano, after Giordano Crispo, his metaphysics tutor. He continued his studies there, completing his novitiate, and ordained a priest in 1572 at age 24. During his time in Naples, he became known for his skill with the art of memory and on one occasion traveled to Rome to demonstrate his mnemonic system before Pope Pius V and Cardinal Rebiba. His great memory is what initially gained him attention.
He later became known for his cosmological theories which incorporated the sun centric model of Copernicus. He forced this model to its logical conclusions suggesting that stars were distant suns surrounded by their own planets. He even raised the possibility that these planets might foster life of their own. He also insisted that the universe is infinite and could have no center.
An invitation in 1592 to go to Venice to teach Count Giovanni Mocenigo the science of memory led to his downfall. Mocenigo in short order turned him over to the Inquisition on a charge of heresy.
After a nine-month trial, the Venice court sent him to Rome where he was imprisoned and underwent another trial that lasted seven years. He was convicted with the Pope's approval and sentenced to death by burning on Feb. 9, 1600.
The inquisition cardinals who judged Giordano Bruno were Cardinal Bellarmino (Bellarmine), Cardinal Madruzzo (Madruzzi), Camillo Cardinal Borghese (later Pope Paul V), Domenico Cardinal Pinelli, Pompeio Cardinal Arrigoni, Cardinal Sfondrati, Pedro Cardinal De Deza Manuel and Cardinal Santorio (Archbishop of Santa Severina, Cardinal-Bishop of Palestrina). Many of these would also be involved in the later trial of Galileo.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giordano_Bruno
Alberto A. Martinez (2022) Pythagoras or Christ? Saltshadow Castle, Cambridge, MA,USA
(March 31, 2025) Interestingly, the Vatican records, normally so voluminous and complete are missing the pages listing his alleged heresies. But we happen to have such a list from a German witness to the events in Rome named Gaspar Schoppe, who was visiting Cardinal Madruzzi at the time. His list was found in a letter to a friend. The most important 2 according to Martinez (2022) were:
Worlds are innumerable
The Holy Spirit is the soul of the world (that is what caused it to move)
Multiple worlds are were a heresy because that implies that Christ must have visited them all, died, and then have been repeatedly resurrected to save them. This goes against Christian teachings even today (which is why even the modern Catholic church has never officially forgiven him).
Claiming a moving earth had a soul causing it to move is a heresy for 2 reasons, first the Bible says the earth is stationary (Psalms 104:5), second the Bible says the Holy Spirit is God's power to comfort, guide, and generally empower Christians, not change anything. Bruno and many other saw Aristotle's theory was flawed, especially in regards to natural motion. Wood rose in water but fell in air. What was its real natural motion? If that was imposed motion then all things falling in air was imposed motion so things did not have a natural resting place (like the center of the earth) which they sought. So the only alternative was to claim the Holy Spirit moved things but this was Pythagorean and thus Pagan.
Paradigms matter.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giordano_Bruno
Alberto A. Martinez (2022) Pythagoras or Christ? Saltshadow Castle, Cambridge, MA,USA
(March 30, 2025) Yet the real proof that the physics of earth extended into the heavens was only seen by those who could understand the astronomical mathematics in Kepler's 650 page book published in 1609 entitled:
Kepler made the claim that planets moved in elliptical orbits subject to physical forces and did not move magically in perfect circles. Additionally he put the sun at one focus of the ellipse. To make this claim he had to replace the classical era Aristotelian physics which placed the earth at the center of the universe where it attracted all physical bodies.
Yet Kepler was still partly trapped by the old divine power source paradigm. While he was the first to define gravity as a force similar to the force of magnetism by saying this:
He want on to say in chapter 33 that the sun somehow moves the planets laterally. He claimed the Sun emitted a physical something, analogous to light, which pushed the planets along. And this was still a Catholic Christian heresy.
(July 6, 2022) Two discoveries started the expansion of physical nature into heavens which ultimately ended up forcing a paradigm change about motion.
Galileo built himself this telescope in 1609 after he heard about Kepler's laws and the invention of the telescope in the Netherlands. His first telescope demonstration was for the Venetian military which gained him a life time appointment as a professor and raised his salary to 1000 florins a year. In the fall he turned an even better telescope towards the heavens. He confirmed that planets orbited the sun by seeing that planets had phases. He also saw that the moon's surface was imperfect and thus it belonged to the material realm.He published a book called the"Starry Messenger" describing and illustrating these discoveries in Venice on March 12, 1610. The book caused a sensation. Kepler was delighted because it confirmed his contention that physics extended to the heavens. After this, Galileo's hometown of Padua offered him a professorship with terms better than those from Venice so Galileo moved back home.
