Thank you for providing us with this very thoughtful
and thought-provoking analysis of the history of the West.
I could not refute any of the author's observations, even if I
had desired to do so, which I did not.
Yet the question remains: Why was Western man able to accept
and utilize the concept of reason inherent in Christianity while the other
races have not done so, even those which, at least to an extent,
have accepted Christianity?

For life and liberty,
David Macko

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Sent: Thursday, December 15, 2005 9:39 AM
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 (http://chronicle.com/)     (http://chronicle.com/review/)     From the
issue dated December 2,  2005<
How Christianity (and Capitalism) Led to Science

By RODNEY STARK
_http://chronicle.com/temp/reprint.php?id=tqm4xd5mqkk5px43d968m19qmf4w3g5y_
(http://chronicle.com/temp/reprint.php?id=tqm4xd5mqkk5px43d968m19qmf4w3g5y)
When Europeans first began to explore the globe, their greatest  surprise 
was
not the existence of the Western Hemisphere, but the extent of  their own
technological superiority over the rest of the world. Not only were  the 
proud
Maya, Aztec, and Inca nations helpless in the face of European  intruders, 
so
were the fabled civilizations of the East: China, India, and  Islamic 
nations
were "backward" by comparison with 15th-century Europe. How had  that 
happened?
Why was it that, although many civilizations had pursued alchemy,  the study
led to chemistry only in Europe? Why was it that, for centuries,  Europeans
were the only ones possessed of eyeglasses, chimneys, reliable clocks, 
heavy
cavalry, or a system of music notation? How had the nations that had  arisen 
from
the rubble of Rome so greatly surpassed the rest of the  world?
Several recent authors have discovered the secret to Western  success in
geography. But that same geography long also sustained European  cultures 
that
were well behind those of Asia. Other commentators have traced the  rise of 
the
West to steel, or to guns and sailing ships, and still others have  credited 
a
more productive agriculture. The trouble is that those answers are  part of
what needs to be explained: Why did  Europeans excel at metallurgy,
shipbuilding, or farming?
The most convincing answer to those questions attributes Western  dominance
to the rise of capitalism, which took place only in Europe. Even the  most
militant enemies of capitalism credit it with creating previously undreamed 
of
productivity and progress. In The Communist  Manifesto, Karl Marx and 
Friedrich
Engels proposed that before the rise  of capitalism, humans engaged "in the
most slothful indolence"; the capitalist  system was "the first to show what
man's activity can bring about." Capitalism  achieved that miracle through
regular reinvestment to increase productivity,  either to create greater 
capacity or
improve technology, and by motivating both  management and labor through
ever-rising payoffs.
Supposing that capitalism did produce Europe's own "great leap  forward," it
remains to be explained why capitalism developed only in Europe.  Some 
writers
have found the roots of capitalism in the Protestant Reformation;  others
have traced it back to various political circumstances. But, if one digs 
deeper,
it becomes clear that the truly fundamental basis not only for  capitalism,
but for the rise of the West, was an extraordinary faith in  reason.
A series of developments, in which reason won the day, gave  unique shape to
Western culture and institutions. And the most important of  those victories
occurred within Christianity. While the other world religions  emphasized
mystery and intuition, Christianity alone embraced reason and logic  as the 
primary
guides to religious truth. Christian faith in reason was  influenced by 
Greek
philosophy. But the more important fact is that Greek  philosophy had little
impact on Greek religions. Those remained typical mystery  cults, in which
ambiguity and logical contradictions were taken as hallmarks of  sacred 
origins.
Similar assumptions concerning the fundamental inexplicability  of the gods
and the intellectual superiority of introspection dominated all of  the 
other
major world religions.
But, from early days, the church fathers taught that reason was  the supreme
gift from God and the means to progressively increase understanding  of
Scripture and revelation. Consequently Christianity was oriented to the 
future,
while the other major religions asserted the superiority of the past. At 
least
in principle, if not always in fact, Christian doctrines could always be
modified in the name of progress, as demonstrated by reason. Encouraged by 
the
scholastics and embodied in the great medieval universities founded by the
church, faith in the power of reason infused Western culture, stimulating 
the
pursuit of science and the evolution of democratic theory and practice. The 
rise
of capitalism also was a victory for church-inspired reason, since 
capi-talism
 is, in essence, the systematic and sustained application of reason to
com-merce — something that first took place within the great monastic 
estates.
