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any rational demonstration of the fact. Copernicus, by a strict train of
reasoning, convinced those who would listen to him that the sun was the
centre of the system. It is useful for us to consider the arguments which he
urged, and by which he effected that intellectual revolution which is always
connected with his name.
The first of the great discoveries which Copernicus made relates to the
rotation of the earth on its axis. That general diurnal movement, by which the
stars and all other celestial bodies appear to be carried completely round the
heavens once every twenty-four hours, had been accounted for by Ptolemy on
the supposition that the apparent movements were the real movements. As we
have already seen, Ptolemy himself felt the extraordinary difficulty involved
in the supposition that so stupendous a fabric as the celestial sphere should
spin in the way supposed. Such movements required that many of the stars
should travel with almost inconceivable velocity. Copernicus also saw that the
daily rising and setting of the heavenly bodies could be accounted for either
by the supposition that the celestial sphere moved round and that the earth
remained at rest, or by the supposition that the celestial sphere was at rest
while the earth turned round in the opposite direction. He weighed the
arguments on both sides as Ptolemy had done, and, as the result of his
deliberations, Copernicus came to an opposite conclusion from Ptolemy. To
Copernicus it appeared that the difficulties attending the supposition that the
celestial sphere revolved, were vastly greater than those which appeared so
weighty to Ptolemy as to force him to deny the earth’s rotation.
Copernicus shows clearly how tne observed phenomena could be
accounted for just as completely by a rotation of the earth as by a rotation of
the heavens. He alludes to the fact that, to those on board a vessel which is
moving through smooth water, the vessel itself appears to be at rest, while the
objects on shore seem to be moving past.
If, therefore, the earth were rotating uniformly, we dwellers upon the earth,
oblivious of our own movement, would wrongly attribute to the stars the
displacement which was actually the consequence of our own motion.
Copernicus saw the futility of the arguments by which Ptolemy had
endeavoured to demonstrate that a revolution of the earth was impossible. It
was plain to him that there was nothing whatever to warrant refusal to believe
in the rotation of the earth. In his clear-sightedness on this matter we have
specially to admire the sagacity of Copernicus as a natural philosopher. It had
been urged that, if the earth moved round, its motion would not be imparted
to the air, and that therefore the earth would be uninhabitable by the terrific
winds which would be the result of our being carried through the air.
Copernicus convinced himself that this deduction was preposterous. He
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book Great Astronoms - Nicolaus Copernicus"
Great Astronoms
Nicolaus Copernicus
- Title
- Great Astronoms
- Subtitle
- Nicolaus Copernicus
- Author
- Robert S. Ball
- Date
- 1907
- Language
- English
- License
- PD
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 11
- Keywords
- Astronom, Philosopher, Englisch, English, Astronomie, Philosophie
- Categories
- International
- Naturwissenschaften Physik