Galileo Galilee (1564 - 1642) was a professor of Mathematics at the University of Padua in the Republic of Venice where he specialized in instrument making. This included an irrigation device and an advanced drawing compass/slide-rule.
The importance of his father, Vincenzio, on Galileo's anti-authoritarian views should not be over looked. Vincenzio was a musician and mathematician and part of the group which invented the opera as a musical revival of Greek tragedy. He invented a more refined musical scale for the lute based on the actual harmonies of sound instead of the traditional mathematical Pythagorean ratios. He wrote a book describing and defending this new approach called Dialog of Ancient and Modern Music. In it he states:
In 1608 or early 1609 Galileo heard about the invention of the telescope in Flanders which had came about because eye glasses had been invented making lenses more common. Because he was an instrument maker and designer he was one of the few who could build it sight unseen and keep on improving its magnification and clarity. His first telescope used standard eye glass lenses but Galileo soon went beyond that with lenses of greater power and clarity.
Sobel, Dana (2000) Galileo's Daughter, Penguin Books, New York
(March 31, 2025)
For Galileo the simplest explanation of his new findings was that the earth had to move around the sun. Yet, as he would be told, this directly contradicted Psalm 104 verse 5:
Galileo's answer to this is found in a 1613 letter to a friend who was reporting this growing opposition to him:
He went on to say that many statements about nature were put into the Bible in order to keep it simple for the masses because the main purpose of the Bible was teaching salvation.
Overt public attacks on Galileo began on December 21, 1614 with a sermon by a Dominican priest in Florence named Tommaso Caccini. He stated that all of Galileo's followers and indeed, all mathematicians in general were "practitioners of diabolical arts and ... the enemies of true religion." After this and the Catholic inquisition condemned heliocentrism again in 1615, Galileo went silent.
When a friend of his (Cardiinal Maffeo Vincenzo Barberini) became Pope Urban VIII from 1623 to 1644 Galileo was emboldened once again. In 1632 he published his sun centric astronomical views in a book entitled Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems. He framed it as a debate and not as his own views so he managed to get it approved by the church. But what he did not know was that his anti-sun centered proponent named Simplico just happened to hold the same views as Pope Urban VIII who was insulted and wanted revenge. He at age 68 and ill was tried by the Inquisition, found guilty of heresy, and forced to recant. He spent the rest of his life under house arrest until he died in 1642.
Yet some still naively hoped that a more proper reasoning methodology would somehow reconcile nature with the Bible and/or Catholic theology. This was never to occur but Protestant Francis Bacon (1561–1626) and Catholic Descartes (1596-1650) made the most famous attempts.
(March 30, 2025) The change of paradigm from a single realm in which all change was governed by divine powers to a binary realm with each realm having their own sources of change (Divine = occult change, Physical = mechanical change) was completed by Isaac Newton (1643–1727) of England in his 1687 book Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy. He wrote:
(July 6, 2022) Christian Europe was dualist. Truth was either true or false, people were either saved or unsaved. The physical world was either evil and corruptible while the divine was good and perfect. This dualism originated with the Zoroastrian religion of the Persian Achaemenid Empire (550-330 BCE) which made its way into Judaism during the Babylonian exile and then into Christianity. The ancient past was not dualist.
John Locke was the first person to attack dualism although he was not aware he was doing so. He was simply trying to understand the how humans could come to know things. The result was the first description of what moderns would call "Decision Theory." He took the new ideas of mathematical probability developed within the context gambling and commercial insurance and applied them to knowledge. Christiaan Huygens published his book on the subject in 1657 entitled On reasoning in games of chance.
For Locke, all knowledge was uncertain. Only if the its probability was high enough could it be considered true. Certainty increases with:
This weighing of evidence takes time therefore:
The right use of it (assent requires) mutual charity and forbearance, in a necessary diversity of opinions.... It would, methinks, become all men to maintain peace, and the common offices of humanity, and friendship, in the diversity of opinions ; since we cannot reasonably expect that any one should readily and obsequiously quit his own opinion, and embrace ours, with a blind resignation to an authority which the understanding of man acknowledges not. For however it may often mistake, it can own no other guide but reason, nor blindly submit to the will and dictates of another. If he you would bring over to your sentiments be one that examines before he assents, you must give him leave at his leisure to go over the account again, and, recalling what is out of his mind, examine all the particulars, to see on which side the advantage lies (Book IV Chapter XVI: Of the Degrees of Assent paragraph 4)But in a contradictory nod the Biblical authority to prevent his book from being suppresses (a fear expressed in the books introduction) he says this:
The bare testimony of divine revelation is the highest certainty. (Book IV Chapter XVI: Of the Degrees of Assent paragraph 14)Locke suddenly assumes the human receiver of knowledge is perfect, a perfection not seen anywhere else in his book.
