Copernicus, Nicolaus

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'''Nicolaus Copernicus''' (February 19, 1473 – May 24, 1543), [[astronomer]] who provided the first modern formulation of a [[heliocentrism|heliocentric]] (sun-centered) theory of the solar system in his epochal book, ''[[De revolutionibus orbium coelestium]]''. That change, often known as the [[Copernican revolution]], had important and far-reaching implications for science and cosmology, but also for theology, religion, and philosophy, and for the relationship between religion and science. Many authors suggest that only [[Euclid|Euclid]]'s [[Euclidean geometry|geometry]], [[Isaac Newton]]'s [[physics]] and [[Charles Darwin]]'s [[Evolution|theory of evolution]] have exerted a comparable influence on human [[culture]] in general and on [[science]] in particular. Copernicus' concept marked a scientific revolution. Some, indeed, equate it with the initiation of "''the'' scientific revolution." [http://www.anselm.edu/homepage/dbanach/timel.htm].
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[[image:Nikolaus Kopernikus.jpg|250px|right|thumb|'''Nicolaus Copernicus''']]
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'''Nicolaus Copernicus''' (February 19, 1473 – May 24, 1543) was one of the great [[polymath]]s of his age. He was a [[mathematics|mathematician]], [[astronomy|astronomer]], [[jurist]], [[physician]], classical scholar, governor, administrator, [[diplomacy|diplomat]], [[economist]], and soldier. Amid his extensive accomplishments, he treated astronomy as an avocation. However, it is for his work in astronomy and cosmology that he has been remembered and accorded a place as one of the most important scientific figures in human history. He provided the first modern formulation of a [[heliocentrism|heliocentric]] ([[Sun]]-centered) theory of the [[solar system]] in his epochal book, ''De revolutionibus orbium coelestium'' ''(On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres)''.  
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That change, often known as the [[Copernican revolution]], had important and far-reaching implications for not only science and cosmology but also theology, philosophy, and culture, and for the relationship between religion and science. Copernicus' concept marked a scientific revolution. It has been equated it with the initiation of "''the'' scientific revolution."
  
Copernicus was one of the great [[polymath]]s of his age. He was a [[mathematician]], [[astronomer]], [[jurist]], [[physician]], [[classical scholar]], [[governor]], [[administrator]], [[diplomacy|diplomat]], [[economist]] and [[soldier]]. Amid his extensive responsibilities, he treated [[astronomy ]] as an avocation, but it is for his astronomical and cosmological work that he has been remembered and accorded a place as one of the most important scientific figures in human history.
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==Biographical sketch==
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[[Image:Torun-Rynek-ratusz-2.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Toruń City Hall]]
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Copernicus was born in 1473 in Toruń (Thorn). On account of geographical and historical uncertainties, it remains a matter of dispute whether Copernicus was German or Polish.<ref>K. Stuart Parkes, [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0415141230&id=QnCssBcUQWUC&pg=PR21&lpg=PR21&dq=Copernicus+ethnic+geographical&sig=NmmJS7rUVd4Hi_fpAnUHavBDRUw ''Understanding Contemporary Germany''] (London: Routledge, 1997, ISBN 0415141230), xxi.</ref> A modern view is that he was an ethnically German Pole.
  
==The Copernican Revolution==
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When Copernicus was ten years old, his father, a wealthy businessman and [[copper]] trader, died. Little is known of his mother, Barbara Watzenrode, who appears to have predeceased her husband. Copernicus' maternal uncle, Lucas Watzenrode, a church [[canon (priest)|canon]] (an administrative position below that of [[bishop]]) and later prince-bishop governor of Warmia, reared him and his three siblings after the death of his father. His uncle's position helped Copernicus in the pursuit of a career within the church, enabling him to devote time for his astronomy studies. Copernicus had a brother and two sisters:
Copernicus's formulation of [[heliocentric cosmology]], the view that the sun is at the center of the universe — in contrast to the view that the Earth is at the center, known as [[Ptolemaic cosmology]] or [[geocentric cosmology]] -- is almost universally considered to be one of the most important [[Scientific hypothesis|scientific hypotheses]] in history, as well as being of extraordinary importance in the history of human knowledge altogether. It came to mark the starting point of modern [[astronomy]] and modern science, and is often known as the [[Copernican revolution]].
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* Andreas, who became a canon at Frombork (Frauenburg)
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* Barbara, who became a [[Benedictine]] nun
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* Katharina, who married businessman and city councilor Barthel Gertner
  
Besides its importance to science, astronomy, and cosmology, the Copernican revolution also had profound implications for religion and theology, and for philosophy. As one website describes this: "It is hard to [over]estimate the importance of this work: it challenged the age long views of the way the universe worked and the preponderance of the Earth and, by extension, of human beings. The realization that ... our planet, and indeed our solar system (and even our galaxy) are quite common in the heavens and reproduced by myriads of planetary systems provided a sobering (though unsettling) view of the universe. All the reassurances of the cosmology of the Middle Ages were gone, and a new view of the world, less secure and comfortable, came into being. Despite these 'problems' and the many critics the model attracted, the system was soon accepted by the best minds of the time such as Galileo." (Adapted from the website http://physics.ucr.edu/~wudka/Physics7/Notes_www/node41.html)
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In 1491, Copernicus enrolled at the Jagiellonian University in [[Kraków]], where he probably encountered [[astronomy]] for the first time, taught by his teacher [[Albert Brudzewski]]. This [[science]] soon fascinated him, as shown by his books, which were later carried off as war booty by the Swedes during "[[The Deluge (Polish history)|The Deluge]]," to the Uppsala University Library. After four years at Kraków, followed by a brief stay back home at Toruń, he went to [[Italy]], where he studied [[law]] and [[medicine]] at the universities of [[Bologna]] and [[Padua]]. His bishop-uncle financed his education and wished for him to become a [[bishop]] as well. However, while studying [[canon law|canon]] and [[civil law]] at Ferrara, Copernicus met the famous astronomer, [[Domenico Maria Novara da Ferrara]]. Copernicus attended his lectures and became his disciple and assistant. The first observations that Copernicus made in 1497, together with Novara, are recorded in Copernicus' epochal book, ''De revolutionibus orbium coelestium'' ''(On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres)''.
  
The construction and/or acceptance of [[Ptolemaic cosmology]], also known as [[geocentric cosmology]], had been based on a number of assumptions and arguments that were philosophical and religious or theological in nature. First was Aristotle's notion that things are naturally fixed and unmoving unless something moves them. A second assumption was that the place of humans as children of God — an assertion made by by both Jewish and Christian doctrine — and thus the highest or most important beings in the cosmos (except for those who held angels to be higher than humans), requires that Earth as the dwelling place of humans be at the center of the universe. A third assumption was that philosophy and logic and theology are paramount in importance over natural science and its methods. A fourth assumption had to do with falling bodies: the Ptolemaic view had held that if the Earth were not the center of the cosmos, then things would not fall to Earth when thrown into the sky and that the Earth itself would fall toward whatever was the center. A fifth was that, if the Earth moved, then things thrown into air above the Earth would be "left behind" and not fall to Earth as the Earth moved. A sixth was that, if the Earth moved this would be a contradiction of Biblical Scripture, since the Bible says that Joshua commanded the Sun and moon to be still (not the Earth) and cease moving across the sky (Joshua 10: 12-13), and that this actually happened.
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In 1497, Copernicus' uncle was ordained Bishop of Warmia, and Copernicus was named a canon at Frombork (Frauenburg) [[Cathedral]], but he waited in Italy for the great [[Roman Jubilee|Jubilee]] of 1500. Copernicus went to [[Rome]], where he observed a lunar [[eclipse]] and gave some lectures in astronomy or mathematics.  
  
Today we know that each of those assumptions was incorrect. We now know that the principle of inertia means that moving things will continue to move unless some force stops them. The place of humans in the universe as the children of God does not depend on man's physical location, or the location of Earth, or the size or prominence of the Earth's Sun, or the prominence of the Milky Way — the galaxy in which Earth is situated — in the cosmos. When there is a conflict between them, natural science and its methods can and frequently should take precedence over philosophy, theology, and religion. Falling bodies fall toward whatever attracts them gravitationally; moreover things thrown up into the air from Earth are already part of Earth's inertial system, so they move as the Earth moves and fall back to earth having moved as the Earth moved during their flight. Whether or not the claim in Joshua is factually true, the appearance that the sun and the moon stopped their movement — assuming, for the sake of argument, that they actually appeared to do so — would have been the same had the Earth's rotation stopped or slowed down; this proves that a geocentric theory is not necessary in order to preserve the notion of scriptural inerrancy. (For one discussion of the Joshua issue, see the website http://www.blueletterbible.org/faq/nbi/625.html)
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It is uncertain whether Copernicus was ordained a [[priest]]; he may only have taken [[minor orders]], which sufficed for assuming a chapter canonry. It appears that he visited Frombork in 1501. As soon as he arrived, he requested and obtained permission to return to Italy to complete his studies at Padua (with Guarico and Fracastoro) and at Ferrara (with Giovanni Bianchini), where in 1503 he received his doctorate in canon law. It has been supposed that it was in Padua that he encountered passages from [[Cicero]] and [[Plato]] about opinions of the ancients on the movement of the Earth, and formed the first intuition of his own future theory. His collection of observations and ideas pertinent to his theory began in 1504.
  
The notion of a "Copernican Revolution" became important in philosophy as well as in science. For one thing, philosophy of science had to recognize that science did not and does not grow in a smooth and continuous pattern. Instead, there are sometimes revolutions in which one scientific pattern or paradigm is overthrown by another. Later on in the 20th century the American historian and philosopher of science [[Thomas Kuhn]] would make scientific revolutions and the notion of a "paradigm" central points in his monumental and highly influential work, ''The Structure of Scientific Revolutions''. German philosopher [[Immanuel Kant]] captured the symbolic character of Copernicus' revolution — its transcendent [[rationalism]] — postulating that it was human rationality that was the true interpreter of observed phenomena. In addition he referred to his own work as being a "Copernican revolution" in philosophy. More recent philosophers, too, have found continuing validity and philosophical meaning in Copernicanism.
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[[Image:Warszawa Copernicus.png|thumb|left|250px|Seated statue of Copernicus by Bertel Thorvaldsen before the Polish Academy of Sciences in [[Warsaw]]]]
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Having left Italy at the end of his studies, he came to live and work at Frombork. Some time before his return to Warmia, he received a position at the Collegiate Church of the Holy Cross in Wrocław (Breslau), [[Silesia]], which he resigned from a few years before his death. He made astronomical observations and calculations through the rest of his life, but always in his spare time and never as a profession.
  
Since the Copernican heliocentric system was rejected for theological and philosophical reasons by both the Catholic and Lutheran Churches of his day, Copernicus inevitably came into conflict with them. This may not have been the first time in human history when a clash between religion and science occurred, but it was the most significant one up to that time, and that clash — often known as a [[warfare between science and religion]] — continues in some form and with sometimes waxing and sometimes waning intensity to this day. A result was a frequent breach between science and scientifically inclined people, on the one hand, and religion and more religiously inclined people on the other. An important result of the Copernican revolution was to encourage young astronomers, scientists and scholars to take a more [[Skepticism|skeptical]] attitude toward established [[dogma]], a tendency that continues to this day.  
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Copernicus worked for years with the [[Prussia]]n [[Diet (assembly)|Diet]] on monetary reform and published some studies about the value of [[money]]. As governor of Warmia, he administered taxes and dealt out justice. It was at this time (beginning in 1519, the year of [[Thomas Gresham]]'s birth) that Copernicus came up with one of the earliest iterations of the theory now known as [[Gresham's Law]]. During these years, he also traveled extensively on government business and as a [[diplomacy|diplomat]] on behalf of the prince-bishop of Warmia.
  
[[image:copernicus.jpg|left|frame|Nicolaus Copernicus]]
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In 1514, he made his ''Commentariolus''&mdash;a short, handwritten text describing his ideas about the heliocentric hypothesis&mdash;available to friends. Thereafter, he continued gathering evidence for a more detailed work. During the war between the [[Teutonic Order]] and the Kingdom of Poland (1519&ndash;1524), Copernicus successfully defended Allenstein (Olsztyn) at the head of royal troops besieged by the forces of [[Albert of Brandenburg]].
  
Copernicus' work did seem to contradict then-accepted religious dogma; people did and have continued to infer from it that there was no need of an entity ([[God]]) that granted a [[soul]], power and life to the world and to human beings because science could explain everything that was attributed to God. But Copernicanism also opened a way to [[immanence]], the view that a divine force, or a divine being, pervades all things that exist, a view that has since been developed further in modern philosophy. Immanentism also can lead to [[metaphysical subjectivism|subjectivism]], to the theory that it is perception that creates reality, that there is no underlying reality that exists independent of perception.  Thus some argue that Copernicanism demolished the foundations of medieval science and [[metaphysics]].
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In 1533, Albert Widmanstadt delivered a series of lectures in Rome, outlining Copernicus' theory. These lectures were watched with interest by several Catholic [[Cardinal (Catholicism)|cardinals]], including [[Pope Clement VII]]. By 1536, Copernicus' work was already in definitive form, and some rumors about his theory had reached educated people all over [[Europe]]. From many parts of the continent, Copernicus received invitations to publish. In a letter dated Rome, November 1, 1536, Cardinal Nicola Schönberg of Capua wrote, asking Copernicus to communicate his ideas more widely and requesting a copy for himself: "Therefore, learned man, without wishing to be inopportune, I beg you most emphatically to communicate your discovery to the learned world, and to send me as soon as possible your theories about the Universe, together with the tables and whatever else you have pertaining to the subject." Some have suggested that this note may have made Copernicus leery of publication, while others have suggested that this letter indicates that the Church wanted to ensure that his ideas were published.
  
A corollary of Copernicanism is that scientific law need not be directly congruent with appearance or perception. This contrasts with [[Aristotle]]'s system, which placed much more importance on the derivation of knowledge through the senses.
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Despite the insistence of many, Copernicus kept delaying the final publication of his book, probably out of fear of criticism for his revolutionary work by the establishment. He was still completing his masterpiece (even if he was not convinced that he wanted to  publish it) when in 1539, Georg Joachim Rheticus, a great mathematician from  [[Wittenberg]], arrived in Frombork. Philipp Melanchthon had arranged for Rheticus to visit several astronomers and study with them. Rheticus became a disciple of Copernicus' and stayed with him for two years, during which he wrote a book, ''Narratio prima'', outlining the essence of the theory.
  
==Quotes==
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In 1542, in Copernicus' name, Rheticus published a treatise on [[trigonometry]] (later included in the second book of ''De revolutionibus''). Under strong pressure from Rheticus, and having seen that the first general reception of his work had been favorable, Copernicus finally agreed to give the book to his close friend Tiedemann Giese, [[bishop]] of Chełmno (Kulm), to be delivered to Rheticus for printing in Nuremberg (Nürnberg).
'''[[Johann Wolfgang von Goethe|Goethe]]''':
 
:"Of all discoveries and opinions, none may have exerted a greater effect on the human spirit than the doctrine of Copernicus. The world had scarcely become known as round and complete in itself when it was asked to waive the tremendous privilege of being the center of the universe. Never, perhaps, was a greater demand made on mankind — for by this admission so many things vanished in mist and smoke! What became of our Eden, our world of innocence, piety and poetry; the testimony of the senses; the conviction of a poetic — religious faith? No wonder his contemporaries did not wish to let all this go and offered every possible resistance to a doctrine which in its converts authorized and demanded a freedom of view and greatness of thought so far unknown, indeed not even dreamed of."
 
 
 
'''Copernicus''':
 
:"For I am not so enamored of my own opinions that I disregard what others may think of them. I am aware that a philosopher's ideas are not subject to the judgement of ordinary persons, because it is his endeavor to seek the truth in all things, to the extent permitted to human reason by God. Yet I hold that completely erroneous views should be shunned. Those who know that the consensus of many centuries has sanctioned the conception that the earth remains at rest in the middle of the heaven as its center would, I reflected, regard it as an insane pronouncement if I made the opposite assertion that the earth moves.
 
 
 
:"For when a ship is floating calmly along, the sailors see its motion mirrored in everything outside, while on the other hand they suppose that they are stationary, together with everything on board. In the same way, the motion of the earth can unquestionably produce the impression that the entire universe is rotating.
 
 
 
:"Therefore alongside the ancient hypotheses, which are no more probable, let us permit these new hypotheses also to become known, especially since they are admirable as well as simple and bring with them a huge treasure of very skillful observations. So far as hypotheses are concerned, let no one expect anything certain from astronomy, which cannot furnish it, lest he accept as the truth ideas conceived for another purpose, and depart from this study a greater fool than when he entered it. Farewell."
 
 
 
''' Declaration of the Polish [[Senate of Poland|Senate]] issued on 12th of June 2003.'''
 
:"At the time of five hundred thirty anniversary of birth and four hundred sixty date of death of Mikołaj Kopernik,the Senat of Republic of Poland expresses its highest respect and praise for this exceptional [[Poles|Pole]], one of the greatest scientists in the history of the world. Mikołaj Kopernik, world famous astronomer, author of the breakthrough work "O obrotach sfer niebieskich" is the the one who "Held the Sun and moved Earth". He distinguished himself for the country as exceptional mathematician, economist, lawyer, doctor and priest, as well as defender of the [[Olsztyn]] Castle during Polish-Teutonic war. May memory about his achievements last and be a source of inspiration for future generations."
 
 
 
 
 
[[image:Nikolaus Kopernikus.jpg|300px|right|thumb|Nicolaus Copernicus]]
 
  
==Biography of Copernicus==
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Legend says that the first printed copy of ''De revolutionibus'' was placed in Copernicus' hands on the day he died, so that he could take farewell of his ''opus vitae''. He supposedly woke from a [[stroke]]-induced [[coma]], looked at his book, and died peacefully.
[[Image:Torun-Rynek-ratusz-2.jpg|thumb|right|300px|[[Toruń]] [[City Hall]].]]
 
Copernicus was born in 1473.  When he was ten years old, his father, a wealthy businessman, [[copper]] trader, and respected citizen of [[Toruń]], died. Little is known of Copernicus' mother, Barbara Watzenrode, who appears to have predeceased her husband. Copernicus' maternal uncle, Lucas Watzenrode the Younger|Lucas Watzenrode, a church [[canon (priest)|canon]] and later [[Prince-Bishop]] governor of [[Archbishopric of Warmia|Warmia]], reared him and his three siblings after the death of his father. His uncle's position helped Copernicus in the pursuit of a career within the church, enabling him to devote time for his astronomy studies. Copernicus had a brother and two sisters:
 
* Andreas became a canon at [[Frombork]] (Frauenburg)
 
* Barbara became a [[Benedictine]] nun
 
* Katharina married a businessman and city councillor, Barthel Gertner
 
  
In [[1491]] Copernicus enrolled at the [[Jagiellonian University]] in Kraków, where he probably encountered [[astronomy]] for the first time, taught by his teacher [[Albert Brudzewski]]. This [[science]] soon fascinated him, as shown by his books which were later carried off as war booty by the Swedes during [[The Deluge (Polish history)|"The Deluge"]], to the [[Uppsala University Library]]). After four years at Kraków, followed by a brief stay back home at Toruń, he went to [[Italy]], where he studied [[law]] and [[medicine]] at the universities of [[Bologna]] and [[Padua]]. His bishop-uncle financed his education and wished for him to become a [[bishop]] as well. However, while studying [[canon law|canon]] and [[civil law]] at [[Ferrara]], Copernicus met the famous [[astronomer]], [[Domenico Maria Novara da Ferrara]].  Copernicus attended his lectures and became his disciple and assistant.  The first observations that Copernicus made in [[1497]], together with Novara, are recorded in Copernicus' epochal book, ''[[De revolutionibus orbium coelestium]]''.
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[[Image:Katedra we Fromborku.jpg|thumb|250px|Frombork Catherdral, Copernicus' burial place]]
  
[[Image:Warszawa Copernicus.png|thumb|left|250px|Seated statue of Copernicus, by [[Bertel Thorvaldsen]], before the [[Polish Academy of Sciences]] in [[Warsaw]].]]
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Copernicus was buried in Frombork Cathedral. In August 2005, a team of archaeologists led by Jerzy Gąssowski, head of an institute of [[archeology]] and [[anthropology]] in Pułtusk, discovered what they believe to be Copernicus' grave and remains, after scanning beneath the cathedral floor. The find came after a year of searching, and the discovery was announced only after further research, on November 3, 2005. Gąssowski said he was "almost 100 percent sure it is Copernicus." [[Forensic]]s experts used the skull to reconstruct a face that closely resembled the features&mdash;including a broken nose and a scar above the left eye&mdash;on a self-portrait. The experts also determined that the skull had belonged to a man who had died at about age 70&mdash;Copernicus' age at the time of his death. The grave was in poor condition, and not all the remains were found. The archaeologists hoped to find relatives of Copernicus in order to attempt [[DNA]] identification.
In [[1497]] Copernicus' uncle was ordained Bishop of Warmia, and Copernicus was named a canon at Frombork (Frauenburg) [[Cathedral]], but he waited in Italy for the great [[Roman Jubilee|Jubilee]] of [[1500]]. Copernicus went to [[Rome]], where he observed a lunar [[eclipse]] and gave some lectures in astronomy or mathematics.
 
 
 
He would thus have visited Frombork only in [[1501]]. As soon as he arrived, he requested and obtained permission to return to Italy to complete his studies at Padua (with Guarico and Fracastoro) and at Ferrara (with [[Giovanni Bianchini]]), where in [[1503]] he received his doctorate in canon law. It has been supposed that it was in Padua that he encountered passages from [[Cicero]] and [[Plato]] about opinions of the ancients on the movement of the Earth, and formed the first intuition of his own future theory. His collection of observations and ideas pertinent to his theory began in [[1504]].
 
 
 
Having left Italy at the end of his studies, he came to live and work at Frombork. Some time before his return to Warmia, he had received a position at the Collegiate Church of the Holy Cross in [[Wrocław]] (Breslau), [[Silesia]], which he would resign a few years before his death. Through the rest of his life he made astronomical observations and calculations, but always in his spare time and never as a profession.
 
 
 
Copernicus worked for years with the [[Royal Prussia|Prussian]] [[Diet (assembly)|Diet]] on monetary reform and published some studies about the value of [[money]]; as governor of Warmia, he administered taxes and dealt out justice. It was at this time (beginning in [[1519]], the year of [[Thomas Gresham]]'s birth) that Copernicus came up with one of the earliest iterations of the theory now known as [[Gresham's Law]]. During these years he also travelled extensively on government business and as a [[diplomat]], on behalf of the [[Prince-Bishop]] of Warmia.
 
 
 
In [[1514]] he made his ''Commentariolus'' — a short handwritten text describing his ideas about the heliocentric hypothesis — available to friends.  Thereafter he continued gathering evidence for a more detailed work. During the war between the [[Teutonic Order]] and the Kingdom of Poland ([[1519]]–[[1524]]) Copernicus successfully defended Allenstein ([[Olsztyn]]) at the head of royal troops besieged by the forces of [[Albert of Brandenburg]].
 
 
 
[[Image:Jan Matejko-Astronomer Copernicus-Conversation with God.jpg|right|300px|thumb|''The astronomer Copernicus: Conversation with God.''  Painting by [[Jan Matejko]].]]
 
In [[1533]] <!-- [[Albert Widmanstadt]] spelling? —> [[Albert Widmannstadt]] delivered a series of lectures in Rome, outlining Copernicus' theory. These lectures were watched with interest by several catholic [[Cardinal (Catholicism)|cardinals]], including [[Pope Clement VII]]. By [[1536]] Copernicus' work was already in definitive form, and some rumors about his theory had reached educated people all over [[Europe]]. From many parts of the continent, Copernicus received invitations to publish. In a letter, dated Rome, 1 November, 1536, Cardinal <!-- [[Nicola Schoenberg]] spelling? —> [[Nicola Schönberg]] of [[Capua]] wrote, asking Copernicus to communicate his ideas more widely and requesting a copy for himself; "Therefore, learned man, without wishing to be inopportune, I beg you most emphatically to communicate your discovery to the learned world, and to send me as soon as possible your theories about the Universe, together with the tables and whatever else you have pertaining to the subject." Some have suggested that this note may have made Copernicus leery of publication, while others have suggested that this letter indicates that the Church wanted to ensure that his ideas were published.
 
 
 
In spite the insistence of many, Copernicus kept delaying the final publication of his book; a main reason for it was probably the fear of criticism for his revolutionary work by the establishment. He was still completing his masterpiece (even if he was not convinced that he wanted to  publish it) when in [[1539]] [[Georg Joachim Rheticus]], a great [[mathematician]] from  [[Wittenberg]], arrived in Frombork. [[Philipp Melanchthon]] had arranged for Rheticus to visit several astronomers and study with them. Rheticus became a disciple of Copernicus' and stayed with him for two years, during which he wrote a book, ''Narratio prima'', outlining the essence of the theory.
 
 
 
In [[1542]], in Copernicus' name, Rheticus published a treatise on [[trigonometry]] (later included in the second book of ''[[De revolutionibus orbium coelestium|De revolutionibus]]''). Under strong pressure from Rheticus, and having seen that the first general reception of his work had been favorable, Copernicus finally agreed to give the book to his close friend [[Tiedemann Giese]], [[bishop]] of [[Chełmno]] (Kulm), to be delivered to Rheticus for printing in [[Nuremberg]] (Nürnberg).
 
 
 
Legend says that the first printed copy of ''[[De revolutionibus orbium coelestium|De revolutionibus]]'' was placed in Copernicus' hands on the day he died, so that he could take farewell of his ''opus vitae''. He supposedly woke from a [[stroke]]-induced [[coma]], looked at his book, and died peacefully.
 
 
 
Copernicus was buried in Frombork Cathedral. Archeologists searching for his remains had failed to locate them, though they had found interesting graves from various periods. On [[November 3]], [[2005]], archeologists announced that in August they had recovered Copernicus' skull (see [[#Grave|Grave]] below).
 
  
 
==The Copernican heliocentric system==
 
==The Copernican heliocentric system==
 
 
===Earlier theories===
 
===Earlier theories===
Much has been written about earlier heliocentric theories. [[Philolaus]] ([[4th century BC]]) was one of the first to hypothesize movement of the Earth, probably inspired by [[Pythagoras]]' theories about a spherical Globe.
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Much has been written about earlier heliocentric theories. [[Philolaus]] (fourth century B.C.E.) was one of the first to hypothesize movement of the Earth, probably inspired by [[Pythagoras]]' theories about a spherical globe.
  
[[Aristarchus of Samos]] in the [[3rd century B.C.E.]] had developed some theories of [[Heraclides Ponticus]] (speaking of a revolution by Earth on its axis) to propose what was, so far as is known, the first serious model of a heliocentric solar system. His work about a heliocentric system has not survived, so one may only speculate about what led him to his conclusions. It is notable that, according to Plutarch, a contemporary of Aristarchus accused him of impiety for "putting the Earth in motion."
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In the third century B.C.E., [[Aristarchus of Samos]] had developed some theories of [[Heraclides Ponticus]], to propose what was, so far as is known, the first serious model of a heliocentric solar system. His work about a heliocentric system has not survived, so one may only speculate about what led him to his conclusions. It is notable that, according to Plutarch, a contemporary of Aristarchus, accused him of impiety for "putting the Earth in motion."
  
[[Aryabhata]] from India was the first to note that Earth is round. He says "Bhumukha sarvato golah" (Earth is round) and [[Bhaskara I]], also anticipated Copernicus' discoveries by about 1,000 years. The work of the [[14th-century]] [[Arab]] astronomer [[Ibn al-Shatir]] contains findings similar to Copernicus', and it has been suggested that Copernicus might have been influenced by them.
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[[Aryabhata]] of India was the first to have noted that the Earth is round. He says, "Bhumukha sarvato golah" (Earth is round). Furthermore, [[Bhaskara I]] anticipated Copernicus' discoveries by about one thousand years. The work of the fourteenth-century [[Arab]] astronomer [[Ibn al-Shatir]] contains findings similar to those of Copernicus, and it has been suggested that Copernicus might have been influenced by them.
  
Copernicus cited Aristarchus and Philolaus in an early manuscript of his book which survives, stating: "Philolaus believed in the mobility of the earth, and some even say that Aristarchus of Samos was of that opinion." For reasons unknown, he struck this passage before publication of his book.
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Copernicus cited Aristarchus and Philolaus in an early manuscript of his book that survives, stating: "Philolaus believed in the mobility of the Earth, and some even say that Aristarchus of Samos was of that opinion." For reasons unknown, he struck this passage before publication of his book.
  
Inspiration came to Copernicus not from observation of the planets, but from reading two authors. In [[Cicero]] he found an account of the theory of [[Hicetas]]. [[Plutarch]] provided an account of the [[Pythagoreans]] [[Heraclides Ponticus]], [[Philolaus]], and [[Ecphantes]]. These authors had proposed a moving [[earth]] that revolved around a central [[sun]]. Copernicus did not attribute his inspiration to [[Aristarchus of Samos|Aristarchus]] as is sometimes stated. When Copernicus' book was published, it contained an unauthorized preface by the Lutheran theologian [[Andreas Osiander]]. This cleric stated that Copernicus wrote his heliocentric account of the earth's movement as a mere mathematical hypothesis, not as an account that contained truth or even probability.  This was apparently written to soften any religious backlash against the book, but there is no evidence that Copernicus considered the heliocentric model as merely mathematically convenient, separate from reality. Copernicus' hypothesis contradicted the account of the sun's movement around the earth that appears in the [[Old Testament]] ([[Book of Joshua|Joshua]] 10:13).
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Inspiration came to Copernicus not from observation of the planets but from reading two authors. In [[Cicero]], he found an account of the theory of [[Hicetas]]. [[Plutarch]] provided an account of the [[Pyhtagoras and Pythagoreans|Pythagoreans]] Heraclides Ponticus, Philolaus, and Ecphantes. These authors had proposed a moving Earth that revolved around a central [[Sun]]. In addition, it has been claimed that in developing the mathematics of heliocentrism, Copernicus drew on not just the Greek but also the Arabic tradition of mathematics, especially the work of [[Nasir al-Din al-Tusi]] and [[Mu’ayyad al-Din al-‘Urdi]].
 
 
It has been argued that in developing the mathematics of heliocentrism Copernicus drew on, not just the Greek, but the Arabic tradition of mathethematics, especially the work of [[Nasir al-Din al-Tusi]] and [[Mu’ayyad al-Din al-‘Urdi]].
 
  
 
===The Ptolemaic system===
 
===The Ptolemaic system===
The prevailing theory in [[Europe]] as Copernicus was writing was that created by [[Ptolemy]] in his ''[[Almagest]]'', dating from about [[150|150 A.D.]]. The [[Ptolemaic system]] drew on many previous theories that viewed Earth as a stationary center of the universe. Stars were embedded in a large outer sphere which rotated relatively rapidly, while the planets dwelt in smaller spheres between a separate one for each planet. To account for apparent anomalies to this view, such as the [[retrograde]] motion observed in many planets, a system of [[epicycles]] was used, by which a planet rotated on a small axis while also rotating on a  larger axis around the Earth. Some planets were assigned "major" epicycles (by which retrograde motion could be observed) and "minor" epicycles (which simply warped the overall rotation).
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As Copernicus was developing his heliocentric model, the prevailing theory in [[Europe]] was that created by [[Ptolemy]] in his ''Almagest'', dating from about 150 C.E. The Ptolemaic system drew on many previous theories that viewed Earth as a stationary center of the universe. Stars were embedded in a large outer sphere, which rotated relatively rapidly, while the planets dwelt in smaller spheres between&mdash;a separate one for each planet. To account for certain anomalies, such as the apparent retrograde motion of many planets, a system of [[epicycles]] was used, in which a planet was thought to revolve around a small axis while also revolving around the Earth. Some planets were assigned "major" epicycles (for which retrograde motion could be observed) and "minor" epicycles (that simply warped the overall rotation).
  
A complementary theory to Ptolemy's employed homocentric spheres:  the spheres within which the planets rotated, could themselves rotate somewhat. Also popular with astronomers were variations such as [[eccentric]]s — by which the rotational axis was offset and not completely at the center — or that added epicycles to epicycles.
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Ptolemy's unique contribution was the idea of an [[equant]]. This complicated addition specified that, when measuring the Sun's rotation, one sometimes used the central axis of the universe, but sometimes one set at a different location. This had an overall effect of making certain orbits "wobble," a fact that greatly bothered Copernicus (because such wobbling rendered implausible the idea of material "spheres" in which the planets rotated). In the end, astronomers could still not get observation and theory to match up exactly. In Copernicus' day, the most up-to-date version of the Ptolemaic system was that of [[Peurbach]] (1423-1461) and [[Regiomontanus]] (1436-1476).
 
 
Ptolemy's unique contribution to this theory was the idea of an [[equant]] — a complicated addition which specified that, when measuring the rotation of the Sun, one sometimes used the central axis of the universe, but sometimes one set at a different location. This had an overall effect of making certain orbits "wobble," a fact that would greatly bother Copernicus (such wobbling rendered implausible the idea of material "spheres" in which the planets rotated). In the end, after all these complications, the astronomers could still not get observation and theory to match up exactly. In Copernicus' day, the most up-to-date version of the Ptolomaic system was that of [[Peurbach]] (1423-1461) and [[Regiomontanus]] (1436-1476).
 
  
 
===Copernican theory===
 
===Copernican theory===
Copernicus' major theory was published in the book, ''[[De revolutionibus orbium coelestium]]'' (On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres) in the year of his death, [[1543]], though he had arrived at his theory several decades earlier.
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[[Image:Kopernikus nikolaus krakau.jpg |thumb|250px|Statue of Copernicus next to the Jagiellonian University's ''Collegium Novum'' (New College), in Kraków (courtesy of Henryart)]]
[[Image:Kopernikus nikolaus krakau.jpg |thumb|250px|Statue of Copernicus next to the [[Jagiellonian University]]'s ''Collegium Novum'' (New College), in Kraków. Courtesy of Henryart.]]
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Copernicus' major theory was published in ''De revolutionibus orbium coelestium'' in 1543, the year of his death. The book marks the beginning of the shift away from a [[geocentric universe|geocentric]] view of the universe.
The book marks the beginning of the shift away from a [[geocentric universe|geocentric]] (and [[anthropocentrism|anthropocentric]]) universe with the Earth at its center. Copernicus held that the Earth is another [[planet]] revolving around the fixed sun once a [[year]], and turning on its [[Axis of rotation|axis]] once a [[day]]. He arrived at the correct order of the known planets and explained the [[precession]] of the [[equinox]]es correctly by a slow change in the position of the Earth's rotational axis. He also gave a clear account of the cause of the seasons: that the Earth's axis is not perpendicular to the plane of its orbit. He added another motion to the Earth, by which the axis is kept pointed throughout the year at the same place in the heavens; since [[Galileo Galilei]], it has been recognized that for the Earth ''not'' to point to the same place would have been a motion.
 
  
Copernicus also replaced [[Ptolemy]]'s [[equant]] circles with more epicycles. This is the main source of the statement that Copernicus' system had even more epicycles than Ptolemy's. With this change, Copernicus' system showed only uniform circular motions, correcting what he saw as the chief inelegance in Ptolemy's system. But while Copernicus put the Sun at the center of the celestial spheres, he did not put it at the exact center of the universe, but near it.
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Copernicus held that the Earth is another [[planet]] revolving around the fixed Sun once a [[year]], and turning on its axis once a [[day]]. He arrived at the correct order of the known planets and explained the precession of the [[equinox]]es correctly by a slow change in the position of the Earth's rotational axis. He also gave a clear account of the cause of the seasons: that the Earth's axis is not perpendicular to the plane of its orbit. He added another motion to the Earth, by which the axis is kept pointed throughout the year at the same place in the heavens; since [[Galileo Galilei]], it has been recognized that for the Earth ''not'' to point to the same place would have been a motion.
  
Copernicus' system was not experimentally better than Ptolemy's model. Copernicus was aware of this and could not present any observational "proof" in his manuscript, relying instead on arguments about what would be a more complete and elegant system. From publication until about 1700, few astronomers were convinced by the Copernican system, though the book was relatively widely circulated (around 500 copies are known to still exist, which is a large number by the scientific standards of the time). Many astronomers, however, accepted some aspects of the theory at the expense of others, and his model did have  a large influence on later scientists such as [[Galileo Galilei|Galileo]] and [[Johannes Kepler]], who adopted, championed and (especially in Kepler's case) sought to improve it. Galileo's observation of the [[Moon phase|phases]] of [[Venus (planet)|Venus]] produced the first observational evidence for Copernicus' theory.
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Copernicus also replaced [[Ptolemy]]'s equant circles with more epicycles. This is the main source of the statement that Copernicus' system had even more epicycles than Ptolemy's. With this change, Copernicus' system showed only uniform circular motions, correcting what he saw as the chief inelegance in Ptolemy's system. Although Copernicus put the Sun at the center of the celestial spheres, he placed it near but not at the exact center of the universe.
  
The Copernican system can be summarized in seven propositions, as Copernicus himself collected them in a Compendium of ''[[De revolutionibus orbium coelestium|De revolutionibus]]'' that was found and published in [[1878]].
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The Copernican system did not have any greater experimental support than Ptolemy's model. Copernicus was aware of this and could not present any observational "proof" in his manuscript, relying instead on arguments about what would be a more complete and elegant system. From publication until about 1700, few astronomers were fully convinced of the Copernican system, though the book was relatively widely circulated (around five hundred copies are known to still exist, which is a large number by the scientific standards of the time). Many astronomers, however, accepted some aspects of the theory at the expense of others, and his model did have  a large influence on later scientists such as [[Galileo Galilei|Galileo]] and [[Johannes Kepler]], who adopted, championed, and (especially in Kepler's case) sought to improve it. Galileo's viewing of the phases of [[Venus]] produced the first observational evidence for Copernicus' theory.
  
The seven parts of Copernicus' theory are:
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The Copernican system can be summarized in seven propositions, as Copernicus himself collected them in a Compendium of ''De revolutionibus'' that was found and published in 1878. These propositions are:
  
1. There is no one center in the universe.
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# There is no one center in the universe.
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# The Earth's center is not the center of the universe.
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# The center of the universe is near the Sun.
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# The distance from the Earth to the Sun is imperceptible compared with the distance to the stars.
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# The rotation of the Earth accounts for the apparent daily rotation of the stars.
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# The apparent annual cycle of movements of the Sun is caused by the Earth revolving around the Sun.
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# The apparent retrograde motion of the planets is caused by the motion of the Earth, from which one observes.
  
2. The Earth's center is not the center of the universe.
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Whether these propositions were "revolutionary" or "conservative" was a topic of debate in the late twentieth century. [[Thomas Kuhn]] argued that Copernicus merely transferred "some properties to the Sun many astronomical functions previously attributed to the Earth." Other historians have since argued that Kuhn underestimated what was "revolutionary" about Copernicus' work, and emphasized the difficulty Copernicus would have had in putting forward a new astronomical theory relying alone on simplicity in geometry, given that he had no experimental evidence.
  
3. The center of the universe is near the sun.
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===''De revolutionibus orbium coelestium''===
 
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[[Image:De revolutionibus orbium coelestium.jpg|250px|thumb|Title page of ''De revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium'' (Part VI, [[Basel]] edition)]]
4. The distance from the Earth to the sun is imperceptible compared with the distance to the stars.
 
 
 
5. The rotation of the Earth accounts for the apparent daily rotation of the stars.
 
 
 
6. The apparent annual cycle of movements of the sun is caused by the Earth revolving around the sun.
 
 
 
7. The apparent retrograde motion of the planets is caused by the motion of the Earth, from which one observes.
 
 
 
 
 
Whether these propositions were "revolutionary" or "conservative" was a topic of debate in the late twentieth century. [[Thomas Kuhn]] argued that Copernicus only transferred "some properties to the sun many astronomical functions previously attributed to the earth." Other historians have since argued that Kuhn underestimated what was "revolutionary" about Copernicus' work, and emphasized the difficulty Copernicus would have had in putting forward a new astronomical theory relying alone on simplicity in geometry, given that he had no experimental evidence.
 
  
===''De revolutionibus orbium coelestium''===
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Copernicus' major work, ''De revolutionibus'', was the result of decades of labor. When published, it contained a preface by Copernicus' friend, [[Andreas Osiander]], a Lutheran theologian. Osiander stated that Copernicus wrote his heliocentric account of the Earth's movement as a mere mathematical hypothesis, not as an account that contained truth or even probability. This was apparently written to soften any religious backlash against the book.
[[Image:De revolutionibus orbium coelestium.jpg|250px|thumb| Title page of ''De revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium'' (Part VI, [[Basel]] edition)]]
 
''Main article: [[De revolutionibus orbium coelestium]].''
 
  
Copernicus' major work, ''On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres'' ([[1543]]), was the result of decades of labor. It opened with an originally anonymous preface by [[Andreas Osiander]], a theologian friend of Copernicus, who urged that the theory, which was considered a tool that allows simpler and more accurate calculations, did not necessarily have implications outside the limited realm of astronomy. Copernicus' actual book began with a letter from his (by then deceased) friend Nicola Schönberg, the Archbishop of [[Capua]], urging Copernicus to publish his theory. Then, in a lengthy introduction, Copernicus dedicated the book to [[Pope Paul III]], explaining his ostensible motive in writing the book as relating to the inability of earlier astronomers to agree on an adequate theory of the planets, and noting that if his system increased the accuracy of astronomical predictions it would allow the Church to develop a more accurate calendar. At that time, a reform of the [[Julian_calendar#From Julian to Gregorian|Julian Calendar]] was considered necessary and was one of the major reasons for Church funding of astronomy.  
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''De revolutionibus'' began with a letter from Copernicus' (by then deceased) friend Nicola Schönberg, the Archbishop of [[Capua]], urging him to publish his theory. Then, in a lengthy introduction, Copernicus dedicated the book to [[Pope Paul III]], explaining his ostensible motive in writing the book as relating to the inability of earlier astronomers to agree on an adequate theory of the planets, and noting that if his system increased the accuracy of astronomical predictions, it would allow the Church to develop a more accurate calendar. At that time, a reform of the [[Julian_calendar#From Julian to Gregorian|Julian Calendar]] was considered necessary and was one of the major reasons for Church funding of astronomy.
  
 
The work itself was then divided into six books:
 
The work itself was then divided into six books:
  
 
# General vision of the heliocentric theory, and a summarized exposition of his idea of the World
 
# General vision of the heliocentric theory, and a summarized exposition of his idea of the World
# Mainly theoretical, presents the principles of spherical astronomy and a list of stars (as a basis for the arguments developed in the subsequent books)
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# Mainly theoretical, presents the principles of spherical astronomy and a list of stars (as a basis for the arguments developed in subsequent books)
 
# Mainly dedicated to the apparent motions of the Sun and to related phenomena
 
# Mainly dedicated to the apparent motions of the Sun and to related phenomena
 
# Description of the Moon and its orbital motions
 
# Description of the Moon and its orbital motions
Line 137: Line 96:
 
# Concrete exposition of the new system
 
# Concrete exposition of the new system
  
==Grave==
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==Impact of the Copernican Revolution==
[[Image:Katedra we Fromborku.jpg|thumb|300px|Frombork Catherdral - Copernicus' burial place]]
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Copernicus' formulation of [[heliocentric cosmology]], the view that the Sun is at the center of the universe, stands in contrast to [[Ptolemy]]'s [[geocentric cosmology]], in which the Earth was placed at the center. The heliocentric model is almost universally considered to be one of the most important [[Scientific hypothesis|scientific hypotheses]] in history, as well as being of extraordinary importance in the history of human knowledge altogether. It came to mark the starting point of modern [[astronomy]] and modern science, and it is often known as the [[Copernican revolution]]; it is considered the start of "''the'' scientific revolution."<ref>David Banach (2006), [http://www.anselm.edu/homepage/dbanach/timel.htm Timeline of the Scientific Revolution.] Retrieved June 29, 2007.</ref>.
In August 2005, a team of archeologists led by Jerzy Gąssowski, head of an [[archaeology]] and [[anthropology]] institute in [[Pułtusk]], discovered what they believe to be Copernicus' grave and remains, after scanning beneath the floor of [[Frombork]] Cathedral. The find came after a year of searching, and the discovery was announced only after further research, on November 3. Gąssowski said he was "almost 100 percent sure it is Copernicus". [[Forensic]] experts used the skull to reconstruct a face that closely resembled the features — including a broken nose and a scar above the left eye — on a Copernicus self-portrait [http://www.kgp.gov.pl/clk/c1.htm]. The experts also determined that the skull had belonged to a man who had died about age 70 — Copernicus' age at the time of his death.
 
  
The grave was in poor condition, and not all the remains were found. The archeologists hoped to find <!-- living? dead? —> relatives of Copernicus in order to attempt [[DNA]] identification.
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Besides its importance to [[science]], [[astronomy]], and [[cosmology]], the Copernican revolution also had profound implications for [[religion]], [[theology]], and [[philosophy]]. Jose Wudka (1998) described it thus: <blockquote>It is hard to [over]estimate the importance of this work: it challenged the age-long views of the way the universe worked and the preponderance of the Earth and, by extension, of human beings. ... All the reassurances of the cosmology of the Middle Ages were gone, and a new view of the world, less secure and comfortable, came into being. Despite these 'problems' and the many critics the model attracted, the system was soon accepted by the best minds of the time such as Galileo.<ref>Jose Wudka (1998), [http://physics.ucr.edu/~wudka/Physics7/Notes_www/node41.html The Copernican Revolution], Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of California Riverside. Retrieved June 29, 2007.</ref></blockquote>
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{{readout||left|250px|The "Copernican revolution," placing the sun instead of the Earth at the center of the universe, is considered "the" scientific revolution and marked the starting point of modern [[astronomy]] and [[cosmology]]}}
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The construction and/or acceptance of [[Ptolemy]]'s [[geocentric cosmology]] had been based on a number of assumptions and arguments that were philosophical and theological in nature. First was [[Aristotle]]'s notion that things are naturally fixed and unmoving unless something moves them. A second assumption was that the place of [[human being]]s as children of God&mdash;an assertion made by both [[Judaism|Jewish]] and [[Christianity|Christian]] doctrine&mdash;and thus the highest or most important beings in the cosmos (except for those who held [[angel]]s to be higher than humans), requires that [[Earth]] as the dwelling place of humans be at the center of the universe. A third assumption was that philosophy, logic, and theology are paramount in importance, superior to natural science and its methods. A fourth assumption had to do with falling bodies: the Ptolemaic view had held that if the Earth were not the center of the cosmos, then things would not fall to Earth when thrown into the sky and that the Earth itself would fall toward whatever was the center. A fifth was that, if the Earth moved, then things thrown into air above the Earth would be "left behind" and not fall to Earth as the Earth moved. A sixth was that, if the Earth moved, this would be a contradiction of [[scripture]], which says that Joshua commanded the [[Sun]] and [[Moon]] (not the Earth) to be still and cease moving across the sky (Josh 10: 12-13).
  
== Historical background to the question of Copernicus' nationality ==
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Today we know that each of those assumptions was incorrect. We now know that the principle of [[inertia]] means that moving things will continue to move unless some force stops them. Second, we have come to realize that the Earth's position needs to be determined by scientific methods, not by religious doctrine or philosophical arguments. At the same time, it needs to be understood that the place of humans in the universe as the children of God does not depend on the physical location of the Earth, or the size or prominence of the Sun, or the prominence of the Milky Way&mdash;the galaxy in which Earth is situated&mdash;in the cosmos. Falling bodies move toward whatever attracts them gravitationally; moreover things thrown up into the air from Earth are already part of Earth's inertial system, so they move as the Earth moves and fall back to earth having moved as the Earth moved during their flight. The claim in Joshua may be interpreted as a figure of speech rather than as a literal event.
Because of geographical uncertainties it remains a matter of dispute to this day whether Copernicus was German or Polish.<ref name="Understanding Contemporary Germany">Understanding Contemporary Germany [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0415141230&id=QnCssBcUQWUC&pg=PR21&lpg=PR21&dq=Copernicus+ethnic+geographical&sig=NmmJS7rUVd4Hi_fpAnUHavBDRUw]</ref>
 
The father of Copernicus, also named Nicolaus and probably Koppernigk, had been a citizen of [[Kraków]], then the capital of [[Poland]], but left this city in [[1460]] to move to [[Toruń]] (Thorn). This city was part of the [[Hanseatic League]], as well as the [[Prussian Confederation]] which, some years before Copernicus' birth, staged an uprising (which shortly led to the [[Thirteen Years' War]] when they asked the Polish king to join Prussia to his kingdom) to gain independence from the [[Teutonic Knights]] who had ruled the area for two hundred years, imposing high taxes which were hindering the economic development in the province. With the [[Second Treaty of Thorn]] in 1466, the city as well as Prussia's western part called [[Royal Prussia]] became connected to the [[Kingdom of Poland]], which had supported the uprising, while the eastern part remained under administration of the [[Teutonic Order]] to become [[Ducal Prussia]] later on.  
 
  
Copernicus, called ''Mikołaj Kopernik'' in [[Polish language|Polish]] and ''Nikolaus Kopernikus'' in [[German language|German]] was born in [[Toruń]] (Thorn) and spent most of his working life in [[Royal Prussia]] which enjoyed substantial autonomy as part of the lands of the [[Polish Crown]] - it had its own [[Diet (assembly)|Diet]], treasury and monetary unit (to which Copernicus' contributed) and armies. He also oversaw the defense of [[Allenstein]]/[[Olsztyn]] at the head of forces of the Polish king when the troops of [[Albert of Brandenburg]] besieged the castle.  
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The notion of a "Copernican Revolution" became important in philosophy as well as science. For one thing, [[philosophy of science]] had to recognize and account for the fact that science does not grow in a smooth and continuous pattern. Instead, there are occasional revolutions in which one scientific pattern or paradigm is overthrown by another. Later, in the twentieth century, American historian and philosopher of science [[Thomas Kuhn]] made scientific revolutions and the notion of a "paradigm" and "paradigm shift" central points in his monumental and highly influential work, ''The Structure of Scientific Revolutions''. German philosopher [[Immanuel Kant]] captured the transcendent [[rationalism]] of the Copernican revolution, postulating that it was human rationality that was the true interpreter of observed phenomena. In addition, he referred to his own work as being a "Copernican revolution" in philosophy. More recent philosophers, too, have found continuing validity and philosophical meaning in Copernicanism.
  
In the 19th century, with the rise of German and Polish nationalism, attempts were made to claim that Copernicus was exclusively a German and to discount his connection with Poland<ref name"Majer">[[Diemut Majer]], Non-Germans Under the Third Reich: The Nazi Judicial and Administrative System in Germany, [http://books.google.ca/books?vid=ISBN0801864933&id=w-IQu7nWQwQC&pg=PA671&lpg=PA671&dq=copernicus+citizenship&sig=mVuCHVIe2kzlBFVig8LDzYa01Tg&pli=1&auth=DQAAAHMAAAAFm81vud4TkFP47a8-7hznFd5kM9oifoCGqTgxTNKkc7_OSc-XAqZWrKeT3OhKBM2tASoZOOQA_i2zvyY2KpWACjQ6pV2Us6pgjkkcNhDp1RmbEw3iGyPnbbJMQ_MnuKeBT_kAgbOZZCkr4P8t2njwGGdcvYB8N-yE3PqdBR9sSw]</ref>, however after 1945 those attempts have greatly diminished.  In a mirror image of this, some Poles attempted to claim Copernicus exclusively and attempted to downplay his possible German ethnic origin.  It is quite possible that his family was ethnically German, and Copernicus was certainly fluent in the German language, while no direct evidence of the extent to which he knew Polish has survived.  His main language for written communication was [[Latin]]. However, Copernicus was born in western Prussia, later known as Royal Prussia or Polish Prussia, due to its connection to the Kingdom of Poland. He became a burgher of Prussian Ermland or Warmia, an exempt [[Prince-Bishop]]ric, throughout the rest of his life and he was a loyal subject of the Catholic Prince-Bishops at a time when most of Prussia and Germany had become Protestant. Today he is broadly considered to be Polish.  At the same time, it must be remembered that during Copernicus' lifetime nationality played a much less significant role that it did later, and people generally did not think of themselves primarily as Poles or Germans <ref name="Davies">[[Norman Davies]], God's Playground: A History of Poland, [http://books.google.ca/books?ie=UTF-8&vid=ISBN0231053533&id=DMoPXktGwiUC&vq=copernicus&dq=copernicus+poland&lpg=PA25&pg=PA26&sig=0w09Sd3mqsHHd9a0QWl_UVswtIE]</ref>.
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[[Image:Jan Matejko-Astronomer Copernicus-Conversation with God.jpg|right|300px|thumb|''The astronomer Copernicus: Conversation with God'' by [[Jan Matejko]]]]
Therefore, in a modern context, Copernicus may be viewed as an ethnically German Pole.
 
  
==See also==
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The Copernican heliocentric system was rejected for theological and philosophical reasons by the Catholic and Lutheran churches of his day. This may not have been the first time in human history when a clash between religion and science occurred, but it was the most significant one up to that time. That clash&mdash;often referred to as a warfare between science and religion&mdash;continues in some form, with sometimes waxing and sometimes waning intensity, to this day. An important result of the Copernican revolution was to encourage scientists and scholars to take a more [[Skepticism|skeptical]] attitude toward established [[dogma]].
* [[Copernicus (lunar crater)]]
 
* [[Inferior planet]]
 
* [[Superior planet]]
 
* [[Polymath]]
 
* [[Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń]] (established in [[1945]])
 
  
==Bibliography==
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Based on the work of Copernicus and others, some have argued that "science could explain everything attributed to God," and that there was no need to believe in an entity (God) who grants a [[soul]], power, and life to human beings. Others, including religious scientists, have taken the view that the laws and principles of nature, which scientists strive to discover, originated from the Creator, who works through those principles. Copernicus himself continued to believe in the existence of God.
<div style="font-size:85%;">
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===Works of Copernicus===
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Copernicanism was also used to support the concept of [[immanence]]&mdash;the view that a divine force or divine being pervades all things that exist. This view has since been developed further in modern philosophy. Immanentism can also lead to [[metaphysical subjectivism|subjectivism]], to the theory that perception creates reality, that underlying reality is not independent of perception. Thus some argue that Copernicanism demolished the foundations of medieval science and [[metaphysics]].
* The complete works of Copernicus are collected in ''On the Revolutions'', ed. and trans. by Edward Rosen (1978, reissued 1992), and ''Minor Works'', ed. and trans. by Edward Rosen and Erna Hilfstein (1985, reissued 1992). ''Three Copernican Treatises'', trans. by Edward Rosen (1971) contains, in addition, a biography and a bibliography of works on Copernicus from 1939-70.
 
  
===Biographies of Copernicus===
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A corollary of Copernicanism is that scientific law need not be directly congruent with appearance or [[perception]]. This contrasts with [[Aristotle]]'s system, which placed much more importance on the derivation of knowledge through the [[senses]].
* Edward Rosen (1884), ''Copernicus and the Scientific Revolution''. Malabar, FL: Krieger.
 
* Jan Adamczewski and Edward J. Piszek (1974; orig. pub. in Polish, 1972), ''Nicolaus Copernicus and His Epoch''.
 
  
===Works About Copernicus and His Work===
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==Quotes==
* Angus Armitage (1951), ''The World of Copernicus'', New York, Mentor Books.  ISBN 0846409798.
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'''[[Johann Wolfgang von Goethe|Goethe]]''':
* Hans Blumenberg (1987; orig. pub. in German, 1972), ''The Genesis of the Copernican World''.
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:"Of all discoveries and opinions, none may have exerted a greater effect on the human spirit than the doctrine of Copernicus. The world had scarcely become known as round and complete in itself when it was asked to waive the tremendous privilege of being the center of the universe. Never, perhaps, was a greater demand made on mankind&mdash;for, by this admission, so many things vanished in mist and smoke! What became of our Eden, our world of innocence, piety and poetry; the testimony of the senses; the conviction of a poetic—religious faith? No wonder his contemporaries did not wish to let all this go and offered every possible resistance to a doctrine which in its converts authorized and demanded a freedom of view and greatness of thought so far unknown, indeed not even dreamed of."
* J. L. E. Dreyer (1953), ''A History of Astronomy from Thales to Kepler'', 2nd ed.
 
* [[Owen Gingrich]] (1993), ''The Eye of Heaven: Ptolemy, Copernicus, Kepler''.
 
* [[Owen Gingerich]] (2004), ''The Book Nobody Read'', Penguin Books. ISBN 0143034766.
 
* [[David Goodman|David C. Goodman]] and Colin A. Russell, eds. (1991). ''The Rise of Scientific Europe, 1500-1800'', Dunton Green, Sevenoaks, Kent: Hodder & Stoughton: The Open University. ISBN 034055861X.
 
* [[Fred Hoyle]] (1973), ''Nicolaus Copernicus: An Essay on His Life and Work''.
 
* [[Alexander Koyre]] (1973, reissued 1992; orig. pub. in French, 1961), ''The Astronomical Revolution''.
 
* [[Thomas Kuhn]] (1957, reissued 1985), ''The Copernican Revolution: Planetary Astronomy in the Development of Western Thought'', Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674171004.
 
* [[Thomas Kuhn]] (1962, 2nd ed. 1970), ''The Structure of Scientific Revolutions''. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
 
* David C. Lindberg, ed. (1978), ''Science in the Middle Ages''.
 
* Harold P. Nebelsick (1985), ''Circles of God: Theology and Science from the Greeks to Copernicus''.
 
* Robert S. Westman, ed. (1975), ''The Copernican Achievement''.
 
  
==External links==
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[[image:copernicus.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Nicolaus Copernicus]]
{{wikiquote}}
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'''Copernicus''':
{{commons|Nicolaus Copernicus}}
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:"For I am not so enamored of my own opinions that I disregard what others may think of them. I am aware that a philosopher's ideas are not subject to the judgment of ordinary persons, because it is his endeavor to seek the truth in all things, to the extent permitted to human reason by God. Yet I hold that completely erroneous views should be shunned. Those who know that the consensus of many centuries has sanctioned the conception that the Earth remains at rest in the middle of the heaven as its center would, I reflected, regard it as an insane pronouncement if I made the opposite assertion that the Earth moves.
  
=== External links to sources ===
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:"For when a ship is floating calmly along, the sailors see its motion mirrored in everything outside, while on the other hand they suppose that they are stationary, together with everything on board. In the same way, the motion of the Earth can unquestionably produce the impression that the entire universe is rotating.
* {{MacTutor Biography|id=Copernicus}}
 
* {{gutenberg author| id=Nicolaus+Copernicus | name=Nicolaus Copernicus}}
 
* [http://www.bj.uj.edu.pl/bjmanus/revol/titlpg_e.html De Revolutionibus, autograph manuscript] — Full digital facsimile, Jagiellonian University
 
* {{pl icon}} [http://www.domwarminski.pl/content/view/312/433 Copernicus' letters to various celebrities, among others the King Sigmundus I of Poland]
 
  
=== External links about Copernicus ===
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:"Therefore alongside the ancient hypotheses, which are no more probable, let us permit these new hypotheses also to become known, especially since they are admirable as well as simple and bring with them a huge treasure of very skillful observations. So far as hypotheses are concerned, let no one expect anything certain from astronomy, which cannot furnish it, lest he accept as the truth ideas conceived for another purpose, and depart from this study a greater fool than when he entered it. Farewell."
* [http://www.frombork.art.pl/Ang01.htm Nicholaus Copernicus Museum in Frombork]
 
* Portraits of Copernicus: [http://serwisy.gazeta.pl/fotografie/5,35076,2999168.html?x=0 Copernicus' face reconstructed]; [http://www-groups.dcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/~history/PictDisplay/Copernicus.html Portrait]; [http://www.frombork.art.pl/Ang10.htm Nicolaus Copernicus]
 
* [http://www.hps.cam.ac.uk/starry/coperastrol.html Copernicus and Astrology] — Cambridge University: Copernicus had – of course – teachers with astrological activities and his tables were later used by astrologers.
 
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/copernicus/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry]
 
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=10340  Find-A-Grave profile for Nicolaus Copernicus]
 
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/4405958.stm 'Body of Copernicus' identified] — BBC article including image of Copernicus using facial reconstruction based on located skull
 
  
=== External links about De Revolutionibus===
+
'''Declaration of the Polish Senate issued on June 12, 2003''':
* [http://galileo.rice.edu/sci/theories/copernican_system.html The Copernican Universe from the De Revolutionibus]
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:"At the time of five hundred thirty anniversary of birth and four hundred sixty date of death of Mikołaj Kopernik, the Senate of Republic of Poland expresses its highest respect and praise for this exceptional [[Poles|Pole]], one of the greatest scientists in the history of the world. Mikołaj Kopernik, world famous astronomer, author of the breakthrough work "O obrotach sfer niebieskich," is the the one who "Held the Sun and moved Earth." He distinguished himself for the country as exceptional mathematician, economist, lawyer, doctor, and priest, as well as defender of the [[Olsztyn]] Castle during Polish-Teutonic war. May memory about his achievements last and be a source of inspiration for future generations."
* [http://digital.lib.lehigh.edu/planets/cop.php?num=F.1&exp=false&lang=lat&CISOPTR=0&limit=cop&view=full De Revolutionibus, 1543 first edition] — Full digital facsimile, Lehigh University
 
* [http://www.hao.ucar.edu/Public/education/bios/derevolutionibus.html The front page of the De Revolutionibus]
 
* [http://webexhibits.org/calendars/year-text-Copernicus.html The text of the De Revolutionibus]
 
* [http://www.flex.com/~jai/astrology/retrograde.html A java applet about Retrograde Motion]
 
  
=== External links related to Copernicus legacy ===
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==Notes==
* {{it icon}} [http://www.bo.astro.it/dip/Museum/italiano/sto1_08.html Copernicus in Bologna] — in Italian
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<references />
* [http://www.npr.org/display_pages/features/feature_1746110.html Chasing Copernicus: The Book Nobody Read] — Was One of the Greatest Scientific Works Really Ignored? All Things Considered. [[NPR]]
 
* [http://www.bede.org.uk/copernicus.htm Copernicus and his Revolutions] — A detailed critique of the rhetoric of De Revolutionibus
 
* [http://www.columbia.edu/~gas1/project/visions/case1/sci.1.html Article which discusses Copernicus's debt to the Arabic tradition]
 
* [http://www.uni.torun.pl/en/ Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń]
 
  
=== German-Polish Cooperations in tradition of Copernicus ===
+
==Bibliography==
* {{de icon}}{{pl icon}} [http://www.berufskolleg-herne.de/kopernikus/index.htm  German-Polish school project on Copernicus]
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;Works of Copernicus
* {{de icon}}{{en icon}}{{pl icon}} [http://www.buero-kopernikus.org/en/home/1 Büro Kopernikus - An initiative of German Federal Cultural Foundation]
+
* The complete works of Copernicus are collected in ''On the Revolutions'', ed. and trans. by Edward Rosen (1978, reissued 1992), and ''Minor Works'', ed. and trans. by Edward Rosen and Erna Hilfstein (1985, reissued 1992). ''Three Copernican Treatises'', trans. by Edward Rosen (1971) contains, in addition, a biography and a bibliography of works on Copernicus from 1939-70.
  
 +
;Biographies of Copernicus
 +
* Adamczewski, Jan, and Edward J. Piszek. ''Nicolaus Copernicus and His Epoch''. Scribner, 1974. ISBN  978-0684138398
 +
* Rosen, Edward. ''Copernicus and the Scientific Revolution''. Malabar, FL: Krieger, 1884. ISBN 978-0898745733
  
<!-- Categorization —>
+
;Works About Copernicus and His Work
[[Category:Physical sciences]]
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* Armitage, Angus. ''The World of Copernicus''. New York, NY: Mentor Books, 1951. ISBN 0846409798
[[Category:Biographies of Scientists and Inventors]]
+
* Blumenberg, Hans. ''The Genesis of the Copernican World''. The MIT Press, 1989. ISBN 978-0262521444
[[Category:1473 births|Copernicus, Nicolaus]]
+
* Dreyer, J. L. E. ''A History of Astronomy from Thales to Kepler''.  Dover Publications, 2011. ISBN 978-0486600796
[[Category:1543 deaths|Copernicus, Nicolaus]]
+
* Gingrich, Owen. ''The Eye of Heaven: Ptolemy, Copernicus, Kepler''. Springer, 1997. ISBN 978-0883188637
[[Category:Astronomers|Copernicus, Nicolaus]]
+
* Gingrich, Owen. ''The Book Nobody Read''. Penguin Books, 2004. ISBN 0143034766
[[Category:Economists|Copernicus, Nicolaus]]
+
* Goodman, David C., and Colin A. Russell (eds.). ''The Rise of Scientific Europe, 1500-1800''. Dunton Green, Sevenoaks, Kent: Hodder & Stoughton: The Open University, 1991. ISBN 034055861X
[[Category:Mathematicians|Copernicus, Nicolaus]]
+
* Hoyle, Fred. ''Nicolaus Copernicus: An Essay on His Life and Work''.  Harper & Row, 1973. ISBN 978-0060119713
[[Category:Polymaths|Copernicus, Nicolaus]]
+
* Koyre, Alexander. ''The Astronomical Revolution''. Dover Publications, 1992. ISBN 0486270955
[[Category:Roman Catholic scientists|Copernicus, Nicolaus]]
+
* Kuhn, Thomas. ''The Copernican Revolution: Planetary Astronomy in the Development of Western Thought''. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1985. ISBN 0674171004
[[Category:History of astronomy|Copernicus, Nicolaus]]
+
* Kuhn, Thomas. ''The Structure of Scientific Revolutions''. Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press, 1996. ISBN 978-0226458083
 +
* Lindberg, David C. (ed.). ''Science in the Middle Ages''. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1978. ISBN 978-0226482330
 +
* Nebelsick, Harold P. ''Circles of God: Theology and Science from the Greeks to Copernicus''. Scottish Academic Press, 1985. ISBN 978-0707304489
 +
* Westman, Robert S. (ed.). ''The Copernican Achievement''. Univ of California Press, 1976. ISBN 978-0520028777
  
 +
==External links==
 +
All links retrieved January 7, 2024.
  
 +
* {{gutenberg author|id=Nicolaus+Copernicus|name=Nicolaus Copernicus}}
 +
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/copernicus/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry]
 +
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/4405958.stm 'Body of Copernicus' identified] &ndash; BBC News &ndash; Article including image of Copernicus using facial reconstruction based on located skull
 +
* [http://galileo.rice.edu/sci/theories/copernican_system.html The Copernican Universe from ''De Revolutionibus'']
 +
* [http://digital.lib.lehigh.edu/planets/cop.php?num=F.1&exp=false&lang=lat&CISOPTR=0&limit=cop&view=full ''De Revolutionibus'', 1543 first edition]—Full digital facsimile, Lehigh University
 +
* [http://webexhibits.org/calendars/year-text-Copernicus.html The text of ''De Revolutionibus'']
 +
* {{it icon}} [http://www.bo.astro.it/dip/Museum/italiano/sto1_08.html Copernicus in Bologna]
 +
* [http://www.npr.org/display_pages/features/feature_1746110.html "Chasing Copernicus: The Book Nobody Read]—Was One of the Greatest Scientific Works Really Ignored?" ''All Things Considered'', National Public Radio
 +
* [http://www.bede.org.uk/copernicus.htm "Copernicus and his Revolutions"] by James Hannam (2003) &ndash; A detailed critique of the rhetoric of De Revolutionibus
 +
* [http://www.columbia.edu/~gas1/project/visions/case1/sci.1.html "Whose Science is Arabic Science in Renaissance Europe?"] by George Saliba &ndash; Discusses Copernicus's debt to the Arabic tradition
 +
 +
[[Category:Physical sciences]]
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[[Category:Biographies of Scientists and Mathematicians]]
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[[Category:Philosophers]]
 
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Latest revision as of 02:58, 8 January 2024


Nicolaus Copernicus

Nicolaus Copernicus (February 19, 1473 – May 24, 1543) was one of the great polymaths of his age. He was a mathematician, astronomer, jurist, physician, classical scholar, governor, administrator, diplomat, economist, and soldier. Amid his extensive accomplishments, he treated astronomy as an avocation. However, it is for his work in astronomy and cosmology that he has been remembered and accorded a place as one of the most important scientific figures in human history. He provided the first modern formulation of a heliocentric (Sun-centered) theory of the solar system in his epochal book, De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres).

That change, often known as the Copernican revolution, had important and far-reaching implications for not only science and cosmology but also theology, philosophy, and culture, and for the relationship between religion and science. Copernicus' concept marked a scientific revolution. It has been equated it with the initiation of "the scientific revolution."

Biographical sketch

Toruń City Hall

Copernicus was born in 1473 in Toruń (Thorn). On account of geographical and historical uncertainties, it remains a matter of dispute whether Copernicus was German or Polish.[1] A modern view is that he was an ethnically German Pole.

