[Home]Flat earth

HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences

Showing revision 10
Reports of belief in a flat earth can be traced back to ancient Greece. Early Greek philosophy portrayed the world as a circular disk floating in the ocean. According to Greek myth, Atlas was punished by being required to hold up the world (not necessarily a flat one). (See Hercules) Some historians have taught that sailors as late as the renaissance era feared falling off the edge of the earth if they ventured too far West of the Straits of Gibraltor.

According to historian [Jeffrey Burton Russell]?, there is little or no evidence that anyone ever believed that the world is flat, and no evidence that educated people ever did so. Russell, an American scholar whose main contribution to historical scholarship is a series of books on the history of concepts of evil and ideas of Satan, explored the issue in his Inventing the Flat Earth: Columbus and Modern Historians. Russell claims that the Flat Earth Theory is a myth used to impugn pre-modern civilization, especially that of the Middle Ages in Europe.

The allegation is that people in some past era believed that the world was flat and that those sailing too far would go off the edge. This legendary belief-system is frequently ascribed to the Catholic Church, especially in the time of Christopher Columbus. The attack is often validated by being linked to the genuine controversy over the geocentric and heliocentric models of the cosmos (see History of astronomy, Ptolemy (2), and Copernicus. However, this is somewhat disingenuous, as neither side in that debate doubted that the world was a sphere: the diameter of the world had been calculated quite accurately by Eratosthenes? in the 3rd century BC. Russell's ultimate conclusion is that a series of 19th century popular historians and serious historians invented and perpetuated this legend in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary.

Russell, Inventing the Flat Earth (ISBN 027595904X (amazon.com, search)).

/Talk


HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences
This page is read-only | View other revisions | View current revision
Edited December 7, 2001 1:40 am by J Hofmann Kemp (diff)
Search: