Nicolaus Copernicus

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    holes and craters. There were many conflicts throughout this period, as the church didn’t want their power and ideas to come into question. That was unacceptable to them. One of the many people who contributed to the Scientific Revolution was Nicolaus Copernicus. In 1543 he wrote and published On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres. This was his proposal of his theory of a sun-centered universe, called a heliocentric. He proposed that the sun was the center of the universe, not the earth, as it

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    1). Copernicus came from Poland, a very Catholic nation, which explains his choice to dedicate his book to Pope Paul III. John Calvin, a theologian who founded the Calvinist sect of Protestantism, was very fond of astronomy, saying that it shows the wisdom of

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    In the beginning God created the heavens with the Earth along with man in his own image. For over 1500 years, Christian followers were heavy believers of the bible, seeing it as the primary source for knowledge. Then came the scientific revolution in the 1500s, a movement which challenged the Christian view of the universe. It was a time when people were looking for a new way of thinking about the world. Since then and to this day, there has been several instances in which scientific inquiry and

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    heliocentric theory as truth. However, Galileo could not easily be written off as a rambling, heretical madman either, seeing as his theories were first proposed by Nicolaus Copernicus, who was “not only a Catholic, but a priest and a canon.” (Galileo, Letter to Christina, 2) Even if Galileo was not a respected member of the Church, Copernicus was, and if his theories had originally been proposed by a Catholic canon, then it was harder to dismiss his ideas as heretical. Additionally, Galileo himself frequently

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    1) What did Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo, and Newton contribute to a new vision of the universe, and how did it differ from the Ptolemaic conception of the universe? According to the reading, in the Ptolemaic or geocentric conception the universe is viewed as a sequence of concentric spheres with a motionless or fixed earth at the midpoint (Spielvogel 479). This notion was made up of "substances of earth, air, fire and water, the earth was imperfect and constantly changing" (Spielvogel 479). Nicolaus

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    Through his telescope, Galileo was able to make many astronomical discoveries, which supported Nicolaus Copernicus’s heliocentric universe. Although he was put on house assert after coming out with his discoveries many scientists adirmed Galileo’s bravery against the Church. He inspired scientists of all ages because many were intrigued by what Galileo

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    around the church and others had self-opinionate ideas without any integration of the church. Nicolaus Copernicus was an understudy of past onlookers and a theoretician. He contemplated the watched movements of grand bodies in connection to the acknowledged geocentric Aristotelian framework, which put the earth at the focal point of the nearby planetary group, with the sun and planets in circle. Copernicus ' perceptions drove him to infer that there was some kind of problem with the geocentric hypothesis

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    showing that we are important because we are God’s creation. The church agreed with this and condemned any other ideas “Both Protestant and Catholic religious leaders condemned the work because it was contrary to traditional teachings” (Watts). Nicolaus Copernicus had founded the heliocentric system where everything had evolved around the sun, not the earth and that it was not in perfect circles. The heliocentric solar-system had weakened the church by showing that God did not make his creation the great

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    is given credit for being the first to accurately describe the entire circuit, including arteries and veins, of where the blood starts in the circulation process and where it ends as a result of heart contractions. In the publication submitted by Copernicus, he established a model of the universe that depicted the Sun and not the Earth at the center of the universe. He described the Earth revolving around the sun which was in contrast to earlier thinking that suggested the sun revolved around the Earth

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    The absolute monarchy, the Baroque style and the Scientific Revolution were very critical movements during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The similarity and difference of these three movements marked the beginning of early modern Europe and their interaction with each other made a huge influence on political and social reform in European countries. The one thing common in the absolute monarchy, the Baroque style and the Scientific Revolution was that they all stood for the end of the Middle

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