What, exactly, do you find problematic with what I posted? Thanks.
Here is what you posted:
Galileo may have been wrong about some science, but he was right about much as well. Which the Church unfortunately denied and persecuted him for.
You probably intend something more subtle, but the whole affair was more complicated that the simple pictures of it that are common.
The prevailing idea of the church of that time being anti-science, in particular empirical science, is not right: Copernicus’s work was supported by the church; special provisions were made to keep Kepler at the Catholic University Graz. The Vatican had an observatory. The truth is that modern Western Science was, at this time, being launched by the Catholic church.
Why was Galileo tried? (And not persecuted, but tried in a court with more due process than existed anywhere else on earth at that time.) The fundamental problem was his going beyond science to insist that science to teach a new hermeneutic that excluded a literal interpretation of the scripture. On that point he was correct, but that point was not his to make, as he was apparently bound by obedience not to teach this position or teach as settled fact the science behind it. Please note that this was all going on against the backdrop of the reformation ideas of “private interpretation of the scripture”. So the Vatican was not about to be precipitous in jumping to new scriptural interpretation because of science that was unsettled.
And it was unsettled. A big problem with the Copernican system is that its predictions were poor. Far worse than the Ptolemaic system with its complex epicycles. There was little traction in the community of scholars for a new theory that gave worse agreement with observation than the old one. It was Brahe and Kepler who worked out the kinks in the Copernican system. Galileo was still teaching Copernicus, and rejecting Kepler, at the time of his trial. This was not his only false move. The astronomers at the Vatican had it out for Galileo because he ridiculed their theory of comets (which was wrong, just as Galileo’s was). He also, by his ridicule, made an enemy of a former friend, who had become the Pope. With his high profile he may have fallen, unfairly, under more scrutiny than others, and he had less friend to help and more enemies happy to see him fall. In fact the intrigue was thick enough that is some sense that the prohibition against further teaching that he was convicted of violating may have been forged by his personal and scientific enemies.
He may have been treated unjustly, but it’s unjust to say that he was persecuted. And the issues, while connected to science (about which Galileo was behind the curve and wrong) the central issues was about the teaching authority of the church. In the end truth cannot contradict truth; scientific truth and theological truth must be compatible. But, as a scientist, I have no patience for contemporary scientists who talk about religion as though their truths should lead us to new theological insights. And thus I am thus a bit leery of seeing Galileo as some sort of hero or innocent victim in this affair.
Cf
catholic.com/library/Galileo_Controversy.asp
catholiceducation.org/articles/science/sc0033.html