Nancy R. Pearcey and Charles B. Thaxton
The Soul of Science (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 1994), p. 152-3.
When the idol of mathematics fell, it brought down with it confidence
in any universal truth. The sharp ring of truth that characterized
mathematics had inspired hope that truth could be found by similar
methods in other fields of scholarship. Now that hope died... Filtered
to the rest of the academic world, the crisis in mathematics was
symbolized by the emergence of non-Euclidean geometries. Euclid's
axioms had stood the test of time for some two thousand years. That
physical space is Euclidean seemed part of common sense. But now
Euclidean geometry had been relegated to one of many possible
geometries. Far from being a universal truth, Euclidean geometry was a
merely human invention that might apply in some contexts but not in
others. The crisis in geometry became a metaphor for the shattering of
established verities, the inadequacy of deductive systems, the loss of
a single, unified body of truth.
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