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The Copernican Question

The Copernican Question: Prognostication, Skepticism, and Celestial Order is a 704-page book written by Robert S. Westman and published by University of California Press (Berkeley, Los Angeles, London) in 2011 and in 2020 (paperback). The book is a broad historical overview of Europe's astronomical and astrological culture leading to Copernicus’s De revolutionibus and follows the scholarly debates that took place roughly over three generations after Copernicus.[1][2][3][4][5]

AuthorRobert S. Westman
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SubjectHistory of Renaissance astronomy, astrology, and scholarship
PublishedJuly, 2011. (University of California Press).
Media typePrint and e-book
Pages704
ISBN9780520254817
OCLC747411317
520.94/09031
LC ClassQB29 W47 2011
Text[1] at the book publisher's website
LCCN 2009-39562

Summary edit

In 1543, Nicolaus Copernicus publicly defended his hypothesis that the earth is a planet and the sun a body resting near the center of a finite universe. This view challenged a long-held, widespread consensus about the order of the planets. But why did Copernicus make this bold proposal? And why did it matter? The Copernican Question revisits this pivotal moment in the history of science and puts political and cultural developments at the center rather than the periphery of the story. When Copernicus first hit on his theory around 1510, European society at all social levels was consumed with chronic warfare, the syphilis pandemic and recurrence of the bubonic plague, and, soon thereafter, Martin Luther’s break with the Catholic church. Apocalyptic prophecies about the imminent end of the world were rife; the relatively new technology of print was churning out reams of alarming astrological prognostications even as astrology itself came under serious attack in July 1496 from the Renaissance Florentine polymath Giovanni Pico della Mirandola (1463-1494). Copernicus knew Pico’s work, possibly as early as the year of its publication in Bologna, the city in which he lived with the astrological prognosticator and astronomer, Domenico Maria di Novara (1454-1504). Against Pico’s multi-pronged critique, Copernicus sought to protect the credibility of astrology by reforming the astronomical foundations on which astrology rested. But, his new hypothesis came at the cost of introducing new uncertainties and engendering enormous resistance from traditionalists in the universities. Westman shows that efforts to answer Pico’s critique became a crucial unifying theme over the three generations of the first phase of what he calls the early modern scientific movement—a “long sixteenth century,” from the 1490s to the 1610s—that laid the foundations for the great transformations in natural philosophy in the century that followed.

Central Themes, Patterns, Theses[6] edit

1. To avoid projecting current classifications of knowledge onto the past, Westman argues that categories of knowledge and their meanings should be regarded as bound to time and place. In Copernicus’s lifetime (1473-1543) and well into the seventeenth century, astronomy and astrology constituted a compound subject, called “the science of the stars.” Each part of this disciplinary couple could be further subdivided into theoretical and practical parts. Authors who contributed to the literature of the heavens described themselves with various names that might look familiar but which no longer carry currently specialized meanings, such as “mathematician” or “physician and astronomer.” Westman uses “astronomer-astrologer,” first coined by Gérard Simon (Kepler astronome astrologue, Paris, 1979) and also his own term, “heavenly practitioner”—terms of reference intended to be consistent with the historical agents’ own self-designations. Similarly, he contends that historical actors located the topic of planetary order within the domains of theoretical astronomy and theoretical astrology—as opposed to their practical counterparts.

2. Copernicus’s initial turn to the heliocentric planetary arrangement occurred in the context of his encounter with Pico della Mirandola’s wide-ranging attack on the science of the stars and, in particular, Pico’s contention that astrologers did not agree about the order of the planets (Disputationes adversus astrologiam divinatricem [Bologna: Benedictus Hectoris, 1496]).

Copernicus was especially bothered by the uncertain ordering of Venus and Mercury. However, like Johannes Regiomontanus’s Epitome of Ptolemy’s Almagest (Venice, 1496), which was an important model for Copernicus, De revolutionibus (Nuremberg, 1543), astrology is nowhere mentioned in either work.

