Image of the week Archives - The Freethinker https://freethinker.co.uk/category/image-of-the-week/ The magazine of freethought, open enquiry and irreverence Mon, 05 Feb 2024 15:27:58 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 Image of the week: ‘Wha wants me’, a caricature of Thomas Paine by Isaac Cruikshank (1792) https://freethinker.co.uk/2024/02/image-of-the-week-wha-wants-me-a-caricature-of-thomas-paine-by-isaac-cruikshank-1792/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=image-of-the-week-wha-wants-me-a-caricature-of-thomas-paine-by-isaac-cruikshank-1792 https://freethinker.co.uk/2024/02/image-of-the-week-wha-wants-me-a-caricature-of-thomas-paine-by-isaac-cruikshank-1792/#respond Mon, 05 Feb 2024 15:09:31 +0000 https://freethinker.co.uk/?p=11969 9 February marks the birthday of the great revolutionary and freethinker Thomas Paine. Born in 1737 in Thetford,…

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‘Wha wants me’, a caricature of Thomas Paine by Isaac Cruikshank (1792). Find out more here.

9 February marks the birthday of the great revolutionary and freethinker Thomas Paine. Born in 1737 in Thetford, Norfolk, Paine emigrated to the American colonies in 1774 and penned the bestselling pro-revolutionary pamphlet Common Sense in 1776.

After America won independence, Paine returned to Europe, spending time in England and France. He became a firm supporter of the French Revolution and wrote Rights of Man (two parts, 1791 and 1792) in defence of it against its critics, especially Edmund Burke. Persecuted in England, he fled to France and was elected a member of the National Convention.

After falling afoul of the Jacobins, Paine was imprisoned and barely escaped execution. In 1802 or 1803, he returned to America, where he died in 1809. His later years were sad; he was ostracised by his fellow Americans for his radicalism and his fierce assault upon religion in The Age of Reason (three parts, 1794, 1795, and 1807). His life and work inspired radicals and freethinkers long after his death, even to this day, despite the opprobrium heaped upon him by conservatives and the faithful during his lifetime.

The image above is a 1792 caricature of Paine by Isaac Cruikshank. It is a good representative of how he was seen by the British establishment: as a dirty, dangerous, vulgar alcoholic, and an enemy of religious and conservative values. Indeed, Paine was the target of a splenetic campaign of vilification for his defence of the French Revolution and he was soon hounded out of the land of his birth by the reactionary government of William Pitt the Younger—which only goes to show how influential he was. In that sense, Cruikshank’s caricature of him is a compliment of a kind, and perhaps that is why, to this eye at least, it makes him look grandly triumphant.

Here is the description of the image from the website of the British Museum:

‘Paine stands full face, looking to the left and smiling. He holds out his right arm, holding a pen and a long scroll; in his left hand is a dagger. On his back is a large bundle of weapons, shackles, and instruments of torture. He smiles slyly, his face is blotched with drink. He is neatly and plainly dressed; from his button-hole hangs an exciseman’s ink-bottle, inscribed ‘Gall’. His head is irradiated, with words inscribed between the rays: ‘Cruelty’, ‘Equality Madness’, ‘Anarchy Murder’, ‘Treason’, ‘Rebellion’, ‘Perjury’, ‘Atheism’, ‘Misery’, ‘Famine’, ‘National & Private Ruin’, ‘Ingratitude Idleness’, ‘Treachery’, ‘Injustice’. His scroll is inscribed: ‘Rights of Man [see BMSat 7867, &c] – Common Nonsense – Equality of Property &c. &c.’ He tramples on scrolls inscribed: ‘Loyalty’, ‘Magna Charta’, ‘National Prosperity’, ‘Religion’, ‘Protection Property’, ‘Obedience to the Laws’, ‘Morality’, ‘happiness’, ‘Industry’, ‘Personal Security’, ‘Inheritance’, ‘Justice’. Beneath the title is etched: ‘I am Ready & Willing to offer my Services to any Nation or People under heaven who are Desirous of Liberty & Equality Vide Paines Letter to the Convention.’ 26 December 1792. Hand-coloured etching.’


