OLD WAY OF THINKING
ARISTOTLE & MEDIEVAL LEARNING
NEW WAY OF THINKING
KEY SCIENTISTS
FAITH & THE SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTION
100

People in the Middle Ages trusted this ancient thinker more than experiments.

Aristotle

100

Aristotle believed all knowledge begins with this.

experience/observation (our senses)

100

The Scientific Revolution encouraged using this instead of relying only on old books.

Experimentation

100

He proposed the heliocentric model, placing the Sun at the center.

Copernicus

100

True or false: The Catholic Church always opposed science.

False

200

This model said Earth was at the center of the universe.  

Geocentric model

200

According to Aristotle, humans are special because they can do this.

Reason/think

200

The new way of thinking relied on three tools: observation, experimentation, and this.

Mathematics

200

This scientist improved the telescope and studied the heavens.

Galileo

200

Why did some people think heliocentrism conflicted with Scripture?

Some verses describe the Sun “moving.”

300

One major problem with the old way was that explanations relied mainly on this instead of testing.

reasoning/logic without experimentation.

300

This type of reasoning moves from general ideas to specific conclusions.

Deductive Reasoning

300

This term describes testing ideas instead of just accepting them.

The Scientific method

300

He discovered planets move in ellipses.

Kepler

300

What did St. Augustine teach about Scripture and science?

Scripture teaches how to go to Heaven, not how the heavens go.


400

Name two reasons people accepted Aristotle for over 1,000 years.

His ideas seemed logical, tools didn’t exist to challenge him, universities taught his books, people trusted tradition.

400

Why was Aristotle’s philosophy so attractive to medieval scholars?

It was organized, logical, and helped explain the natural world.

400

Why did new tools like telescopes help start the Scientific Revolution?

They allowed people to see things that ancient thinkers couldn’t observe.

400

How did the Edict of Nantes help France recover?

It brought peace and unity after decades of war

400

Why did Galileo get in trouble with the Church in 1632?

He mocked the pope in his dialogue and broke instructions to treat both sides fairly.

500

Give one example of an observation that didn’t match Aristotle’s explanations.

Planets didn’t move in perfect circles; motion sometimes continued after force stopped; moon wasn’t perfect.

500

These two Catholic thinkers helped show that Aristotle and Catholic faith were compatible.

St. Thomas Aquinas and Albert the Great

500

Explain one reason why the Scientific Revolution was NOT a rejection of faith.

Many scientists were Catholic; Church funded science; discoveries were seen as revealing God’s design.

500

Why did Copernicus delay publishing his book for 25 years?

He feared ridicule and controversy, even though educated Catholics encouraged him.

500

Explain one reason why the Galileo trial is more complex than “Church vs science.”

He wasn’t tortured; Church funded science; miscommunication and pride played roles; debate was about interpretation, not rejecting science.