3. The controversy about the principles of astrological prognostication persisted as a major motive that drove debates about the heavens from the late fifteenth- to the early seventeenth century. Those debates took place within a nexus of political-cultural arrangements defined by the churches (both Catholic and Protestant), the universities and the royal, princely and imperial courts. At mid-sixteenth century Wittenberg, the Lutheran reformer university rector, Philipp Melanchthon (1497-1560), advocated a theology that stressed divine presence in nature and prophetic or prognosticative activity as a natural, inborn human desire to know God’s works. Astronomer-astrologers at Wittenberg, most notably Erasmus Reinhold (1511-1553) and his many students, read De revolutionibus selectively, ignoring the re-ordering of the planets and, instead, extracted from Copernicus’s work those calculational models that could be geometrically transformed into the framework of a stationary earth. Superficially, this “Wittenberg Interpretation” has sometimes been taken to refer to the methodological view known as “instrumentalism”—that scientific theories are just useful instruments of prediction—but Reinhold retained a “realist” view with respect to the solid spheres that carried the planets.

4. In the face of Pico’s critique there were different kinds of efforts to improve astrological prognostication during the sixteenth century and Copernicus’s proposal to reform theoretical astronomy was but one of them.

5. The appearance of unforeseen, singular, celestial novelties between 1572 and 1604 pushed a handful of astronomer-astrologers to consider whether alternative planetary orderings, including those of Copernicus, Tycho Brahe (1546-1601), Nicolaus Reimars Baer (1551-1600) and Paul Wittich (1546-1586) could better explain the unanticipated phenomena.

6. This consideration of alternatives was the first major instance of underdetermination in the history of science (where the same observational evidence equally supports two, logically different hypotheses), although the historical agents were unaware of the epistemological generality of that problem. It resulted in new kinds of controversies and raised unprecedented questions about weighting the criteria for adjudicating among different hypotheses, including ancient authority, scriptural compatibility, simplicity, explanatory breadth, predictive accuracy and physical coherence.

7. The second generation followers of Copernicus (Michael Maestlin [1550-1631], Thomas Digges [1546-1595], Giordano Bruno [1548-1600], Christopher Rothmann [ca. 1550-1600]) did not constitute a socially- and intellectually-unified movement. And the failure of the high-profile third-generation proponents Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) and Galileo Galilei (1564-1638) to forge a cooperative and productive alliance around their defense of the Copernican theory is a particularly notable instance of this larger pattern of disunity.

8. Shared social context underdetermined the adoption of new theoretical claims. Many Copernicans, for example, were attracted to court settings because those spaces were more open to novelty than traditional university settings. But while court patronage allowed for rhetorical and philosophical diversity, it fails to explain why particular figures, like Galileo, adopted specific theoretical claims, such as the Copernican hypothesis.

9. Galileo’s famous telescopic claims can be thought of as introducing the discovery of recurrent novelties into the debate about alternative hypotheses. Unlike novas and comets, which seemed to appear only when God wanted to send a message, a human being with an instrument could make phenomena like the moon’s rough surface, never-before-seen distant stars or Jupiter’s ‘planets’ appear and disappear. Success in convincing others of the reality of these phenomena occurred largely through print rather than by live demonstrations with the instrument.

10. The main social locus of change of belief was not some twentieth-century-like “scientific community,” but the master-disciple relationship that was rooted in the all-male-cultures of the universities and modeled on the paternalistic structures of the family.

11. The Copernican Question proposes a new periodization that argues for an “early modern scientific movement”—chronologically, a “Long Sixteenth Century” that began with the late-fifteenth century conflict about the status of astrological prognostication and ended in the early seventeenth century when the Catholic Church extended its skepticism (and its enforcement machinery) about naturalistic foreknowledge to the reality of the heliocentric planetary ordering. Rather than revolutionary, paradigmatic rupture, this periodization offers a picture of gradual, multi-generational change that broadly conjoins a backward-looking veneration for ancient tradition with a forward-looking, modernizing valuation of change and novelty.

