A few months ago, on a lark, I sent in a paper proposal for the 2009 International Medieval Congress at Leeds. For those not in the know, this is one of the two annual huge Medieval Studies conferences held annually, the other held at the American Leeds- Kalamazoo, Michigan. While I was at 'zoo last year, I met the organizers of this year's IMC, and they told me about the leitmotif of this conference, heresy and orthodoxy, and when I told them some of my ideas, they encouraged me to submit a proposal. The paper is a spinoff of ideas I have developed while working on my Master's thesis, and I hope I can do it justice. Here it is, then, the paper that I will present on Bastille Day 2009. All that's left to do is write the damn thing...
Proposal for "Beware Greeks Bearing News: the Influence of Orthodox Monks on the Reporting of Heresy in Western Europe"
"Recent scholarship into 11th-century texts such as the "Letter of Heribert" and the sermons of Ademar of Chabannes have done much to revive the notion that the 'heretics' of 11th-century France were proselytized by Bogomil missionaries from the Byzantine Empire. They have pointed toward superficial similarities between the western 'heretics' described and the Bogomils, and toward the language used in polemics against the new religious movements as evidence of their connection. I intend to propose that these similarities cannot be taken as prima facie evidence of a connection. They may, rather, constitute evidence of a different kind of influence - that of visiting Orthodox monks on the chronicling of reformist movements by their Catholic brethren."
28 November 2008
24 November 2008
Happy Anniversary, Mr. Darwin
Today is the 149th anniversary of the publication of "The Origin of Species," one of the most important books ever published and containing certainly the supreme scientific insight of the last two hundred years. Even those few who will read this who are creationists have benefited from the consequences of Darwin's insight in ways large and small.
It is an amazing book, and one I highly recommend. Darwin builds his case logically beginning with the familiar forms of artificial selection used by farmers and breeders, and moving to the vast sweep of life on Earth. He begins hesitantly, laying out his ideas cautiously. As his case builds, he becomes more and more confident, and the accumulated weight of evidence in his argument gives it unstoppable momentum. There are individual things he gets wrong, but on the one big idea he is absolutely right. And by the end, you can tell that he knows it.
The single best encomium to Darwin and the theory evolution by means of natural selection that I have ever read was written by Ian McEwan, a writer whom I both love and loathe. I love him, because he is possibly the finest living writer working in the English language; I loathe him because he's so much better a writer than I can probably hope to be. This is from his 2005 novel "Saturday."
"What better creation myth? An unimaginable sweep of time, numberless generations spawning by infinitesimal steps complex living beauty out of inert matter, driven on by the blind furies of random mutation, natural selection and environmental change, with the tragedy of forms continually dying, and lately the wonder of minds emerging and with them morality, love, art, cities-- and the unprecedented bonus of being demonstrably true."
Don't let the talk of myths fool you; this is how it happens. It is no less beautiful than any other idea that has been proposed and fills me with the sense of awe that religion never gave me. And don't get hung up on the word "theory" either. There are those out there who would have you believe it means the same thing as "conjecture." In the sciences, it does not. It means a hypothesis that is so supported by data and experiment that it is accepted as true. One reliably reproducible counter-instance sends the whole edifice tumbling down. Keep waiting...
It is an amazing book, and one I highly recommend. Darwin builds his case logically beginning with the familiar forms of artificial selection used by farmers and breeders, and moving to the vast sweep of life on Earth. He begins hesitantly, laying out his ideas cautiously. As his case builds, he becomes more and more confident, and the accumulated weight of evidence in his argument gives it unstoppable momentum. There are individual things he gets wrong, but on the one big idea he is absolutely right. And by the end, you can tell that he knows it.
The single best encomium to Darwin and the theory evolution by means of natural selection that I have ever read was written by Ian McEwan, a writer whom I both love and loathe. I love him, because he is possibly the finest living writer working in the English language; I loathe him because he's so much better a writer than I can probably hope to be. This is from his 2005 novel "Saturday."
"What better creation myth? An unimaginable sweep of time, numberless generations spawning by infinitesimal steps complex living beauty out of inert matter, driven on by the blind furies of random mutation, natural selection and environmental change, with the tragedy of forms continually dying, and lately the wonder of minds emerging and with them morality, love, art, cities-- and the unprecedented bonus of being demonstrably true."
Don't let the talk of myths fool you; this is how it happens. It is no less beautiful than any other idea that has been proposed and fills me with the sense of awe that religion never gave me. And don't get hung up on the word "theory" either. There are those out there who would have you believe it means the same thing as "conjecture." In the sciences, it does not. It means a hypothesis that is so supported by data and experiment that it is accepted as true. One reliably reproducible counter-instance sends the whole edifice tumbling down. Keep waiting...
Into the Deep Water- Take Two
OK, let's try this again. When I originally set this blog up, my intention was simply to write. However, my old friend inertia (and his buddies laziness and ennui) popped up and I dropped the blog pretty quickly. So, I'll try again. No promises about frequency, but let's see what happens.
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