ericfromcowtown
Puritan Board Sophomore
I am taking my annual "keep my brain sharp" night class and find myself in a Philosophy of Science class reading Lynn White's "The Historical Roots of our Ecological Crisis."
In that paper, White discusses what he calls the "Franciscan doctrine of the animal soul," and Francis' apparent belief in the spiritual equality of all creatures, including man. Did Saint Francis really teach these things? If so, is he considered in protestant circles to have been a heretic?
Apparently Francis Schaeffer presented a rebuttal to White's thesis in "Pollution and the Death of Man." I haven't found the chapter he dedicated to White online; perhaps my church library has a copy.
Moderators: I'm not sure if this topic fit better into Church History or Philosophy.
In that paper, White discusses what he calls the "Franciscan doctrine of the animal soul," and Francis' apparent belief in the spiritual equality of all creatures, including man. Did Saint Francis really teach these things? If so, is he considered in protestant circles to have been a heretic?
Apparently Francis Schaeffer presented a rebuttal to White's thesis in "Pollution and the Death of Man." I haven't found the chapter he dedicated to White online; perhaps my church library has a copy.
Moderators: I'm not sure if this topic fit better into Church History or Philosophy.