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Further reading on Paine and the radical and freethought traditions

Image of the week: ‘The world is my country, to do good my religion!’, by Bob Forder

How three media revolutions transformed the history of atheism, by Nathan Alexander

Introducing ‘Paine: A Fantastical Visual Biography’, by Polyp, by Paul Fitzgerald

Britain’s blasphemy heritage, by David Nash

Charles Bradlaugh and George Jacob Holyoake: their contrasting reputations as Secularists and Radicals, by Edward Royle

Freethought in the 21st century – interview of Freethinker editor Emma Park by Christoph De Spiegeleer of Liberas, a heritage and research centre for the history of the liberal movement and the freedom ideal in Belgium

Christopher Hitchens and the long afterlife of Thomas Paine, by Daniel James Sharp

Freethought and secularism, by Bob Forder

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Image of the week: Filippino Lippi’s ‘Triumph of St Thomas Aquinas over the Heretics’ https://freethinker.co.uk/2024/01/image-of-the-week-filippino-lippis-triumph-of-st-thomas-aquinas-over-the-heretics/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=image-of-the-week-filippino-lippis-triumph-of-st-thomas-aquinas-over-the-heretics https://freethinker.co.uk/2024/01/image-of-the-week-filippino-lippis-triumph-of-st-thomas-aquinas-over-the-heretics/#respond Sat, 13 Jan 2024 15:07:59 +0000 https://freethinker.co.uk/?p=11801 A detail from Filippino Lippi’s late fifteenth-century fresco, held in the Carafa Chapel of the Santa Maria sopra…

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Filippino Lippi’s 15th-century fresco ‘Triumph of St Thomas Aquinas over the Heretics’. Are western values inherently christian? Read more here. Image: public domain, from wikimedia commons.

A detail from Filippino Lippi’s late fifteenth-century fresco, held in the Carafa Chapel of the Santa Maria sopra Minerva in Rome, venerating the thirteenth-century monk and theologian St Thomas Aquinas (seated in the centre). The influence of Christianity on the development of the western mind has been a topic of interest in the Freethinker of late: see my interview with the scholar Charles Freeman, which (inter alia) deals with this question, and Nick Cohen’s recent essay arguing that western values (whatever these might be) are not inherently Christian.

Freeman discusses Lippi’s painting at the beginning of his 2003 book The Closing of the Western Mind, and in doing so explains why it is germane to the now very prominent debate over Christianity’s role in the intellectual evolution of the western world:

‘The monk crushes a scowling old man beneath his feet. The old man is a personification of evil and he clutches a banner with the Latin inscription “Wisdom conquers evil”. The monk himself is none other than the great Dominican theologian Thomas Aquinas (c. 1225-74). Above him in a roundel are the verses from the book of Proverbs with which he chose to begin one of his finest works, the Summa contra gentiles, “a summary of the case against the heretics”, “For my mouth shall speak truth and wickedness is an abomination to my lips.” Also above him, on panels held by putti, appears a declaration of the importance of the revealed word of God: “The revelation of Thy words gives light; it gives understanding to the simple.” The most important text, however, must be that which Thomas has selected to hold in his left hand; it is from the apostle Paul, SAPIENTIAM SAPIENTUM PERDAM, “I will destroy the wisdom of the wise.” As this book will suggest[,] the phrase, supported by other texts of Paul which condemn the “empty logic” of “the philosophers”, was the opening shot in the enduring war between Christianity and science.

Here Thomas is in a position of authority, defending the revelatory power of God against “the wisdom of the wise”. Yet this “wisdom” is allowed some place. Alongside the saint sit four further personifications, in order from the left, those of Philosophy, Theology, Grammar and Dialectic. Philosophy (largely the study of formal logic), grammar and dialectic (the art of disputation) were the first subjects of the traditional medieval curriculum. However, though they may appear at ease alongside Thomas, they are clearly subordinate to the word of God, as preliminaries that had to be mastered before any advanced study in theology, the longest and most challenging course, could begin. Theology’s prominence over the others is shown here by her crown and her hand raised to heaven.

