I"ll give you a correction instead. There absolutely were small private and public libraries, and the vast majority of them were filled with nothing but political and business records, letters, and official communications with perhaps the odd copy of some odd paper on an unrelated subject. The Library at Alexandria, and the Serapeum were the primary and secondary source for scientific and general knowledge storage. The former of course suffered it’s loss as an accident, the latter was deliberately burned. After the loss of those two major centers the world later turned to what copies could be located made by Arabic scholars.
Your political feeling, or opinion on the role of religion doesn’t allow you to write revisionist history.
Your ignorance of basic Christian tenets is quite telling in this statement. Christianity is indeed concerned with the soul and the afterlife; but what you do in THIS life has an impact on your afterlife.
So there were no copies of any of those books anywhere else in the ancient Mediterranean world, and the libraries at Alexandria and Serapeum held most of the Mediterranean world’s supply of books? Somehow I’m skeptical of that, and I stand by what I said. Most of the books of the ancient world were not lost because fanatical Christians burned libraries or because the all-powerful Church suppressed forbidden books. Most of them were lost because nobody considered them worth preserving. Deliberate destruction of books for religious reasons was rare.
(shrug) Neither does yours. The notion that the Christians were exclusively or primarily responsible for the loss of most of the classical world’s literature is not a historical fact, but an anti-Christian smear. I don’t recall that you have specifically made this claim, but certainly others on this thread are saying or implying it.
Christians were actually responsible for preserving most of the classical literature we still have available to us. We still have stuff like Aristotle and Plato because it was preserved and copied in Christian monastaries during the Dark Ages.
:rolleyes: yourself. Most of the things you list here are boogeymen. In any case, the only one you condemn frequently and regularly with such ferocity is Christianity. It’s awfully hard to believe your accusations are founded on facts rather than mere hatred.
Nobody said that the Hindus and the Hindus alone had done such a thing.
I’d agree with you about some of the classical literature we have, but not in the specific cases of Aristotle and Plato. Western Europe didn’t rediscover Aristotle until the 12th century, after Reconquista armies retook Toledo, and the Toledo School of Translation (people like Gerard of Cremona, John of Seville, Herman the German) translated the works on Aristotle and their Arabic commentaries into Latin. Plato was lost to the west until the 15th century, when Byzantine scholars, most notably Georgius Gemistus, but there were others too, fled Constantinople ahead of the Turks and came to Italy.
Byzantium was Christian of course, so just because those works were lost to western Christendom doesn’t mean they were lost to Christendom.
Remember guys, the Christian Roman Empire lasted until 1452.
The topic of this thread is, “What Would The World With a Marginalized Christianity Look Like?”. If the answer to is, “It would be fricken awesome, because places without Christianity holding them back outperform places with Christianity”, well, we have to look at actual places in the actual world.
China and Japan and India and Mongolia and the Americas weren’t hotbeds of science, reason, innovation, peace, human rights, and gender equality. Neither was classical Europe or medieval pagan Europe. It’s a simple fact. Here I’m excluding consideration of the Islamic world on the grounds that Islam was heavily influenced by Christianity and also grew from the same roots.
The reason I’m not a Christian isn’t because I believe Christianity is horrible and Christians are horrible people who do horrible things, the reason I’m not a Christian is because I believe Christianity is false. I also don’t believe in Zeus or Shiva, for what it’s worth.