During the past century Western intellectuals have been more  than willing 
to
trace European imperialism to Christian origins, but they have  been 
entirely
un-willing to recognize that Christianity made any contribution  (other than
intolerance) to the Western capacity to dominate other societies.  Rather, 
the
West is said to have surged ahead precisely as it overcame re-ligious
barriers to progress, especially those impeding science.  Nonsense. The 
success of
the West, including the rise of science, rested  entirely on religious
foundations, and the people who brought it about were  devout Christians.
Unfortunately, even many of those historians willing to grant  Christianity 
a role in
shaping Western progress have tended to limit themselves  to tracing 
beneficial
religious effects of the Protestant Reformation. It is as  if the previous 
1,500
years of Christianity either were of little matter, or  were harmful.
Such academic anti-Roman Catholicism inspired the most famous  book ever
written on the origins of capitalism. At the start of the 20th  century, the
German sociologist Max Weber published what soon became an  immensely 
influential
study: The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of  Capitalism. In it Weber 
proposed
that capitalism originated only in  Europe because, of all the world's
religions, only Protestantism provided a  moral vision that led people to 
restrain
their material consumption while  vigorously seeking wealth. Weber argued 
that,
before the Reformation, restraint  on consumption was invariably linked to
asceticism and, hence, to condemnations  of commerce. Conversely, the 
pursuit of
wealth was linked to profligate  consumption. Either cultural pattern was
inimical to capitalism. According to  Weber, the Protestant ethic shattered 
those
traditional linkages, creating a  culture of frugal entrepreneurs content to
systematically reinvest profits in  order to pursue ever greater wealth, and
therein lies the key to capitalism and  the ascendancy of the West.
Perhaps because it was such an elegant thesis, it was widely  embraced,
despite the fact that it was so obviously wrong. Even today The  Protestant 
Ethic
enjoys an almost sacred status among sociologists, although  economic
historians quickly dismissed Weber's surprisingly undocumented  monograph on 
the
irrefutable grounds that the rise of capitalism in Europe  preceded the 
Reformation
by centuries. Only a decade after Weber  published, the celebrated Belgian
scholar Henri Pirenne noted a large literature  that "established the fact 
that
all of the essential features of  capitalism — individual enterprise, 
advances
in credit, commercial profits,  speculation, etc. — are to be found from the
12th century on, in the city  republics of Italy — Venice, Genoa, or 
Florence."
A generation later, the  equally celebrated French historian Fernand Braudel
complained, "All historians  have opposed this tenuous theory, although they
have not managed to be rid of it  once and for all. Yet it is clearly false.
The northern countries took over the  place that earlier had so long and
brilliantly been occupied by the old  capitalist centers of the 
Mediterranean. They
invented nothing, either in  technology or business management." Braudel 
might
have added that, during their  critical period of economic development, 
those
northern centers of capitalism  were Catholic, not Protestant — the
Reformation still lay well into the  future. Further, as the Canadian 
historian John
Gilchrist, an authority on the  economic activity of the medieval church, 
pointed
out, the first examples of  capitalism appeared in the great Christian
monasteries.
Though Weber was wrong, however, he was correct to suppose that  religious
ideas played a vital role in the rise of capitalism in Europe. The  material
conditions needed for capitalism existed in many civilizations in  various 
eras,
including China, the Islamic world, India, Byzantium, and probably  ancient
Rome and Greece as well. But none of those societies broke through and
developed capitalism, as none evolved ethical visions compatible with that 
dynamic
economic system. Instead, leading religions outside the West called for
asceticism and denounced profits, while wealth was exacted from peasants and
merchants by rapacious elites dedicated to display and consumption. Why did 
things
turn out differently in Europe? Because of the Christian commitment to
rational theology, something that may have played a major role in causing 
the
Reformation, but that surely predated Protestantism by far more than a 
millennium.
