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suitable sphere for his talents might be found in the Church, which, in those
days, was almost the only profession that afforded an opening for an
intellectual career. We thus find that by the time Johannes Kepler was
seventeen years old he had attained a sufficient standard of knowledge to
entitle him to admission on the foundation of the University at Tübingen.[3]
In the course of his studies at this institution he seems to have divided his
attention equally between astronomy and divinity. It not unfrequently happens
that when a man has attained considerable proficiency in two branches of
knowledge he is not able to see very clearly in which of the two pursuits his
true vocation lies. His friends and onlookers are often able to judge more
wisely than he himself can do as to which of the two lines it would be better
for him to pursue. This incapacity for perceiving the path in which greatness
awaited him, existed in the case of Kepler. Personally, he inclined to enter the
ministry, in which a promising career seemed open to him. He yielded,
however, to friends, who evidently knew him better than he knew himself,
and accepted, in 1594, the important professorship of astronomy which had
been offered to him in the University of Grätz.[4]
It is difficult for us in these modern days to realise the somewhat
extraordinary duties which were expected from an astronomical professor in
the sixteenth century. He was, of course, required to employ his knowledge of
the heavens in the prediction of eclipses, and of the movements of the
heavenly bodies generally. This seems reasonable enough ; but what we are
not prepared to accept is the obligation which lay on the astronomers to
predict the fates of nations and the destinies of individuals.
It must be remembered that it was the almost universal belief in those days,
that all the celestial spheres revolved in some mysterious fashion around the
earth, which appeared by far the most important body in the universe. It was
imagined that the sun, the moon, and the stars indicated, in the vicissitudes of
their movements, the careers of nations and of individuals. Such being the
generally accepted notion, it seemed to follow that a professor who was
charged with the duty of expounding the movements of the heavenly bodies
must necessarily be looked to for the purpose of deciphering the celestial
decrees regarding the fate of man which the heavenly luminaries were
designed to announce.
Kepler threw himself with characteristic ardour into even this fantastic
phase of the labours of the astronomical professor; he diligently studied the
rules of astrology, which the fancies of antiquity had compiled. Believing
sincerely as he did in the connection between the aspect of the stars and the
state of human affairs, he even thought that he perceived, in the events of his
own life, a corroboration of the doctrine which affirmed the influence of the
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Buch Great Astronoms - Johannes Kepler"
Great Astronoms
Johannes Kepler
- Titel
- Great Astronoms
- Untertitel
- Johannes Kepler
- Autor
- Robert S. Ball
- Datum
- 1907
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- PD
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 16
- Schlagwörter
- Astronom, Philosopher, Englisch, English, Astronomie, Philosophie
- Kategorien
- International
- Naturwissenschaften Physik