Below Thomas and his intellectual companions two groups of men stand back from a clutter of books and manuscripts. A debate has been in progress and it seems that its settlement has resulted in a disposal of discarded arguments. The reference here is to the fourth and fifth centuries when the [Roman] empire, newly if not fully Christianized, was rocked with debate over the nature of Jesus and his relationship with God. The Arians (followers of Arius) claimed that Jesus was a distinct and lower creation, divine perhaps but not fully God. At the opposite extreme the followers of Sabellius, a Roman cleric, claimed that the Godhead was one and Jesus on earth was only a temporary manifestation of that Godhead, in no way distinct from it. In the fresco Arius stands on the left, a serious and thoughtful man as tradition records, wearing yellow robes. In front of him a book bearing the words of his thesis, “there was a time when the Son was not”, lies condemned. Sabellius, shown as an austere Roman in a red robe, gazes down on his work with its own heretical assertion, that the Father is not to be distinguished from the Son, likewise condemned. Other heretics, including the Persian Mani (to the right of Sabellius in a furred hood [not visible in the detail above]), to whose sect St Augustine belonged before his conversion to Christianity, are in the crowd. These heretics had all been subject to specific refutation by Thomas in his works. What Thomas now upholds is the final solution to the issue, the doctrine of the Trinity. God the Father, Jesus the Son and the Holy Spirit have distinct personalities within a single Godhead. It is a doctrine, as Thomas himself wrote in his other great work, the Summa theologiae, that cannot be upheld by reason, but only through faith.

The “triumph of faith”, as depicted here by the Florentine painter Filippino Lippi, reflects the theme of this book. “Faith” is a complex concept but whether it is trust in what cannot be seen, belief in promises made by God, essentially a declaration of loyalty or a virtue, it involves some kind of acquiescence in what cannot be proved by rational thought. What makes faith a difficult concept to explore is that it has both theological and psychological elements. At a psychological level one could argue that faith must exist in any healthy mind. If we cannot trust anyone, have any optimism that all will be well, we cannot live full lives. Such faith will include positive responses to individuals, as evinced by those who met and travelled with Jesus. Here we cross a conceptual boundary because faith in Jesus, and in particular in the saving nature of his crucifixion and resurrection as taught by Paul, was of a different order from faith in the general sense that “all will be well”. With the elaboration of Christian doctrine faith came to mean acquiescence in the teachings of the churches – to be seen as a virtue in itself.

In the fourth and fifth centuries AD, however, faith in this last sense achieved prominence over reason. The principles of empirical observation or logic were overruled in the conviction that all knowledge comes from God and even, in the writings of Augustine, that the human mind, burdened with Adam’s original sin, is incapable of thinking for itself. For centuries any form of independent scientific thinking was suppressed. Yet, and this is the paradox of the Carafa fresco, it was actually Thomas, through reviving the works of Aristotle, who brought reason back into theology and hence into western thought. Once again it was possible for rational thought and faith to co-exist. We will meet the other Thomas, the Thomas who champions reason alongside faith, in the final chapter of this book.’

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Image of the week: New super-deep view of the universe https://freethinker.co.uk/2023/11/image-of-the-week-new-super-deep-view-of-the-universe/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=image-of-the-week-new-super-deep-view-of-the-universe https://freethinker.co.uk/2023/11/image-of-the-week-new-super-deep-view-of-the-universe/#respond Mon, 20 Nov 2023 11:03:22 +0000 https://freethinker.co.uk/?p=11151 An image published on 9th November 2023 by the European Space Agency, demonstrating the ever-increasing extent of scientists’…

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IMage copyright NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, J. Diego (Instituto de Física de Cantabria, Spain), J. D’Silva (U. Western Australia), A. Koekemoer (STScI), J. Summers & R. Windhorst (ASU), and H. Yan (U. Missouri). Used for informational and educational purposes under the terms of the ESA licence.

An image published on 9th November 2023 by the European Space Agency, demonstrating the ever-increasing extent of scientists’ ability to see the universe through the collaborative use of space telescopes, in this case, the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope and the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. The image is centred on MACS0416, an expansive galaxy cluster about 4.3 billion light years away, with other galaxies visible around it.

More information on the ESA website.

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Image of the week: The Transhumans Are Coming https://freethinker.co.uk/2023/10/image-of-the-week-the-transhumans-are-coming/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=image-of-the-week-the-transhumans-are-coming https://freethinker.co.uk/2023/10/image-of-the-week-the-transhumans-are-coming/#respond Tue, 31 Oct 2023 11:02:50 +0000 https://freethinker.co.uk/?p=10588 Image produced using text-to-image generative AI.