Even so, capitalism developed in only some locales. Why  not in all? Because
in some European societies, as in most of the rest of the  world, it was
prevented from happening by greedy despots. Freedom also  was essential for 
the
development of capitalism. That raises another matter: Why  has freedom so 
seldom
existed in most of the world, and how was it nurtured in  some medieval
European states? That, too, was a victory of reason. Before  any medieval 
European
state actually attempted rule by an elected council,  Christian theologians
had long been theorizing about the nature of equality and  individual 
rights —
indeed, the later work of such secular 18th-century  political theorists as
John Locke explicitly rested on egalitarian axioms  derived by church 
scholars.
All of this stemmed from the fact that from earliest days, the  major
theologians taught that faith in reason was intrinsic to faith in God. As 
Quintus
Tertullian instructed in the second century, "Reason is a thing of God,
inasmuch as there is nothing which God the Maker of all has not provided, 
disposed,
ordained by reason — nothing which He has not willed should be  handled and
understood by reason." Consequently it was assumed that reason held  the key 
to
progress in understanding scripture, and that knowledge of God and  the
secrets of his creation would increase over time. St. Augustine (c. 354-430) 
flatly
asserted that through the application of reason we will gain an 
increasingly
more accurate understanding of God, remarking that although there  are
"certain matters pertaining to the doctrine of salvation that we cannot yet 
grasp
... one day we shall be able to do so."
Nor was the Christian belief in progress limited to theology.  Augustine 
went
on at length about the "wonderful — one might say  stupefying — advances
human industry has made." All were attributed to the  "unspeakable boon" 
that God
has conferred upon his creation, a "rational  nature." Those views were
repeated again and again through the centuries.  Especially typical were 
these
words preached by Fra Giordano, in Florence in  1306: "Not all the arts have 
been
found; we shall never see an end of finding  them."
Christian faith in reason and in progress was the foundation on  which
Western success was achieved. As the distinguished philosopher Alfred  North
Whitehead put it during one of his Lowell Lectures at Harvard in 1925, 
science arose
only in Europe because only there did people think that science  could be
done and should be done, a faith "derivative from medieval  theology."
Moreover the medieval Christian faith in reason and progress was  constantly
reinforced by actual progress, by technical and organizational  innovations,
many of them fostered by Christianity. For the past several  centuries, far 
too
many of us have been misled by the incredible fiction that,  from the fall 
of
Rome until about the 15th century, Europe was submerged in the  Dark Ages —
centuries of ignorance, superstition, and misery — from  which it was 
suddenly,
almost miraculously, rescued; first by the Ren-aissance  and then by the
Enlightenment. But, as even dictionaries and encyclopedias  recently have 
begun to
acknowledge, it was all a lie!
It was during the so-called Dark Ages that European technology  and science
overtook and surpassed the rest of the world. Some of that involved 
original
inventions and discoveries; some of it came from Asia. But what was so
remarkable was the way that the full capacities of new technologies were 
recognized
and widely adopted. By the 10th century Europe already was far ahead  in 
terms
of farm-ing equipment and techniques, had unmatched capacities in the  use 
of
water and wind power, and possessed superior military equipment and 
tactics.
Not to be overlooked in all that medieval progress was the invention of  a
whole new way to organize and operate commerce and industry:  capitalism.
Capitalism was developed by the great monastic estates.  Throughout the
medieval era, the church was by far the largest landowner in  Europe, and 
its
liquid assets and annual income probably exceeded that of all of  Europe's 
nobility
added together. Much of that wealth poured into the coffers of  the 
religious
orders, not only because they were the largest landowners, but  also in
payment for liturgical services — Henry VII of England paid a huge  sum to 
have
10,000 masses said for his soul. As rapid innovation in agricultural 
technology
began to yield large surpluses to the religious orders, the church  not only
began to reinvest profits to increase production, but diversified.  Having
substantial amounts of cash on hand, the religious orders began to lend 
money at
interest. They soon evolved the mortgage (literally, "dead pledge") to  lend
money with land for security, collecting all income from the land during 
the
term of the loan, none of which was deducted from the amount owed. That
practice often added to the monastery's lands because the monks were not 
hesitant
to foreclose. In addition, many monasteries began to rely on a hired  labor
force and to display an uncanny ability to adopt the latest technological
advances. Capitalism had arrived.
