GALILEO.
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ber 21, 1613) a long and eloquent letter on the subject. The original of this letter was never found, although the Inquisition made diligent search for it. Many authentic copies were circulated, however.[1] The question of the place of the Bible in scientific questions is discussed. Galileo is a good Catholic; the scriptures can not lie or err, he says. But the expositors are fallible. They will fall into error, nay into heresy, if they interpret Holy Writ literally. Both scriptures and external nature owe their origin to the Divine Word.
This noble declaration of the independence of man's reason, written in 1613, marks the highest insight yet reached by the human spirit in this regard. It is the greatest product of Galileo's philosophical genius. It was written in haste, he says, yet its form is perfect and
- β The letter was subsequently expanded and addressed in its new form to the Grand Duchess Christine (1614).