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** "My aim is to show that the machine of the universe is not similar to a divine animated being, but similar to a clock."
** "My aim is to show that the machine of the universe is not similar to a divine animated being, but similar to a clock."
** First and second laws about planetary orbits.
** First and second laws about planetary orbits.
** "Astronomia Nova" (1609)
** "Harmony of the World" (1618) - Third law about planetary orbits
** Writes one of the first science-fiction stories, "Dream of the Moon
* John Napier (1550-1617) - Invented logarithms

Revision as of 17:35, 26 March 2025

Origins

  • One potential date for the beginning of the revival of Western Europe is 1453:
    • Publication of "On the Structure of the Human Body" by Andreas Vesalius and of "On the Revolutions of the Celestial Bodies" by Copernicus", mark the start of the scientific revolution that would transform first Europe and then the world.
    • The Turks captured Constantinople marking the end of the old Roman Empire, causing many Greek-speaking scholars fled westwards to Italy with their documents, and there the Italian humanists took up these documents and the teaching found therein to -establish civilization along the lines that head existed before the Dark Ages.
    • Perhaps equally important was the depopulation of Europe by the Black Death in the 14th C, which led the survivors to question the whole basis of society, made labor expensive and encouraged the invention of technological devices to replace manpower.
    • Also, Gutenberg's development of moveable type in the mid 15th C had an obvious impact on what was to become science, and discoveries brought back to Europe by another technological development, sailing ships capable of crossing the oceans, transformed society.
  • The scientific revolution did not happen in isolation, but eventually became the driving force of Western civilization over the next 450 years.
  • The development of technology is more important than human genius, and it is no surprise that the start of the scientific revolution "coincides" with the development of the telescope and the microscope.
  • Western science got started because the Renaissance happened. And once it got started by giving a boost to technology it ensured that it would keep on rolling, with new scientific ideas leading to improved technology, and improved technology providing the scientists with the means to test new ideas to greater and greater accuracy. Technology came first, because it is possible to make machines by trial and error without fully understanding the principles on which they operate. But once science and technology got together, progress really took off.

Renaissance Men

  • Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543) - "On the Revolution of the Celestial Spheres" (1543)
  • Andreas Vesalius (1514-1564) - "On the Structure of the Human Body" (1543)
  • William Harvey - discovery of the circulation of the blood.
  • Gabriele Fallopio - discover of the fallopian tubes

The Last Mystics

  • Galileo Galilei (1564-1642)
  • Tycho Brahe (1546-1601) - De Nova Stella (1573)
    • Sees a comet in 1577. First astronomer to imagine the planets hanging unsupported in space
  • Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) - The Mystery of the Universe (1597)
    • Suggested that planets were kept moving in their orbits by a force he called "the vigour" reaching out from the Sun and pushing them along.
    • "My aim is to show that the machine of the universe is not similar to a divine animated being, but similar to a clock."
    • First and second laws about planetary orbits.
    • "Astronomia Nova" (1609)
    • "Harmony of the World" (1618) - Third law about planetary orbits
    • Writes one of the first science-fiction stories, "Dream of the Moon
  • John Napier (1550-1617) - Invented logarithms