Nicolaus Copernicus: 1473-1543
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Nicolaus Copernicus was the first astronomer to formulate a scientifically-based heliocentric cosmology that displaced the Earth from the center of the universe.
His book,
De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (On the
Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres), is often regarded as the
starting point of modern
astronomy and the defining
epiphany that began the
Scientific Revolution.
Although
Greek,
Indian and
Muslim
savants had published heliocentric
hypotheses centuries before Copernicus, his publication
of a scientific theory of heliocentrism, demonstrating that the
motions of celestial objects can be explained without putting the
Earth at rest in the center of the universe, stimulated further
scientific investigations and became a
landmark in the
history of modern science that is known as the
Copernican Revolution.
Among the great
polymaths of the
Renaissance, Copernicus was a
mathematician,
astronomer,
physician,
classical scholar,
translator,
artist,
Catholic cleric,
jurist,
governor,
military leader,
diplomat and
economist. Among his many responsibilities, astronomy
figured as little more than an
avocation — yet it was in that field that he made his
mark upon the world.
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