When Copernicus was ten years old, his father, a wealthy businessman and copper trader, died. Little is known of his mother, Barbara Watzenrode, who appears to have predeceased her husband. Copernicus' maternal uncle, Lucas Watzenrode, a church canon (an administrative position below that of bishop) and later prince-bishop governor of Warmia, reared him and his three siblings after the death of his father. His uncle's position helped Copernicus in the pursuit of a career within the church, enabling him to devote time for his astronomy studies. Copernicus had a brother and two sisters:

  • Andreas, who became a canon at Frombork (Frauenburg)
  • Barbara, who became a Benedictine nun
  • Katharina, who married businessman and city councilor Barthel Gertner

In 1491, Copernicus enrolled at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków, where he probably encountered astronomy for the first time, taught by his teacher Albert Brudzewski. This science soon fascinated him, as shown by his books, which were later carried off as war booty by the Swedes during "The Deluge," to the Uppsala University Library. After four years at Kraków, followed by a brief stay back home at Toruń, he went to Italy, where he studied law and medicine at the universities of Bologna and Padua. His bishop-uncle financed his education and wished for him to become a bishop as well. However, while studying canon and civil law at Ferrara, Copernicus met the famous astronomer, Domenico Maria Novara da Ferrara. Copernicus attended his lectures and became his disciple and assistant. The first observations that Copernicus made in 1497, together with Novara, are recorded in Copernicus' epochal book, De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres).

In 1497, Copernicus' uncle was ordained Bishop of Warmia, and Copernicus was named a canon at Frombork (Frauenburg) Cathedral, but he waited in Italy for the great Jubilee of 1500. Copernicus went to Rome, where he observed a lunar eclipse and gave some lectures in astronomy or mathematics.

It is uncertain whether Copernicus was ordained a priest; he may only have taken minor orders, which sufficed for assuming a chapter canonry. It appears that he visited Frombork in 1501. As soon as he arrived, he requested and obtained permission to return to Italy to complete his studies at Padua (with Guarico and Fracastoro) and at Ferrara (with Giovanni Bianchini), where in 1503 he received his doctorate in canon law. It has been supposed that it was in Padua that he encountered passages from Cicero and Plato about opinions of the ancients on the movement of the Earth, and formed the first intuition of his own future theory. His collection of observations and ideas pertinent to his theory began in 1504.

Seated statue of Copernicus by Bertel Thorvaldsen before the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw

Having left Italy at the end of his studies, he came to live and work at Frombork. Some time before his return to Warmia, he received a position at the Collegiate Church of the Holy Cross in Wrocław (Breslau), Silesia, which he resigned from a few years before his death. He made astronomical observations and calculations through the rest of his life, but always in his spare time and never as a profession.

Copernicus worked for years with the Prussian Diet on monetary reform and published some studies about the value of money. As governor of Warmia, he administered taxes and dealt out justice. It was at this time (beginning in 1519, the year of Thomas Gresham's birth) that Copernicus came up with one of the earliest iterations of the theory now known as Gresham's Law. During these years, he also traveled extensively on government business and as a diplomat on behalf of the prince-bishop of Warmia.

In 1514, he made his Commentariolus—a short, handwritten text describing his ideas about the heliocentric hypothesis—available to friends. Thereafter, he continued gathering evidence for a more detailed work. During the war between the Teutonic Order and the Kingdom of Poland (1519–1524), Copernicus successfully defended Allenstein (Olsztyn) at the head of royal troops besieged by the forces of Albert of Brandenburg.

In 1533, Albert Widmanstadt delivered a series of lectures in Rome, outlining Copernicus' theory. These lectures were watched with interest by several Catholic cardinals, including Pope Clement VII. By 1536, Copernicus' work was already in definitive form, and some rumors about his theory had reached educated people all over Europe. From many parts of the continent, Copernicus received invitations to publish. In a letter dated Rome, November 1, 1536, Cardinal Nicola Schönberg of Capua wrote, asking Copernicus to communicate his ideas more widely and requesting a copy for himself: "Therefore, learned man, without wishing to be inopportune, I beg you most emphatically to communicate your discovery to the learned world, and to send me as soon as possible your theories about the Universe, together with the tables and whatever else you have pertaining to the subject." Some have suggested that this note may have made Copernicus leery of publication, while others have suggested that this letter indicates that the Church wanted to ensure that his ideas were published.

Despite the insistence of many, Copernicus kept delaying the final publication of his book, probably out of fear of criticism for his revolutionary work by the establishment. He was still completing his masterpiece (even if he was not convinced that he wanted to publish it) when in 1539, Georg Joachim Rheticus, a great mathematician from Wittenberg, arrived in Frombork. Philipp Melanchthon had arranged for Rheticus to visit several astronomers and study with them. Rheticus became a disciple of Copernicus' and stayed with him for two years, during which he wrote a book, Narratio prima, outlining the essence of the theory.

In 1542, in Copernicus' name, Rheticus published a treatise on trigonometry (later included in the second book of De revolutionibus). Under strong pressure from Rheticus, and having seen that the first general reception of his work had been favorable, Copernicus finally agreed to give the book to his close friend Tiedemann Giese, bishop of Chełmno (Kulm), to be delivered to Rheticus for printing in Nuremberg (Nürnberg).

Legend says that the first printed copy of De revolutionibus was placed in Copernicus' hands on the day he died, so that he could take farewell of his opus vitae. He supposedly woke from a stroke-induced coma, looked at his book, and died peacefully.

Frombork Catherdral, Copernicus' burial place

Copernicus was buried in Frombork Cathedral. In August 2005, a team of archaeologists led by Jerzy Gąssowski, head of an institute of archeology and anthropology in Pułtusk, discovered what they believe to be Copernicus' grave and remains, after scanning beneath the cathedral floor. The find came after a year of searching, and the discovery was announced only after further research, on November 3, 2005. Gąssowski said he was "almost 100 percent sure it is Copernicus." Forensics experts used the skull to reconstruct a face that closely resembled the features—including a broken nose and a scar above the left eye—on a self-portrait. The experts also determined that the skull had belonged to a man who had died at about age 70—Copernicus' age at the time of his death. The grave was in poor condition, and not all the remains were found. The archaeologists hoped to find relatives of Copernicus in order to attempt DNA identification.

The Copernican heliocentric system

Earlier theories

Much has been written about earlier heliocentric theories. Philolaus (fourth century B.C.E.) was one of the first to hypothesize movement of the Earth, probably inspired by Pythagoras' theories about a spherical globe.

In the third century B.C.E., Aristarchus of Samos had developed some theories of Heraclides Ponticus, to propose what was, so far as is known, the first serious model of a heliocentric solar system. His work about a heliocentric system has not survived, so one may only speculate about what led him to his conclusions. It is notable that, according to Plutarch, a contemporary of Aristarchus, accused him of impiety for "putting the Earth in motion."

Aryabhata of India was the first to have noted that the Earth is round. He says, "Bhumukha sarvato golah" (Earth is round). Furthermore, Bhaskara I anticipated Copernicus' discoveries by about one thousand years. The work of the fourteenth-century Arab astronomer Ibn al-Shatir contains findings similar to those of Copernicus, and it has been suggested that Copernicus might have been influenced by them.

Copernicus cited Aristarchus and Philolaus in an early manuscript of his book that survives, stating: "Philolaus believed in the mobility of the Earth, and some even say that Aristarchus of Samos was of that opinion." For reasons unknown, he struck this passage before publication of his book.

Inspiration came to Copernicus not from observation of the planets but from reading two authors. In Cicero, he found an account of the theory of Hicetas. Plutarch provided an account of the Pythagoreans Heraclides Ponticus, Philolaus, and Ecphantes. These authors had proposed a moving Earth that revolved around a central Sun. In addition, it has been claimed that in developing the mathematics of heliocentrism, Copernicus drew on not just the Greek but also the Arabic tradition of mathematics, especially the work of Nasir al-Din al-Tusi and Mu’ayyad al-Din al-‘Urdi.

The Ptolemaic system

As Copernicus was developing his heliocentric model, the prevailing theory in Europe was that created by Ptolemy in his Almagest, dating from about 150 C.E. The Ptolemaic system drew on many previous theories that viewed Earth as a stationary center of the universe. Stars were embedded in a large outer sphere, which rotated relatively rapidly, while the planets dwelt in smaller spheres between—a separate one for each planet. To account for certain anomalies, such as the apparent retrograde motion of many planets, a system of epicycles was used, in which a planet was thought to revolve around a small axis while also revolving around the Earth. Some planets were assigned "major" epicycles (for which retrograde motion could be observed) and "minor" epicycles (that simply warped the overall rotation).

Ptolemy's unique contribution was the idea of an equant. This complicated addition specified that, when measuring the Sun's rotation, one sometimes used the central axis of the universe, but sometimes one set at a different location. This had an overall effect of making certain orbits "wobble," a fact that greatly bothered Copernicus (because such wobbling rendered implausible the idea of material "spheres" in which the planets rotated). In the end, astronomers could still not get observation and theory to match up exactly. In Copernicus' day, the most up-to-date version of the Ptolemaic system was that of Peurbach (1423-1461) and Regiomontanus (1436-1476).

Copernican theory

Statue of Copernicus next to the Jagiellonian University's Collegium Novum (New College), in Kraków (courtesy of Henryart)

Copernicus' major theory was published in De revolutionibus orbium coelestium in 1543, the year of his death. The book marks the beginning of the shift away from a geocentric view of the universe.

Copernicus held that the Earth is another planet revolving around the fixed Sun once a year, and turning on its axis once a day. He arrived at the correct order of the known planets and explained the precession of the equinoxes correctly by a slow change in the position of the Earth's rotational axis. He also gave a clear account of the cause of the seasons: that the Earth's axis is not perpendicular to the plane of its orbit. He added another motion to the Earth, by which the axis is kept pointed throughout the year at the same place in the heavens; since Galileo Galilei, it has been recognized that for the Earth not to point to the same place would have been a motion.

Copernicus also replaced Ptolemy's equant circles with more epicycles. This is the main source of the statement that Copernicus' system had even more epicycles than Ptolemy's. With this change, Copernicus' system showed only uniform circular motions, correcting what he saw as the chief inelegance in Ptolemy's system. Although Copernicus put the Sun at the center of the celestial spheres, he placed it near but not at the exact center of the universe.

The Copernican system did not have any greater experimental support than Ptolemy's model. Copernicus was aware of this and could not present any observational "proof" in his manuscript, relying instead on arguments about what would be a more complete and elegant system. From publication until about 1700, few astronomers were fully convinced of the Copernican system, though the book was relatively widely circulated (around five hundred copies are known to still exist, which is a large number by the scientific standards of the time). Many astronomers, however, accepted some aspects of the theory at the expense of others, and his model did have a large influence on later scientists such as Galileo and Johannes Kepler, who adopted, championed, and (especially in Kepler's case) sought to improve it. Galileo's viewing of the phases of Venus produced the first observational evidence for Copernicus' theory.

The Copernican system can be summarized in seven propositions, as Copernicus himself collected them in a Compendium of De revolutionibus that was found and published in 1878. These propositions are:

  1. There is no one center in the universe.
  2. The Earth's center is not the center of the universe.
  3. The center of the universe is near the Sun.
  4. The distance from the Earth to the Sun is imperceptible compared with the distance to the stars.
  5. The rotation of the Earth accounts for the apparent daily rotation of the stars.
  6. The apparent annual cycle of movements of the Sun is caused by the Earth revolving around the Sun.
  7. The apparent retrograde motion of the planets is caused by the motion of the Earth, from which one observes.

Whether these propositions were "revolutionary" or "conservative" was a topic of debate in the late twentieth century. Thomas Kuhn argued that Copernicus merely transferred "some properties to the Sun many astronomical functions previously attributed to the Earth." Other historians have since argued that Kuhn underestimated what was "revolutionary" about Copernicus' work, and emphasized the difficulty Copernicus would have had in putting forward a new astronomical theory relying alone on simplicity in geometry, given that he had no experimental evidence.