12. Kepler’ Epitome of Copernican Astronomy  (1618–21) and Galileo’s Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems (1632) consolidated a critical mass of novel physical claims and arguments developed between the 1580s and the telescopic discoveries of 1610-13. While Kepler and Galileo disagreed on some important issues (Galileo, for example, never accepted Kepler’s elliptical orbits), together their presentations made possible a multifaceted, robust public debate (1620s-40s) that a new generation of modernizing natural philosophers—including René Descartes (1596-1650), Pierre Gassendi (1592-1655), Marin Mersenne (1588-1648), and Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)—selectively incorporated into their own original arguments with tradition-bound natural philosophers in the universities. In this period, the Copernican Question became a struggle that overtly involved natural philosophy, a battle framed as one between competing “world systems”.

13. By 1651, the Jesuit astronomer Giovanni Battista Riccioli (1598-1651), writing in the shadow of Galileo’s Trial in 1633, produced a massive work (Almagestum novum) in which he assembled 49 arguments in favor of the daily and annual motions of the Earth as against 77 arguments contrary to the Earth’s motions. While presenting the decision between the two as a contrasting of probable arguments, in the end, he decisively eliminated any uncertainty by appeal to “both sacred authority and Divine Scriptures.”[7]  

14. Although the midcentury modernizers were all followers of Copernicus’s system, like the late-sixteenth defenders of Copernicus, they continued to be disunified in the kinds of principles and arguments to which they appealed. For example, a proposal that side-stepped the difficult technical arguments grounding Kepler’s ellipses and Galileo’s falling bodies and which helped to popularize support with new audiences was the argument for a plurality of worlds. Building on Giordano Bruno’s claim that God must have used his omnipotence to create an infinite universe with innumerable worlds and Galileo’s telescopic discovery of a moon with Earthlike characteristics, John Wilkins argued that an infinite, omnipotent god must have used his power to create other living beings to occupy a plurality of other sun-centered worlds. In his Discovery of a World in the Moone (1638), Wilkins broached the probability of an Earthlike moon with lunar inhabitants, the dark areas interpreted as seas, the entire body surrounded by a vaporous atmosphere. The existence of Lunatics was further testimony to the divine wisdom.[7] And the pluralist argument became a significant resource for attracting adherents to a multiplicity of sun-centered systems in an infinite universe.

15. In England, prominent midcentury astrologers like Vincent Wing (1619-1668) and Thomas Streete (1621?-1689) learned their Copernicus through Kepler and Descartes and associated the accuracy of their predictions with Kepler’s Rudolfine Tables (1627).

16. Isaac Newton (1642-1727) and Robert Hooke (1635-1702) were members of a generation that encountered the Copernican Question not directly through Copernicus’s De revolutionibus but as a controversy already matured and refracted through the midcentury literature of the heavens and natural philosophy. Newton himself made his earliest acquaintance with the Copernican ordering and Kepler’s elliptical orbits through the astronomer-astrologers Wing and Streete. Ultimately, however, he rejected the claims of astrology as a form of idolatry, much as did Pico—based upon the projection of human qualities onto the stars and planets—and contrary to Newton’s belief in the power of God to act directly in the world without need of intermediaries. However, like Copernicus, Newton never published his views about astrology.  

16. The problem of closure. Westman argues that “the diversity already evident at the beginning of the [seventeenth] century persisted among Copernicus’s midcentury followers. To identify oneself publicly with the Copernican arrangement or to declare its truth did not entail allegiance to the uniform set of commitments in natural philosophy evoked by the nineteenth- and twentieth century term “Copernicanism”. The Copernican question achieved closure—an end to questioning and criticism from competing alternatives—in different ways among different audiences. These endings occurred through no single proof and with audiences as variously overlapping as almanac readers, practicing astrologers, planetary table makers, extraterrestrializers, itinerant scientific lecturers and, of course, philosophizing astronomers and high-end, new-style natural philosophers.”[7]

