The Inverted Scheme of Copernicus; with the Pretended Experiments Upon which His Followers Have Founded Their Hypotheses of Matter and Motion, Compared with Facts, ... and the Doctrine of the Formation of Worlds Out of Atoms, by the Power of Gravity and Attraction, Contrasted with the Formation of One World by Divine Power, as it is Revealed in the History of the Creation. Book the First. To which is Prefixed a Letter to Sir H. Davy


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The Copernican Question


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In 1543, Nicolaus Copernicus publicly defended his hypothesis that the earth is a planet and the sun a body resting near the center of a finite universe. But why did Copernicus make this bold proposal? And why did it matter? The Copernican Question reframes this pivotal moment in the history of science, centering the story on a conflict over the credibility of astrology that erupted in Italy just as Copernicus arrived in 1496. Copernicus engendered enormous resistance when he sought to protect astrology by reconstituting its astronomical foundations. Robert S. Westman shows that efforts to answer the astrological skeptics became a crucial unifying theme of the early modern scientific movement. His interpretation of this long sixteenth century, from the 1490s to the 1610s, offers a new framework for understanding the great transformations in natural philosophy in the century that followed.













A Budget of Paradoxes


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A Budget of Paradoxes


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