De revolutionibus orbium coelestium

Title page of De revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium (Part VI, Basel edition)

Copernicus' major work, De revolutionibus, was the result of decades of labor. When published, it contained a preface by Copernicus' friend, Andreas Osiander, a Lutheran theologian. Osiander stated that Copernicus wrote his heliocentric account of the Earth's movement as a mere mathematical hypothesis, not as an account that contained truth or even probability. This was apparently written to soften any religious backlash against the book.

De revolutionibus began with a letter from Copernicus' (by then deceased) friend Nicola Schönberg, the Archbishop of Capua, urging him to publish his theory. Then, in a lengthy introduction, Copernicus dedicated the book to Pope Paul III, explaining his ostensible motive in writing the book as relating to the inability of earlier astronomers to agree on an adequate theory of the planets, and noting that if his system increased the accuracy of astronomical predictions, it would allow the Church to develop a more accurate calendar. At that time, a reform of the Julian Calendar was considered necessary and was one of the major reasons for Church funding of astronomy.

The work itself was then divided into six books:

  1. General vision of the heliocentric theory, and a summarized exposition of his idea of the World
  2. Mainly theoretical, presents the principles of spherical astronomy and a list of stars (as a basis for the arguments developed in subsequent books)
  3. Mainly dedicated to the apparent motions of the Sun and to related phenomena
  4. Description of the Moon and its orbital motions
  5. Concrete exposition of the new system
  6. Concrete exposition of the new system

Impact of the Copernican Revolution

Copernicus' formulation of heliocentric cosmology, the view that the Sun is at the center of the universe, stands in contrast to Ptolemy's geocentric cosmology, in which the Earth was placed at the center. The heliocentric model is almost universally considered to be one of the most important scientific hypotheses in history, as well as being of extraordinary importance in the history of human knowledge altogether. It came to mark the starting point of modern astronomy and modern science, and it is often known as the Copernican revolution; it is considered the start of "the scientific revolution."[2].

Besides its importance to science, astronomy, and cosmology, the Copernican revolution also had profound implications for religion, theology, and philosophy. Jose Wudka (1998) described it thus:

It is hard to [over]estimate the importance of this work: it challenged the age-long views of the way the universe worked and the preponderance of the Earth and, by extension, of human beings. ... All the reassurances of the cosmology of the Middle Ages were gone, and a new view of the world, less secure and comfortable, came into being. Despite these 'problems' and the many critics the model attracted, the system was soon accepted by the best minds of the time such as Galileo.[3]

Did you know?
The "Copernican revolution," placing the sun instead of the Earth at the center of the universe, is considered "the" scientific revolution and marked the starting point of modern astronomy and cosmology

The construction and/or acceptance of Ptolemy's geocentric cosmology had been based on a number of assumptions and arguments that were philosophical and theological in nature. First was Aristotle's notion that things are naturally fixed and unmoving unless something moves them. A second assumption was that the place of human beings as children of God—an assertion made by both Jewish and Christian doctrine—and thus the highest or most important beings in the cosmos (except for those who held angels to be higher than humans), requires that Earth as the dwelling place of humans be at the center of the universe. A third assumption was that philosophy, logic, and theology are paramount in importance, superior to natural science and its methods. A fourth assumption had to do with falling bodies: the Ptolemaic view had held that if the Earth were not the center of the cosmos, then things would not fall to Earth when thrown into the sky and that the Earth itself would fall toward whatever was the center. A fifth was that, if the Earth moved, then things thrown into air above the Earth would be "left behind" and not fall to Earth as the Earth moved. A sixth was that, if the Earth moved, this would be a contradiction of scripture, which says that Joshua commanded the Sun and Moon (not the Earth) to be still and cease moving across the sky (Josh 10: 12-13).

Today we know that each of those assumptions was incorrect. We now know that the principle of inertia means that moving things will continue to move unless some force stops them. Second, we have come to realize that the Earth's position needs to be determined by scientific methods, not by religious doctrine or philosophical arguments. At the same time, it needs to be understood that the place of humans in the universe as the children of God does not depend on the physical location of the Earth, or the size or prominence of the Sun, or the prominence of the Milky Way—the galaxy in which Earth is situated—in the cosmos. Falling bodies move toward whatever attracts them gravitationally; moreover things thrown up into the air from Earth are already part of Earth's inertial system, so they move as the Earth moves and fall back to earth having moved as the Earth moved during their flight. The claim in Joshua may be interpreted as a figure of speech rather than as a literal event.

The notion of a "Copernican Revolution" became important in philosophy as well as science. For one thing, philosophy of science had to recognize and account for the fact that science does not grow in a smooth and continuous pattern. Instead, there are occasional revolutions in which one scientific pattern or paradigm is overthrown by another. Later, in the twentieth century, American historian and philosopher of science Thomas Kuhn made scientific revolutions and the notion of a "paradigm" and "paradigm shift" central points in his monumental and highly influential work, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. German philosopher Immanuel Kant captured the transcendent rationalism of the Copernican revolution, postulating that it was human rationality that was the true interpreter of observed phenomena. In addition, he referred to his own work as being a "Copernican revolution" in philosophy. More recent philosophers, too, have found continuing validity and philosophical meaning in Copernicanism.

The astronomer Copernicus: Conversation with God by Jan Matejko

The Copernican heliocentric system was rejected for theological and philosophical reasons by the Catholic and Lutheran churches of his day. This may not have been the first time in human history when a clash between religion and science occurred, but it was the most significant one up to that time. That clash—often referred to as a warfare between science and religion—continues in some form, with sometimes waxing and sometimes waning intensity, to this day. An important result of the Copernican revolution was to encourage scientists and scholars to take a more skeptical attitude toward established dogma.

Based on the work of Copernicus and others, some have argued that "science could explain everything attributed to God," and that there was no need to believe in an entity (God) who grants a soul, power, and life to human beings. Others, including religious scientists, have taken the view that the laws and principles of nature, which scientists strive to discover, originated from the Creator, who works through those principles. Copernicus himself continued to believe in the existence of God.

Copernicanism was also used to support the concept of immanence—the view that a divine force or divine being pervades all things that exist. This view has since been developed further in modern philosophy. Immanentism can also lead to subjectivism, to the theory that perception creates reality, that underlying reality is not independent of perception. Thus some argue that Copernicanism demolished the foundations of medieval science and metaphysics.

A corollary of Copernicanism is that scientific law need not be directly congruent with appearance or perception. This contrasts with Aristotle's system, which placed much more importance on the derivation of knowledge through the senses.

Quotes

Goethe:

"Of all discoveries and opinions, none may have exerted a greater effect on the human spirit than the doctrine of Copernicus. The world had scarcely become known as round and complete in itself when it was asked to waive the tremendous privilege of being the center of the universe. Never, perhaps, was a greater demand made on mankind—for, by this admission, so many things vanished in mist and smoke! What became of our Eden, our world of innocence, piety and poetry; the testimony of the senses; the conviction of a poetic—religious faith? No wonder his contemporaries did not wish to let all this go and offered every possible resistance to a doctrine which in its converts authorized and demanded a freedom of view and greatness of thought so far unknown, indeed not even dreamed of."
Nicolaus Copernicus

Copernicus:

"For I am not so enamored of my own opinions that I disregard what others may think of them. I am aware that a philosopher's ideas are not subject to the judgment of ordinary persons, because it is his endeavor to seek the truth in all things, to the extent permitted to human reason by God. Yet I hold that completely erroneous views should be shunned. Those who know that the consensus of many centuries has sanctioned the conception that the Earth remains at rest in the middle of the heaven as its center would, I reflected, regard it as an insane pronouncement if I made the opposite assertion that the Earth moves.
"For when a ship is floating calmly along, the sailors see its motion mirrored in everything outside, while on the other hand they suppose that they are stationary, together with everything on board. In the same way, the motion of the Earth can unquestionably produce the impression that the entire universe is rotating.
"Therefore alongside the ancient hypotheses, which are no more probable, let us permit these new hypotheses also to become known, especially since they are admirable as well as simple and bring with them a huge treasure of very skillful observations. So far as hypotheses are concerned, let no one expect anything certain from astronomy, which cannot furnish it, lest he accept as the truth ideas conceived for another purpose, and depart from this study a greater fool than when he entered it. Farewell."

Declaration of the Polish Senate issued on June 12, 2003:

"At the time of five hundred thirty anniversary of birth and four hundred sixty date of death of Mikołaj Kopernik, the Senate of Republic of Poland expresses its highest respect and praise for this exceptional Pole, one of the greatest scientists in the history of the world. Mikołaj Kopernik, world famous astronomer, author of the breakthrough work "O obrotach sfer niebieskich," is the the one who "Held the Sun and moved Earth." He distinguished himself for the country as exceptional mathematician, economist, lawyer, doctor, and priest, as well as defender of the Olsztyn Castle during Polish-Teutonic war. May memory about his achievements last and be a source of inspiration for future generations."

Notes

  1. K. Stuart Parkes, Understanding Contemporary Germany (London: Routledge, 1997, ISBN 0415141230), xxi.
  2. David Banach (2006), Timeline of the Scientific Revolution. Retrieved June 29, 2007.
  3. Jose Wudka (1998), The Copernican Revolution, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of California Riverside. Retrieved June 29, 2007.

Bibliography

Works of Copernicus
  • The complete works of Copernicus are collected in On the Revolutions, ed. and trans. by Edward Rosen (1978, reissued 1992), and Minor Works, ed. and trans. by Edward Rosen and Erna Hilfstein (1985, reissued 1992). Three Copernican Treatises, trans. by Edward Rosen (1971) contains, in addition, a biography and a bibliography of works on Copernicus from 1939-70.
Biographies of Copernicus
  • Adamczewski, Jan, and Edward J. Piszek. Nicolaus Copernicus and His Epoch. Scribner, 1974. ISBN 978-0684138398
  • Rosen, Edward. Copernicus and the Scientific Revolution. Malabar, FL: Krieger, 1884. ISBN 978-0898745733
Works About Copernicus and His Work
  • Armitage, Angus. The World of Copernicus. New York, NY: Mentor Books, 1951. ISBN 0846409798
  • Blumenberg, Hans. The Genesis of the Copernican World. The MIT Press, 1989. ISBN 978-0262521444
  • Dreyer, J. L. E. A History of Astronomy from Thales to Kepler. Dover Publications, 2011. ISBN 978-0486600796
  • Gingrich, Owen. The Eye of Heaven: Ptolemy, Copernicus, Kepler. Springer, 1997. ISBN 978-0883188637
  • Gingrich, Owen. The Book Nobody Read. Penguin Books, 2004. ISBN 0143034766
  • Goodman, David C., and Colin A. Russell (eds.). The Rise of Scientific Europe, 1500-1800. Dunton Green, Sevenoaks, Kent: Hodder & Stoughton: The Open University, 1991. ISBN 034055861X
  • Hoyle, Fred. Nicolaus Copernicus: An Essay on His Life and Work. Harper & Row, 1973. ISBN 978-0060119713
  • Koyre, Alexander. The Astronomical Revolution. Dover Publications, 1992. ISBN 0486270955
  • Kuhn, Thomas. The Copernican Revolution: Planetary Astronomy in the Development of Western Thought. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1985. ISBN 0674171004
  • Kuhn, Thomas. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press, 1996. ISBN 978-0226458083
  • Lindberg, David C. (ed.). Science in the Middle Ages. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1978. ISBN 978-0226482330
  • Nebelsick, Harold P. Circles of God: Theology and Science from the Greeks to Copernicus. Scottish Academic Press, 1985. ISBN 978-0707304489
  • Westman, Robert S. (ed.). The Copernican Achievement. Univ of California Press, 1976. ISBN 978-0520028777

External links

All links retrieved January 7, 2024.

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