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proved that the air must accompany the earth, just as his coat remains round
him, notwithstanding the fact that he is walking down the street. In this way
he was able to show that all a priori objections to the earth’s movements were
absurd, and therefore he was able to compare together the plausibilities of the
two rival schemes for explaining the diurnal movement.
Once the issue had been placed in this form, the result could not be long in
doubt. Here is the question : Which is it more likely—that the earth, like a
grain of sand at the centre of a mighty globe, should turn round once in
twenty-four hours, or—that the whole of that vast globe should complete a
rotation in the opposite direction in the same time ? Obviously, the former is
far the more simple supposition. But the case is really much stronger than
this. Ptolemy had supposed that all the stars were attached to the surface of a
sphere. He had no ground whatever for this supposition, except that otherwise
it would have been well-nigh impossible to have devised a scheme by which
the rotation of the heavens around a fixed earth could have been arranged.
Copernicus, however, with the just instinct of a philosopher, considered that
the celestial sphere, however convenient from a geometrical point of view, as
a means of representing apparent phenomena, could not actually have a
material existence. In the first place, the existence of a material celestial
sphere would require that all the myriad stars should be at exactly the same
distances from the earth. Of course, no one will say that this or any other
arbitrary disposition of the stars is actually impossible, but as there was no
conceivable physical reason why the distances of all the stars from the earth
should be identical, it seemed in the very highest degree improbable that the
stars should be so placed.
Doubtless, also, Copernicus felt a considerable difficulty as to the nature of
the materials from which Ptolemy’s wonderful sphere was to be constructed.
Nor could a philosopher of his penetration have failed to observe that, unless
that sphere were infinitely large, there must have been space outside it, a
consideration which would open up other difficult questions. Whether infinite
or not, it was obvious that the celestial sphere must have a diameter at least
many thousands of times as great as that of the earth. From these
considerations Copernicus deduced the important fact that the stars and the
other celestial bodies must all be vast objects. He was thus enabled to put the
question in such a form that it could hardly receive any answer but the correct
one. Which is it more rational to suppose, that the earth should turn round on
its axis once in twenty-four hours, or that thousands of mighty stars should
circle round the earth in the same time, many of them having to describe
circles many thousands of times greater in circumference than the circuit of
the earth at the equator ? The obvious answer pressed upon Copernicus with
so much force that he was compelled to reject Ptolemy’s theory of the
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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