The net result of his book was the falsification of the idea that knowledge was binary being either true or false. Knowledge could be gathered from nature over time with ever increasing certainty. It did not have to be suddenly revealed. He was certainly proved correct as evidenced by the existence of modern technology.
References
Locke, John (1689) Essay Concerning Human Understanding. Online at: https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/An_Essay_Concerning_Human_Understanding
Locke, John (1690) Essay Concerning Human Understanding (a second edition original) Online at: https://www.google.com/books/edition/An_Essay_Concerning_Human_Understanding/hGeKsjjtu6EC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=Essay+Concerning+Human+Understanding&printsec=frontcover
(April 3, 2025) During the Renaissance, reality became binary having both a material universe and a spiritual/divine universe. This led to the question of where were they and how were they related? Two possible answers emerged:
2. Binary Reality - The divine and material realms have different roles. This is the dominant paradigm of today. It is also the paradigm of Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and Buddhism. Yet how these 2 realms may interact is never explained by these dominant religions. That has been left to more recent philosophies which are:
(March 8, 2025) Pantheism holds that the divine and material realms exist within each other but use different ways to separate causal events (that is, to change state).
(July 6, 2022) Freemasonry was a Manifestation of the Freedom Stage of the Enlightenment. It was not meant to replace any existing religion but became popular because it was a place for free thinkers to associate in a private club atmosphere. Its popularity was due to doing ceremonial royal-like rituals together and working towards gaming-like level advancements in regards to those rituals. Its members were free to work out and choose their own religious path. This desire for freedom from the repressive state and religious authorities of the time led to most of its workings being secret.
Freemasonry also provided much of the ritual structure for later Nature based magical practices. Many modern Nature Pagans still use the Freemasonry ritual practice of calling the cardinal directions, using its closing phrase of "so mote it be" and its original three degrees of advancement in education schemes. Also the 1950's founders of the British Wicca (Gerald Gardner) and the more nature based Order of Bards, Ovates, and Druids (Ross Nichols) were members of a Freemason inspired organization called the Ancient Druid Order.
Freemasonry's first informal lodges were formed in London starting around 1680. In 1717 the remaining members of these lodges came together and formally formed a grand lodge (Morris 2013). Consequently, their rise paralleled that of the 3rd and last stage of the Enlightenment which focused on social freedom. By joining a Freemason lodge its members were making more of a personal statement about being anti-authoritarian instead of seeking a nature based religion.
The ancient tradition most in line with freedom and which was adopted by these new Freemasons was that of stone-craft masonry which was in steep decline at the time due to the rise of brick as a building material. Brick had been of poor quality until the time of King Henry VIII (ruled 1509 to 1547) who build several palaces out of it. By the mid 1600's it was the building material of choice, especially for the conversions of old stone houses into houses having the new invention of fireplaces.
The governing guild charter of stone-craft masonry goes back to 1390 CE with the Regius Manuscript. It shows an egalitarian organization of traveling masons having a legendary ancient history. This fake history has the craft masons going back to the time of Babylon and then having the guild associated with Abraham and the Greek geometer Euclid in ancient Egypt at the same time.
Freemasonry invented "secrets" for itself. These secrets consist of passwords, various secret signal, and most of the rituals themselves. Over time most such secrets have been exposed. Why they did so can only be guessed. Perhaps it was to insure security against a misunderstanding and hostile world, perhaps it was to give it an aura of mystery and exclusivity. Yet by claiming to have these "secrets" Freemasonry has generated much hostility to itself. Many people think that they must be doing something nefarious if they have such deliberate secrets.
Freemasonry's rituals in their temples (also called lodges) have been their most important gift to Nature Paganism. These rituals are done around a central altar. The ritual room is orientated along the cardinal directions. Yet these rituals are done without the aim of generating feelings. They involve a lot of rote memorization. Often they are done to illustrate some ethical principle. While the initiation rituals can generate feelings that is not their goal. Instead, Freemason's seek to connect to the Divine with prayers thinking words are somehow transmitted across the veil (the material-spiritual barrier).
Freemasonry is generally segregated by gender. It is also composed of many different organizations which are open to all Master Masons (3rd degree Masons) which belong to a Blue (Symbolic) Lodge. Some of these higher level male organizations are: York rites, Scottish Rites, Shriners, Grotto, Tall Cedars of Lebanon, and Knights Templar. The male African American Masonic orders are Prince Hall
The groups for the female relatives of male Masons are the Order of the Eastern Star, Order of the Amaranth, and the White Shrine of Jerusalem.
