Briefest Thoughts Sparked by Reflecting On Giordano Bruno’s Life and Death

Briefest Thoughts Sparked by Reflecting On Giordano Bruno’s Life and Death 2011-11-01T15:11:08-07:00


On this day in 1600 Giordano Bruno the former friar, amazing thinker, difficult personality and arguably the “first” martyr to science was burned alive at the stake.

I am fascinated by the range of people who admire him, from as Puala Findlen notes in her essay A Hungry Mind, main stream scientists “like Ernst Haeckel and Herbert Spencer to leading literary figures like Vicotr Hugo and Henrik Ibsen,” and I would include to pantheist philosophers to flying saucer enthusiasts.

Clearly much of who he was and is has become a canvas upon which we paint our own pictures. Not a terrible thing, but not a particularly good thing, either.

The real person is always so much messier, so much more complex, so much more interesting.

Perhaps that’s true in all our encounters. I know the danger for me often is to drop someone into a tidy box rather than to let the real person in all her or his complexity to present, to challenge, and, maybe, to transform me…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PW_Js_Ep1Oc

For the text for this video, written by John Kessler.


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