Rizal promoted the importance of science despite it being suppressed during Spanish colonial rule. Students were expected to memorize lessons from religious orders rather than think critically. However, Rizal believed science could help understand God and society. While in exile, he studied shells, naming three new species, and explored archaeology, geology and anthropology through correspondence. He made significant contributions to various fields of science through his detailed studies of the local environment.
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Module 3 Lesson 2 The Value of Science
Rizal promoted the importance of science despite it being suppressed during Spanish colonial rule. Students were expected to memorize lessons from religious orders rather than think critically. However, Rizal believed science could help understand God and society. While in exile, he studied shells, naming three new species, and explored archaeology, geology and anthropology through correspondence. He made significant contributions to various fields of science through his detailed studies of the local environment.
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Module 3 Lesson 2: The Value of Science
Science was not at the forefront of the Spanish colonial
Philippines in the 19th century. It was merely introduced as a required subject to be taken to fulfill the much needed courses to attain a degree. The El Filibustirismo described a student enrolled in a class of Physics to be “reciting lessons from memory”, which was a usual predicament back then. Students were to mimic, like parrots, the lessons laid out by their professors from the religious orders. When students showed a sign of distaste for the subject, the atmosphere transformed into "a sermon about lessons on humility, submissiveness, and respect for the religious." That was the context by which science was suppressed in the 19th century. But in one of his essays, the Religiosity of the Filipinos, Rizal asserted that science is helpful in understanding the Creator. As a propagandist writing in the La Solidaridad, Rizal would invoke the importance of science in laying out reforms and in improving the state of the country. In the Indolence of the Filipinos, Rizal argued the important use of physical sciences to understand current social reality. In The Philippines a Century Hence, he compared science with history. "History does not record in its annals any lasting domination by a group of people...the existence of a foreign body within another endowed with strength and activity is contrary to all natural and ethical laws. Science teaches us that it is either assimilated, destroys the organism, is eliminated or becomes encysted."
An ardent admirer of the physical sciences, Rizal had to prove
his knowledge a the subject when he was in exile in Dapitan. The solitude and tranquility of the place provided him with resplendent natural surroundings and he believed that scientific pursuit would be within his grasp. In his four-year exile, he fostered fascination for conchology or the study or collection of shells, estimated to be around 346 shells from 203 species. Rizal became a familiar name for at least three species named after him: Draco rizali (lizard), Apogonia rizali (beetle), and Rhacophorus rizali (frog). Furthermore, he delved into archaeological, geological, geographical and anthropological studies based on his correspondences with his fellow scientists. Rizal was also in touch with his scientific side and never relinquished his thirst for knowledge. The species named after him clearly displayed his contributions to botany and zoology. His inquiries into the local environment provided detailed accounts of his different contributions to society. A man of his caliber, born in the East, educated in the West, and still was able to focus and look on the greater side of man makes you take a second look on his