Steve Greenleaf

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The medieval church regarded heresy in much the same way that a modern state regards terrorism, with the added fear that the success of heresy would destroy not only civil society but also immortal souls. As with terrorism, it proved particularly difficult to obtain evidence, since heretics lied on each others’ behalf, were protected by sympathetic populations, and merged into other heretical groups “by whatever names they are called, having many faces but intertwined in their tails.”
The Science of Conjecture: Evidence and Probability Before Pascal
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