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1Chapter
While the illustrious astronomer, Tycho Brahe, lay on his death-bed, he had
an interview which must ever rank as one of the important incidents in the
history of science. The life of Tycho had been passed, as we have seen, in the
accumulation of vast stores of careful observations of the positions of the
heavenly bodies. It was not given to him to deduce from his splendid work the
results to which they were destined to lead. It was reserved for another
astronomer to distil, so to speak, from the volumes in which Tycho’s figures
were recorded, the great truths of the universe which those figures contained.
Tycho felt that his work required an interpreter, and he recognised in the
genius of a young man with whom he was acquainted the agent by whom the
world was to be taught some of the great truths of nature. To the bedside of
the great Danish astronomer the youthful philosopher was summoned, and
with his last breath Tycho besought of him to spare no labour in the
performance of those calculations, by which alone the secrets of the
movements of the heavens could be revealed. The solemn trust thus imposed
was duly accepted, and the man who accepted it bore the immortal name of
Kepler.[1]
Kepler was born on the 27th December, 1571, at Weil, in the Duchy of
Würtemberg.[2] It would seem that the circumstances of his childbood must
have been singularly-unhappy. His father, sprung from a well-connected
family, was but a shiftless and idle adventurer; nor was the great astronomer
much more fortunate in his other parent. His mother was an ignorant and ill-
tempered woman ; indeed, the ill-assorted union came to an abrupt end
through the desertion of the wife by her husband when their eldest son
Johannes, the hero of our present sketch, was eighteen years old. The
childhood of this lad, destined for such fame, was still further embittered by
the circumstance that when he was four years old he had a severe attack of
small-pox. Not only was his eyesight permanently injured, but even his
constitution appears to have been much weakened by this terrible malady.
It seems, however, that the bodily infirmities of young Johannes Kepler
were the immediate cause of his attention being directed to the pursuit of
knowledge. Had the boy been fitted like other boys for ordinary manual work,
there can be hardly any doubt that to manual work his life must have been
devoted. But, though his body was feeble, he soon gave indications of the
possession of considerable mental power. It was accordingly thought that a
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book Great Astronoms - Johannes Kepler"
Great Astronoms
Johannes Kepler
- Title
- Great Astronoms
- Subtitle
- Johannes Kepler
- Author
- Robert S. Ball
- Date
- 1907
- Language
- English
- License
- PD
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 16
- Keywords
- Astronom, Philosopher, Englisch, English, Astronomie, Philosophie
- Categories
- International
- Naturwissenschaften Physik