Tracing philosophy, like I did last week, is fairly easy. Commentators
build on each other and reference each other. Tracing how science moved around
the world in the Middle Ages is not so easy. The idea of a copyright did not
exist yet. There were no international scientific publications.
Recent historical research into this has been much like
detective work. If you look at De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium (go ahead,
grab your copy, I’ll wait) written in 1543 by Nicholas Copernicus and compare
it to Al-Tusi’s Tahrir al-Majisti (Amazon.com might carry it), you will see
diagrams of Tusi’s couple that are almost identical. Maybe Copernicus arrived
at this independently, but it seems unlikely to me. And even though the work
and data from the 9th century Muslim, Al-Battani, is mentioned by
Copernicus in that same work, that fact is rarely mentioned in history or
science classes.
In case you have forgotten, Copernicus came before Galileo.
He published his ideas about the earth rotating around the sun late in his life
because he knew it could cause trouble for him with the Pope. He is often
credited with beginning the scientific revolution. More often, I am seeing this
credit come with the qualification “in the West”, but this is a recent
phenomena and even when used, no mention of where else in the world scientific
ideas came from. Sometimes there will be a vague reference made to translations
of Greek works by Arabic scholars. The growth of the university system is also
credited without mentioning where they got their books.
Why have we lost this connection? There is at least one
technical reason. The Arabic language is very ornate. When written, a slightly
more or less pronounced curl of a symbol can carry meaning. This does not lend
itself well to being reproduced with movable type. Invented around 1439, Queen
Isabella funded the increased use of the printing press. It could also have
something to do with the over 1 million Arabic books that were burned after Spain was
“reconquered” in 1492.
Even before gaining back the territory
of Granada, the last Muslim Kingdom
in Spain,
rules were in place to enforce the conversion of everyone to Catholicism. The
most famously brutal leader of the Spanish Inquisition, Tomas de Torquemada was
appointed Grand Inquisitor in 1483. It was common for Jews and Muslims to fake
their conversions to Catholicism. It was the job of the inquisition to insure
they were authentic and expel, torture or kill them if they did not comply.
1492 is famous of course in the Americas
because that is when Columbus
arrived. Whether he was the first European there or just the last one to make a
big deal out of it is not my concern here. More important is that he claimed a
land that was already inhabited by the Lucayans, Tainos and Arawaks for his God
and his country, thinking nothing of taking seven of them back to Queen
Isabella and King Ferdinand and having them baptized. Immediately the Spanish
and Portuguese began to draw lines on the map, with their authority secured by
the Borgia Pope, Alexander VI, laying claim to these new worlds that they
barely understood.
On his second voyage, Columbus
was escorted by an Apostolic Delegate and missionaries with clear orders to evangelize.
In 1494, Columbus
sent 500 slaves to the Queen but she refused them and continued to advocate for
good treatment of the natives. This did not slow the pace of conquest and did
not stop Columbus from enslaving the natives to
work in mines and plantations on Hispaniola. By
1496, Columbus’ brother Diego had secured the port of Santo Domingo. In 1510, Balboa founded Santa Maria la Antigua del Darien on continental America. By
1515, the conquest of Cuba
was complete and other Caribbean islands were
under Spanish control. The wealth that came from these adventures shifted the
focus of Europe from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic.
Throughout, it was important that these conquerors had
official authority behind them. It seems unlikely that those authorities were
not aware of the mistreatment of people in the New World.
They were most likely more concerned about the gold, timber and cotton flowing
to them. Ferdinand and Isabella were always careful to receive a Papal Bull
that authorized their claims. This idea of the rulers of the people having the
blessing of the religious leaders had been fermenting for centuries. Two
centuries earlier, Thomas Aquinas had revisited the work of Augustine of Hippo
to create justifications for war.
Augustine had said, "The commandment forbidding killing was not
broken by those who have waged wars on the authority of God, or those who have
imposed the death-penalty on criminals when representing the authority of the
state, the justest and most reasonable source of power"
So, if it was criminal to be anything but a Christian, then
killing people who refused to convert was not a problem. It is doubtful that
this was Augustine’s intention, but over the centuries the Church had increased
in power and figured out what they could say to their followers and what they
could get away with. 900 years later, Aquinas clarified and added criteria for
when killing was justified:
- First, war must occur for a good and just purpose rather than for self-gain (for example, "in the nation's interest" is not just) or as an exercise of power.
- Second, just war must be waged by a properly instituted authority such as the state.
- Third, peace must be a central motive even in the midst of violence.
Again, leaving much open to
interpretation. If the Pope says it is good and just to bring Christ to the New World, nearly anything is acceptable. The motive of
peace can be claimed when any kind of conflict arises. Simply claim that you
are the one who is going to bring peace, as soon as you kill off a few of the
non-peaceful ones, and your actions are just in the eyes of the Lord. Go
wherever you want, as long as you carry the right flag with you, you are
justified.
With these rules in place, the acquisition
of knowledge from one declining empire and the acquisition of resources from a
much weaker tribal culture, the pattern for the development of the Americas was
set in motion.
Regardless of what was officially stated,
it seems clear that all were aware of what was happening in these far off
conquests. Even after Columbus was arrested by Francisco
De Bobadilla and sent back to Spain
in chains for his mistreatment of the Arawaks, his punishment only lasted a
couple months and he was returned. Conquest and mistreatment of natives was not
limited to Columbus or the rulers of Spain. The patterns that began here
would last for centuries.
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