Still, like all of the world's other major religions, for  centuries
Christianity took a dim view of commerce. As the many great Christian 
monastic orders
maximized profits and lent money at whatever rate of interest  the market
would bear, they were increasingly subject to condemnations from more
traditional members of the clergy who accused them of avarice.
Given the fundamental commitment of Christian theologians to  reason and
progress, what they did was rethink the traditional teachings. What  is a 
just
price for one's goods, they asked? According to the immensely  influential 
St.
Albertus Magnus (1193-1280), the just price is simply what  "goods are worth
according to the estimate of the market at the time of sale."  That is, a 
just
price is not a function of the amount of profit, but is whatever  uncoerced
buyers are willing to pay. Adam Smith would have agreed — St.  Thomas 
Aquinas
(1225-74) did. As for usury, a host of leading theologians of the  day 
remained
opposed to it, but quickly defined it out of practical existence.  For 
example,
no usury was involved if the interest was paid to compensate the  lender for
the costs of not having the money available for other commercial
opportunities, which was almost always easily demonstrated.
That was a remarkable shift. Most of these theologians were,  after all, men
who had separated themselves from the world, and most of them had  taken 
vows
of poverty. Had asceticism truly prevailed in the monasteries, it  seems 
very
unlikely that the traditional disdain for and opposition to commerce  would
have mellowed. That it did, and to such a revolutionary extent, was a 
result of
direct experience with worldly imperatives. For all their genuine acts  of
charity, monastic administrators were not about to give all their wealth to 
the
poor, sell their products at cost, or give kings interest-free loans. It was
the active participation of the great orders in free markets that caused
monastic theologians to reconsider the morality of commerce.
The religious orders could pursue their economic goals because  they were
sufficiently powerful to withstand any attempts at seizure by an  avaricious
nobility. But for fully developed secular capitalism to unfold, there 
needed to
be broader freedom from regulation and expropriation. Hence secular 
capitalism
appeared first in the relatively democratic city-states of north-ern  Italy,
whose political institutions rested squarely on church doctrines of free 
will
and moral equality.
Augustine, Aquinas, and other major theologians taught that the  state must
respect private property and not intrude on the freedom of its  citizens to
pursue virtue. In addition, there was the central Christian doctrine  that,
regardless of worldly inequalities, inequality in the most important sense 
does
not exist: in the eyes of God and in the world to come. As Paul explained:
"There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor fee, there is 
neither
male nor female, for ye are all one in Christ Jesus."
And church theologians and leaders meant it. Through all prior  recorded
history, slavery was universal — Christianity began in a world  where as 
much as
half the population was in bondage. But by the seventh century, 
Christianity
had become the only major world religion to formulate specific  theological
opposition to slavery, and, by no later than the 11th century, the  church 
had
expelled the dreadful institution from Europe. That it later  reappeared in 
the
New World is another matter, although there, too, slavery was  vigorously
condemned by popes and all of the eventual abolition movements were  of 
religious
origins.
Free labor was an essential ingredient for the rise of  capitalism, for free
workers can maximize their rewards by working harder or  more effectively 
than
before. In contrast, coerced workers gain nothing from  doing more. Put
another way, tyranny makes a few people richer; capitalism can  make 
everyone
richer. Therefore, as the northern Italian city-states developed  capitalist
economies, visitors marveled at their standards of living; many were 
equally
confounded by how hard everyone worked.
The common denominator in all these great historical  developments was the
Christian commitment to reason.
That was why the West won.
Rodney Stark is university professor of the social sciences  at Baylor
University. This essay is adapted from The Victory of Reason: How 
Christianity Led
to Freedom, Capitalism, and Western Success, to be published  in December by
Random House. Copyright © by Rodney Stark.

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