Morris, S. Brent (2013) The Complete Idiot's Guide to Freemasonry (2nd edition) Alpha books
(July 6, 2022) The first attack on Freemasonry was a 1698 leaflet published in London. This attack occurred even before the formation of the Grand Lodge there. It is reproduced below:
To All Godly People in the Citie of LONDONThe earliest Freemason statement on the religion of Freemasonry was made in 1723 by Freemason and Reverend James Anderson in his book Constitution of the Free-Masons. He imagined some common natural religious framework as the "religion which all men agree" with some natural "Moral Law" without stating what that was or how to find it. Beyond that all sectarian religious opinions were not to be discussed within Freemasonry. His important section of text is as follows:
A Mason is oblig'd by his Tenure, to obey the moral Law; and if he rightly understands the Art, he will never be stupid Atheist, nor an irreligious Libertine. But though in ancient Time Masons were charg'd in every Country to be of the Religion of the Country or Nation, whatever it was, yet 'tis now thought more expedient only to oblige them to that Religion in which all Men agree, leaving their particular Opinions to themselves; that is, to be good Men and true, or Men of Honour and Honesty; by whatever Denomonations or Persuasions they may [be] distinguish'd; whereby Masonry becomes the Center of Union, and the Means of conciliating true Friendship among Persons that must else have remain'd at a perpetual Distance. (in Morris 2013, page 212)The Catholic church under Pople Clement XII issued its first encyclical against Freemasonry in 1738 called "In Eminenti." The Catholic church did not argue against it on doctrinal grounds since that would mean promoting their own doctrine and condemning all other Christian denominations. Instead they seized upon it as being a secret society and assumed it like all secret societies was plotting against the state and the church. They also commanded the inquisition to go after all Catholic members:
"Moreover, We desire and command that ... inquisitors for heresy ... are to pursue and punish them with condign (proportional) penalties as being the most suspect of heresy." (in Morris 2013, page 215)This has continued to be the position of the Catholic church through it new Code of Canon Law of 1983:
"One who joins an association which plots against the Church is to be punished with a just penalty; one who promotes or moderates such an association, however, is to be punished with an interdict." (in Morris 2013, page 217)Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger who soon became Pope Benedict XVI (2005-2013) issued a clarification on this:
Therefore, the church's negative judgment in regard to Masonic associations remains unchanged since their principles have always been considered irreconcilable with the doctrine of the Church and therefore, membership in them remains forbidden. The faithful who enroll in Masonic associations are in a state of grave sin and may not receive Holy Communion. (in Morris 2013, page 218)The Southern Baptists also do not find Freemasonry compatible with Christianity. The following is a report from their missions board which was approved at the 1993 annual session of the Southern Baptist Convention. It's eight reasons of incompatibility are reproduced below:
We conclude that many tenants and teachings of Freemasonry are not compatible with Christianity or Southern Baptist Doctrine, including:(July 6, 2022) The first phase of the Enlightenment challenged human created religious laws and institutions hiding behind a claimed divine sanction. The next phase will challenge was the divine right of kings to rule.
The Dawn of Freedom began in Britain in 1688 because that was the year of the "Glorious Revolution" in which constitutional limits were placed on monarchical power and religious toleration was made state policy. This phase had its roots in the philosophy of government from the classical era. This is why all the original government buildings in the United States look classical.
The idea of liberty based upon natural rights only emerged during the Enlightenment. Freedom never emerged in nations having authorities not based upon nature.
In this phase, the Enlightenment thinkers tried to separate the role of the state from the role of religion. Europe had seen too many religious wars and wars against heretics in its history. They concluded that the state would be responsible for material things while religion would be responsible for emotional/spiritual things. This first stated by John Locke (1632-1704) who was also important in closing out the previous phase of Enlightenment. He wrote the following between 1689 and 1693:
Thomas Jefferson in the U.S Declaration of Independence shortened and generalized Locke's phase to "Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness."
The concept of happiness as used by Jefferson thus includes the right to health and the right to acquire and hold possessions. During the civil war Abraham Lincoln and the nation elevated in blood the Declaration of Independence above that of the constitution to justify the elimination of the property right of slavery. The Declaration as a statement of purpose trumped any legal document meant to implement that purpose. Freedom is Pagan.
Gay, Peter (1966) The Enlightenment - The Rise of Modern Paganism
Kramic, Isaac [editor] (1995) The Portable Enlightenment Reader. Penguin books