一个有总体规划的人:史丹诺对地球历史的观察

Q1 Arts and Humanities
S. Dominici
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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们提出了具体的来源,包括美第奇橱柜的标本和托斯卡纳的地质露头,可能被尼古拉斯·斯泰诺用来建立一个关于有机化石、晶体和沉积地层起源的理论,以便根据普遍的几何原理构建地球的历史。他在托斯卡纳和之前的旅行中观察到的现象揭示了一系列与圣经描述一致的事件。我们认为他设计了他的方法来重建原始事件的年表,以证明圣经创造的历史性,与非正统的思想形成对比。自17世纪50年代以来,这种观点就在北欧的哲学圈子里传播开来,在1666年到达托斯卡纳之前,斯坦诺经常光顾这个圈子。斯坦诺事先就知道应该去哪些地方寻找化石,比如米歇尔·莫卡蒂的《金属化石》。这是佛罗伦萨人卡洛·达蒂(Carlo Dati)的手稿,斯泰诺可能在1664-1665年在巴黎时听说过他。在托斯卡纳,他很快就与当地的学者团体在化石解释问题上形成了密切的互动。其中包括乔瓦尼·阿方索·博雷利,他应莱奥波尔多·德·美第奇王子的要求,向斯蒂诺提供西西里岛和马耳他的化石。斯泰诺在1666年完成的一篇地质学论文Canis Carchariae Dissectum Caput中暗示了他在托斯卡纳发现的地质对象的理论和不依赖于比例的几何方法。这个理论最完整的版本发表在1669年的《前驱》上。在这两本著作中,他都证明了托斯卡纳丘陵较年轻地层中的化石,如鲨鱼牙齿和软体动物的壳,其起源类似于生物形成的固体。在这两篇文章中,他都明确地将海洋化石地层的沉积与圣经中的洪水联系起来,这一观点在他1659年的已知最古老的手稿中就有预示,当时他还是哥本哈根的一名学生。他在亚平宁山脉更古老的砂岩中没有发现化石,他认为这些地层是在生命出现之前形成的。这些发现和他在托斯卡纳的其他观察,对斯泰诺来说,是自然哲学和圣经启示协同作用揭示上帝创造奥秘的最终证据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A man with a master plan: Steno’s observations on earth’s history
We present specific sources, including specimens of the Medicean cabinet and geological outcrops in Tuscany, probably used by Nicolaus Steno to build a theory on the origin of organic fossils, crystals and sedimentary strata, in order to construct the history of the Earth based on universal geometric principles. Phenomena he observed in Tuscany and in precedeing travels were revealing a sequence of events consistent with the biblical account. We propose that he devised his method to reconstruct a chronology of primordial events to demonstrate the historicity of the biblical creation in contrast to unorthodox thinking. This had been spreading in philosophical circles of northern Europe since the 1650s, circles frequented by Steno before his arrival in Tuscany in 1666. Steno knew in advance what places to visit to find fossils from literature such as Michele Mercati’s Metallotheca. This was a manuscript owned by the Florentine Carlo Dati, whom Steno probably heard about while in Paris in 1664-1665. In Tuscany he soon formed a tight interaction on matters regarding the interpretation of fossils with the local community of learned men. These included Giovanni Alfonso Borelli who was asked by Prince Leopoldo de’ Medici to provide Steno with fossils from Sicily and Malta. Steno’s theory and scale-independent, geometrical method of inquiry of geological objects found in Tuscany is hinted at in his Canis Carchariae Dissectum Caput, a geological essay completed in a few months in 1666. The theory was published in its most complete form in the so-called Prodromus of 1669. In both works he demonstrated that fossils in younger strata in the Tuscan hills, such as shark teeth and molluscan shells, have an origin analogous to solids which living animals form. In both essays he explicitly related the deposition of strata with marine fossils to the biblical flood, an idea foreshadowed in his oldest known manuscript of 1659, when he was a student in Copenhagen. He found no fossils in older sandstones of the Apennines and understood those strata to have formed before the creation of life. These discoveries  and other observations he made in Tuscany were, for Steno, the final proof that natural philosophy and biblical revelation disclose in synergy the mysteries of God’s creation.
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Substantia
Substantia Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
1.10
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18
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