Please explain what the author means by " splintered traditions" in the following "Perhaps he was astonished that the same splintered traditions could inspire, by contrast, the sixth- and seventh-century missionary and monastic reformer Columbanus to pen an achingly beautiful line of medieval Latin literature: “Understand creation, if you wish to know the creator.” Perhaps he attended a seminar on the https://books.google.com/books?id=9DUgmJGxZyEC&lpg=PA407&dq=catherine%20of%20siena%20bynum&pg=PA166#v=onepage&q&f=falsehttps://books.google.com/books?id=9DUgmJGxZyEC&lpg=PA407&dq=catherine%20of%20siena%20bynum&pg=PA166#v=onepage&q&f=false. Here is the link. Thanks http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/history/2016/11/how_history_has_been_used_and_misused_during_campaign_2016.html
Whenever a group divides into several subgroups, the group is said to have splintered, and each subgroup is called a splinter group. The usage comes from the simpler definition of 'splinter' — to break into pieces. The same logic applies here, but to traditions.
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Whenever a group divides into several subgroups, the group is said to have splintered, and each subgroup is called a splinter group. The usage comes from the simpler definition of 'splinter' — to break into pieces.
The same logic applies here, but to traditions. Whatever traditions were originally practiced in Christianity, they had broken up into various other traditions by the time t