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WildEyedAtheist
Guest
Actually, he earliest traces of a counter-intuitive idea that it is the Earth that is actually moving and the Sun that is at the centre of the solar system (hence the concept of heliocentrism) is found in several Vedic Sanskrit texts written in ancient India.I would be a little more skeptical of some viewpoints if I were you, as sometimes things are not always what they seem. Copernicus introduced Heliocentrism, not Galileo and dedicated De revolutionibus orbium coelestium to Pope Paul III. Galileo was in trouble for disrespect, not for his theory. Respect was taken a lot more seriously in the old days.
Scylla
Galileo was a avowed Catholic. Of course he dedicated his findings and publications to the Pope. Copernicus merely introduced a mathematical model Heliocentrism. Galileo came up with the math to prove it and Kepler codified it.
Galileo’s theoretical and experimental work on the motions of bodies, along with the largely independent work of Kepler and René Descartes, was a precursor of the classical mechanics developed by Sir Isaac Newton. He was a pioneer, at least in the European tradition, in performing rigorous experiments and insisting on a mathematical description of the laws of nature.
Galileo was in trouble for his theory, not disrespect.
"Galileo was required to recant his heliocentric ideas; the idea that the Sun is stationary was condemned as “formally heretical.”
“While Church officials did condemn Galileo, heliocentrism was never formally or officially condemned by the Catholic Church, except insofar as it held (for instance, in the formal condemnation of Galileo) that “The proposition that the sun is in the center of the world and immovable from its place is absurd, philosophically false, and formally heretical; because it is expressly contrary to Holy Scriptures”, and the converse as to the Sun’s not revolving around the Earth.”