The
Origin of Science and the Science of its Origin
Stanley L. Jaki
Modern man owes an immense debt to science.
He has received on the
one hand the practical benefit of powerful tools and on the other the
stimulus to his imagination through the unveiling of the remote past. Yet
science is a recent phenomenon. Its three-hundred-year-old history has
occupied but a few moments of recorded time. No wonder that its novelty
has provoked not a few reflections.
These reflections on the recent origin of
science are the materials and
rudiments of the science of its origin. For the first time they are
surveyed and analysed in this book, the text of five lectures delivered
at Balliol College, Oxford in 1977.
The historical survey is given in the first
four lectures which deal in
succession with the material accrued during the seventeenth, eighteenth,
nineteenth, and twentieth centuries. The lesson provided by this historical
material and the analysis of that lesson, given in the fifth lecture,
are the support of this book;s major claim: only a Christian outlook can
provide that view in depth of the origin of science which is needed for
a proper appraisal of the past of science, and of its future impact.