Search Results
6/26/2025, 6:07:28 PM
>>508793242
While progress was slower than in modern times, Europe made steady advances in math and science throughout the so-called “dark ages.” After Rome fell, Christian scholars didn’t stop thinking, they preserved and developed knowledge. Monks copied key Greek and Roman texts, including works by Euclid and Ptolemy. Boethius (6th century) passed on ancient arithmetic. The Venerable Bede (8th century) worked on calendar calculations. Gerbert of Aurillac (10th century) reintroduced the abacus and early forms of "Arabic" numerals. By the 12th century, European translators in Spain and Sicily were reintroducing classical mathematical works, which sparked real growth. Fibonacci’s Liber Abaci (1202) brought modern numerals and practical problem-solving into Europe. In Oxford and Paris, scholars were already applying math to physics before the Renaissance, centuries ahead of Galileo.
The idea that monasteries only produced “worthless philosophy” ignores that the very universities that later fueled the Renaissance and scientific revolution grew out of cathedral schools, founded and staffed by Christians.
Europe didn’t sit idle for 1000 years. It laid the groundwork, quietly and faithfully, for the explosion of knowledge that followed the Reformation. Without those Christian scholars, the Renaissance wouldn’t have had anything to rediscover.
>>508793001
>>508793087
What would I reply to you people? You are just endlessly mad at anything Christian. The whole of Europe is fundamentally Christian if you haven't noticed. There is nothing anyone can say to you guys, you are just anti-Christian no matter what. So there is mostly no point. Ok, I get it, you hate Christ and you want a Roman Empire with a pagan Roman Caesar and hail this mortal man.
I'm not the "All I have" anon btw, not every German flag is that one person.
>>508792943
Yeah, I'm thinking those
>>508789755
>>508789073
are ChatGPT, but you guys have no problem with them I suppose?
While progress was slower than in modern times, Europe made steady advances in math and science throughout the so-called “dark ages.” After Rome fell, Christian scholars didn’t stop thinking, they preserved and developed knowledge. Monks copied key Greek and Roman texts, including works by Euclid and Ptolemy. Boethius (6th century) passed on ancient arithmetic. The Venerable Bede (8th century) worked on calendar calculations. Gerbert of Aurillac (10th century) reintroduced the abacus and early forms of "Arabic" numerals. By the 12th century, European translators in Spain and Sicily were reintroducing classical mathematical works, which sparked real growth. Fibonacci’s Liber Abaci (1202) brought modern numerals and practical problem-solving into Europe. In Oxford and Paris, scholars were already applying math to physics before the Renaissance, centuries ahead of Galileo.
The idea that monasteries only produced “worthless philosophy” ignores that the very universities that later fueled the Renaissance and scientific revolution grew out of cathedral schools, founded and staffed by Christians.
Europe didn’t sit idle for 1000 years. It laid the groundwork, quietly and faithfully, for the explosion of knowledge that followed the Reformation. Without those Christian scholars, the Renaissance wouldn’t have had anything to rediscover.
>>508793001
>>508793087
What would I reply to you people? You are just endlessly mad at anything Christian. The whole of Europe is fundamentally Christian if you haven't noticed. There is nothing anyone can say to you guys, you are just anti-Christian no matter what. So there is mostly no point. Ok, I get it, you hate Christ and you want a Roman Empire with a pagan Roman Caesar and hail this mortal man.
I'm not the "All I have" anon btw, not every German flag is that one person.
>>508792943
Yeah, I'm thinking those
>>508789755
>>508789073
are ChatGPT, but you guys have no problem with them I suppose?
6/26/2025, 6:07:28 PM
>>22867624
While progress was slower than in modern times, Europe made steady advances in math and science throughout the so-called “dark ages.” After Rome fell, Christian scholars didn’t stop thinking, they preserved and developed knowledge. Monks copied key Greek and Roman texts, including works by Euclid and Ptolemy. Boethius (6th century) passed on ancient arithmetic. The Venerable Bede (8th century) worked on calendar calculations. Gerbert of Aurillac (10th century) reintroduced the abacus and early forms of "Arabic" numerals. By the 12th century, European translators in Spain and Sicily were reintroducing classical mathematical works, which sparked real growth. Fibonacci’s Liber Abaci (1202) brought modern numerals and practical problem-solving into Europe. In Oxford and Paris, scholars were already applying math to physics before the Renaissance, centuries ahead of Galileo.
The idea that monasteries only produced “worthless philosophy” ignores that the very universities that later fueled the Renaissance and scientific revolution grew out of cathedral schools, founded and staffed by Christians.
Europe didn’t sit idle for 1000 years. It laid the groundwork, quietly and faithfully, for the explosion of knowledge that followed the Reformation. Without those Christian scholars, the Renaissance wouldn’t have had anything to rediscover.
>>22867620
>>22867622
What would I reply to you people? You are just endlessly mad at anything Christian. The whole of Europe is fundamentally Christian if you haven't noticed. There is nothing anyone can say to you guys, you are just anti-Christian no matter what. So there is mostly no point. Ok, I get it, you hate Christ and you want a Roman Empire with a pagan Roman Caesar and hail this mortal man.
I'm not the "All I have" anon btw, not every German flag is that one person.
>>22867619
Yeah, I'm thinking those
>>22867585
>>22867575
are ChatGPT, but you guys have no problem with them I suppose?
While progress was slower than in modern times, Europe made steady advances in math and science throughout the so-called “dark ages.” After Rome fell, Christian scholars didn’t stop thinking, they preserved and developed knowledge. Monks copied key Greek and Roman texts, including works by Euclid and Ptolemy. Boethius (6th century) passed on ancient arithmetic. The Venerable Bede (8th century) worked on calendar calculations. Gerbert of Aurillac (10th century) reintroduced the abacus and early forms of "Arabic" numerals. By the 12th century, European translators in Spain and Sicily were reintroducing classical mathematical works, which sparked real growth. Fibonacci’s Liber Abaci (1202) brought modern numerals and practical problem-solving into Europe. In Oxford and Paris, scholars were already applying math to physics before the Renaissance, centuries ahead of Galileo.
The idea that monasteries only produced “worthless philosophy” ignores that the very universities that later fueled the Renaissance and scientific revolution grew out of cathedral schools, founded and staffed by Christians.
Europe didn’t sit idle for 1000 years. It laid the groundwork, quietly and faithfully, for the explosion of knowledge that followed the Reformation. Without those Christian scholars, the Renaissance wouldn’t have had anything to rediscover.
>>22867620
>>22867622
What would I reply to you people? You are just endlessly mad at anything Christian. The whole of Europe is fundamentally Christian if you haven't noticed. There is nothing anyone can say to you guys, you are just anti-Christian no matter what. So there is mostly no point. Ok, I get it, you hate Christ and you want a Roman Empire with a pagan Roman Caesar and hail this mortal man.
I'm not the "All I have" anon btw, not every German flag is that one person.
>>22867619
Yeah, I'm thinking those
>>22867585
>>22867575
are ChatGPT, but you guys have no problem with them I suppose?
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