Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

History General

Galileo's Mistake

The Archaeology of a Myth: Why Science Rules and Why It Shouldn't

by (author) Wade Rowland

Publisher
Dundurn
Initial publish date
Mar 2014
Category
General, Essays, General
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780919028425
    Publish Date
    Aug 2001
    List Price
    $29.95
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781459725539
    Publish Date
    Mar 2014
    List Price
    $14.99

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Description

Veteran literary journalist Wade Rowland takes one of the modern world's most influential myths -- the epic confrontation of physicist and astronomer Galileo Galilei (1564 - 1642) with the Church of Rome -- and turns it on its head. Rowland argues that at the dawning of the Scientific Revolution in the early 1600s, Galileo's mistake was to insist that science provides truth about nature. The Church fought back against this challenge to its authority by declaring that science provides only models for reality and that the ultimate truth is accessible only through metaphysical or spiritual insight.

Although the 1633 trial centred on Galileo's telescopic observations of the night sky, Rowland argues persuasively that this was merely the public face put on a much more profound issue: what is truth and how can we know it? Galileo's ultimate recantation, Rowland argues, must be understood in this light. Couched in the engaging style of travel narrative, this provocative reexamination deconstructs the myth that Galileo was a freethinker waging war against reactionary and anti-intellectual Church.

Using the Socratic method of examining arguments, Galileo's Mistake moves seamlessly through Galileo's life and his ideas about the nature of reality. By no means an apologist for the Church, Rowland skillfully and persuasively identifies the source of the ontological crisis that plagues us today: the unquestioned authority of science in determining the nature of reality.

About the author

Ranked among Canada's leading literary journalists, Wade Rowland is the author of more than a dozen non-fiction books including Ockham's Razor, Greed, Inc., and Saving the CBC. He spent many years in television news production at the network level and has held senior management roles at both CTV and CBC, where he was also senior producer of the consumer affairs program Marketplace. Rowland holds a Ph.D. in Communication and Culture and is currently Associate Professor at York University. Born in Montreal, he grew up in Regina and Winnipeg and currently lives in rural Port Hope, Ontario, with his wife Christine Collie Rowland.

Wade Rowland's profile page

Editorial Reviews

Rowland has a gift for both narrative as well as for dialogue.

Catholic Register

Rowland tells the story well and with style...backed by research and sensitivity to the issues.

Globe and Mail

...this book was a wonderful read!...Rowland is to be complimented in the way he convinces the reader that the issues are perennial, not just historical.

Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith

Rowland's triumph is in examining Galileo's method over his facts and winning an argument that was lost more than 350 years ago. His book provides a fascinating contribution to a debate that is particularly germane today and is likely to be equally important 300 years from now.

The Montreal Gazette

Rowland does an impressive job of bringing the 17th century to life.

Publishers Weekly

Rowland has written a provocative and entertaining look at a turbulent period of European history.

Hamilton Spectator

Wade Rowland has written a book in which the life and accomplishments of Galileo are described in effortless prose and with a light touch, which is a joy to read. He has the ear of a journalist and a novelist's eye.

Catholic Insight

'Galileo's Mistake' is a lofty and ambitious philosophical exploration, and Rowland's considerable gifts as a writer make the book pleasurable and captivating.

Quill & Quire

It is a stunning point and Rowland makes it in wonderfully readable prose, that incorporates elements of the type of Platonic dialogue that Galileo himself employed.

digitaljournal.com