1 oe
‘ofthe printing press huge numbers of indulgences could be produce, sometines as
and reading habits changed a ineracy spread. W
snambers (which familiarized readers with.
and ingeres became posible. This meant
1001 AWSTORY OF SoIENCE IN socIeTY
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‘meri aos cules tue Tanstaadiofanestiay tinker copes
yp fiom mamscrits or were sles. Tis meat that chlare could concentrate on ic WaT ere Wire hs anceps came fom but as poy to try a uber of
ZF -Afodng new zones her an nly coeGag Sito Beas Pade fel ose what ld mode
4 Neon borrow numa GIS AEF’ hap pics and without ‘When Copernicus sled Poly’ asroneny ad compared to medical
‘tac and planet chars, he se seis pbs NO oly dhe predicted
‘ofthe celestial bodies difer, but Copernicus believed that Golem had v
we
1 po nist
‘4g2 was printed immediately on his return to Spain and translated fom Spanish Bruiser
tutor te Polen rine rapsteesian
Z eae i iown insistence on pict cesar
‘mogude motion ich bd ed Ply oder the ep
None Coeiew ten ws aerial ganda he
a oes
ether guts fa ore real atv phe ed Norco)‘ideas unellhe was om his deathbed. He
gee ect tte pen
o the Revolutions ofthe Heavenly
Spheres ins, through the perruse
sion of his friends, especially Georg
indus Orbtum Codestzm ~~”
SCIENCE IN THE RENAISSANCE: THE COURTLY PHILOSOPHERS 1108
Usage merino opps Tte do made on of he
Her planets. Tis was « mar discover, sce it forced people to think about
ca ality ofthe solid transparent sphares of Aristotelian cosmology.
paths were supralinar and thus discredited the teadiionalphyseal explanations
of the unieree Bir Tycho had no alternative physics to propete, which may balp
to explain the reluctance of astronomers and natural pilosopers ta aberdon
Copernican system aesthetically
man Thomas Digges (545-5)
accepted Copernican cosmology, walle
snd German Michael Matlin