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The Transhumans Are Coming: image produced by Rahman Toone using the generative AI text-to-image programme Zoo, an open source project from Replicate.

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Image of the week: a double vanishing act https://freethinker.co.uk/2023/09/image-of-the-week-a-double-vanishing-act/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=image-of-the-week-a-double-vanishing-act https://freethinker.co.uk/2023/09/image-of-the-week-a-double-vanishing-act/#respond Fri, 29 Sep 2023 08:19:37 +0000 https://freethinker.co.uk/?p=10222 From the Jesus and Mo series. First published 14th January 2015. Enjoying the Freethinker? Subscribe to our free…

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From the Jesus and Mo series. First published 14th January 2015.

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Image of the week: planet K2-18b https://freethinker.co.uk/2023/09/image-of-the-week-planet-k2-18b/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=image-of-the-week-planet-k2-18b https://freethinker.co.uk/2023/09/image-of-the-week-planet-k2-18b/#respond Tue, 19 Sep 2023 19:52:21 +0000 https://freethinker.co.uk/?p=10131 New signs of life elsewhere in the galaxy? The BBC recently reported that NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope…

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Exo-planet K2-18b: artist’s impression. Image: Arndt Stelter via Wikimedia Commons.

New signs of life elsewhere in the galaxy? The BBC recently reported that NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope may have detected evidence of the molecule dimethyl sulphide (DMS), which on Earth is ‘only produced by life’, on planet K2-18b, which is 120 light years away and nearly nine times the Earth’s size.

Could Jesus have visited other planets? More here.

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Image of the week: Jesus and Mo on identity https://freethinker.co.uk/2023/08/image-of-the-week-jesus-and-mo-on-identities/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=image-of-the-week-jesus-and-mo-on-identities https://freethinker.co.uk/2023/08/image-of-the-week-jesus-and-mo-on-identities/#respond Tue, 29 Aug 2023 16:12:58 +0000 https://freethinker.co.uk/?p=10073 Cartoon by Mohammed Jones. First published on jesusandmo.net, 31 May 2023. Reproduced with permission. See also: Cannibal Speaks…

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Cartoon by Mohammed Jones. First published on jesusandmo.net, 31 May 2023. Reproduced with permission.

See also:

Cannibal Speaks Out, by Modus Tollens

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Image of the week: Redacted https://freethinker.co.uk/2023/07/image-of-the-week-redacted/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=image-of-the-week-redacted https://freethinker.co.uk/2023/07/image-of-the-week-redacted/#respond Thu, 27 Jul 2023 07:26:41 +0000 https://freethinker.co.uk/?p=9895 For a bibliography of our articles on free speech and free thought, see Free Speech in the Freethinker.…

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Redacted: Speech and Thought in jail, by Polyp (Paul Fitzgerald).

For a bibliography of our articles on free speech and free thought, see Free Speech in the Freethinker.

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Image of the week: thought medicine https://freethinker.co.uk/2023/06/image-of-the-week-thought-medicine/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=image-of-the-week-thought-medicine https://freethinker.co.uk/2023/06/image-of-the-week-thought-medicine/#respond Tue, 27 Jun 2023 09:46:43 +0000 https://freethinker.co.uk/?p=9449 The post Image of the week: thought medicine appeared first on The Freethinker.

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‘Dogmaril’, by Paul Fitzgerald.

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Image of the week: ‘Thinker’, by Martin Janecký https://freethinker.co.uk/2023/05/image-of-the-week-thinker-by-martin-janecky/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=image-of-the-week-thinker-by-martin-janecky https://freethinker.co.uk/2023/05/image-of-the-week-thinker-by-martin-janecky/#respond Thu, 25 May 2023 19:13:50 +0000 https://freethinker.co.uk/?p=9184 The post Image of the week: ‘Thinker’, by Martin Janecký appeared first on The Freethinker.

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Thinker (2019), glass sculpture by the czech artist Martin Janecký. Image: Gabriel Urbánek, via Wikimedia Commons

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