Also, despite what is said, the Church did not approve the Ptolemaic system as real. It simply stated that both were simply devices to predict positions. It was Galileo who tried to force an acceptance of the Copernican system as "real"
Wasn't the church in definite favor of a geocentric universe, though? At least, there were many [religious arguments]? put forth for it, and Copernicus undoubtedly published posthumously for some reason or another. Also the church had just finished some council or another where they decided there absolute and final stance on all sorts of issues, which I vaguely recall Galileo was opposing somehow...maybe the non-Aristotelian physics. In any case, I agree that the church was being fairly nice until Galileo got out of hand.
I think you got some confusion with the terms philosopher and scientist Josh Grosse.
Not to mention superior?. Anyway I left your text there. I'm not AxelBoldt that likes deleting here and there.
Didn't mention superiority, and I'm not mixing philosophy and science up - the two fields split fairly recently, and much earlier material falls into both categories, in scope if not methodology.
Even in its early form, though, the Copernican system was clearly superior to Ptolemy in that the model of a tilted Earth rotating around the sun explained the oddly-inclined motion of sunspots in a simple way that Ptolemy could not, for example. Yes, Copernicus got a few things wrong like circular orbits, and Galileo himself was mistaken about his theory of tides being caused directly by the rotation of the Earth, but overall, his theories were still far superior to Ptolemy.
The church might not have accepted Ptolemy as "real" (and I don't think my text claims that), but at no point did Galileo ever claim that Copernicus' model was real either. The churuch's main concern was with scripture that claimed the Earth was stationary. The generally-accepted Ptolemaic system fit with that; the Copernican system (even in its early less-than perfect form) did not. Galileo pointed out that by _assuming_ a Copernican model, you could more easily calculate and predict certain things, but at no point in his life did he ever claim (at least publicly) that the system was "real"; he firmly backed away from such claims at every opportunity. De Revolutionibus itself is a masterpiece of weaseling and backpedaling.
Note: As I understand it, De Revolutionibus is no such thing, except in so far as there is an introduction that states the theory is intended for calculations and not as a description, which was not put in by the original author.
Did Galileo claim the universe was heliocentric, though? I can't imagine why he wouldn't have - after all, he defied the church to publish material on it (assuming the Dialogues mention the topic), and it seems more likely that he would do so if he though it was genuinely valid.
BlackGriffen I think you do NOT know the exact spelling of theory. Well I've correcte all your threories? in the text above.
I think Francis Bacon came before Galileo in that regard.
--LDC
You misspellt Galileo in Gallileo and I corrected it, LDC.
--Ed Poor
You misspelt Galileo in Galilio, telescope in telecscope and I corrected it.
There is an account of Thomas Harriot observing the moon with a three-power scope in June of 1609, and no recorded account of Gallileo doing so before Obtober of that year. Gallileo did have telescopes before then, so it is likely that he did so earlier, but it is just as likely that any number of people who had the first telescopes in 1608 did so but did not record it. Gallileo should certainly be credited as the one who popularized the practice, but it is unlikely that he was in fact the first.
--LDC
Hmm, you misspellt Galileo again in Gallileo, it's not just a mistake or a lapsus?, you REALLY don't have a clue on how is spellt. You got your spectacles? on LDC?
--Ed Poor
It is commonly taught in science classes that Gallileo was the first, so it is natural that that factoid would end up here. Here's a good rule of thumb: anything you ever learned about history in school is probably wrong. :-) Note, for example, [The Myth of the Lone Inventor]. Factoids of "X was the first to..." form are about as reliable as "X invented..."
--LDC
I think Bacon and Galileo should be mentioned in any article on the development of the scientific method. I don't know about "credit" in terms of "lone inventor", but it would nice to know what part each had in science's development. I make no claims for or against either. It's science I love, not dead white males (nothing against them, though).
--Ed Poor
I certainly agree that any article on the foundations of science ought to mention both men; but this isn't an article on that--it's an article on Gallileo. If he, personally, was influenced by [Francesco Bacone]?, then that should be mentioned. But otherwise, I see no need to necessarily mention him, though I'm sure some description of Galileo's role in founding modern science might mention Bacon? in passing.
--LDC
Here's a "GaLLileo?" again. Sorry, correcting it.
What exactly was he "forced to recant"? The mobility of the earth?
What were the terms of the "life-long house arrest" and when did it start? Was he guarded, told not to leave his estate, or what?
In what way did Galileo's "lack of judgment" contribute to his problems with the Inquisition?
Note that I am not challenging, just asking for details. Ed Poor
Very much seconded.