17. Newton’s powerful achievement was his construction of a natural philosophy of mathematizable forces in which the sun’s position at or near the center of the planets could be deduced rather than assumed as a premise, as Copernicus had done: “The Copernican system is proved a priori,” Newton wrote, “for if the common center of gravity is calculated for any position of the planets it either falls in the body of the Sun or will always be very close to it.”[7] And, unlike Copernicus, Tycho Brahe or Kepler in the long sixteenth century, he made no effort to fix astrology.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "The Copernican Question: Prognostication, Skepticism, and Celestial Order: by Robert S. Westman". the Montréal Review. July 2012. Retrieved 2014-01-12. {{cite journal}}: External link in |journal= (help)
  2. ^ Rabin, Sheila J. (Summer 2012). "Robert S. Westman. The Copernican Question: Prognostication, Skepticism, and Celestial Order". Renaissance Quarterly. 65 (2): 559–561. doi:10.1086/667300. JSTOR 667300. S2CID 163357025.
  3. ^ Vanden, Steven (March 2013). "The Copernican Question: Prognostication, Skepticism, and Celestial Order by Robert S. Westman". The British Journal for the History of Science. 46 (1): 151–159. doi:10.1017/S0007087413000137. hdl:1854/LU-8522801. JSTOR 41809829.
  4. ^ Dear, Peter (2011). "Copernicus and the Science of the Stars". Science. 334 (6056): 598–600. Bibcode:2011Sci...334..598D. doi:10.1126/science.1213727. JSTOR 41351620. S2CID 128944007.
  5. ^ Broecke, Steven Vanden (2013). "Review: The Copernican Question: Prognostication, Skepticism, and Celestial Order" (Free PDF download available (Academia.edu)). The British Journal for the History of Science. 46: 151–159. doi:10.1017/S0007087413000137. hdl:1854/LU-8522801. The British Journal for the History of Science, Vol. 46, pages 151-159.
  6. ^ Westman, Robert S. (May 2013). "The Copernican Question Revisited: A Reply to Noel Swerdlow and John Heilbron". Perspectives on Science. 21 (1): 100–136. doi:10.1162/POSC_a_00087. ISSN 1063-6145. S2CID 57568360.
  7. ^ a b c d WESTMAN, ROBERT S. (2020). COPERNICAN QUESTION : prognostication, skepticism, and celestial order. [S.l.]: UNIV OF CALIFORNIA PRESS. p. 512. ISBN 978-0-520-35569-9. OCLC 1120697196.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Heilbron, J. L. (2012). "Robert Westman on Galileo and Related Matters". Perspectives on Science. 20 (3): 379–388. doi:10.1162/POSC_a_00072. S2CID 57566908.
  • Westman, Robert S. (2013). "The Copernican Question Revisited: A Reply to Noel Swerdlow and John Heilbron". Perspectives on Science. 21: 100–136. doi:10.1162/POSC_a_00087. S2CID 57568360.
  • Westman, Robert S (July 1990), "Chapter 4 Proof, Poetics, and Patronage...", Reappraisals of the Scientific Revolution, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, pp. 167–205, ISBN 9780521348041

copernican, question, prognostication, skepticism, celestial, order, page, book, written, robert, westman, published, university, california, press, berkeley, angeles, london, 2011, 2020, paperback, book, broad, historical, overview, europe, astronomical, astr. The Copernican Question Prognostication Skepticism and Celestial Order is a 704 page book written by Robert S Westman and published by University of California Press Berkeley Los Angeles London in 2011 and in 2020 paperback The book is a broad historical overview of Europe s astronomical and astrological culture leading to Copernicus s De revolutionibus and follows the scholarly debates that took place roughly over three generations after Copernicus 1 2 3 4 5 AuthorRobert S WestmanCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishSubjectHistory of Renaissance astronomy astrology and scholarshipPublishedJuly 2011 University of California Press Media typePrint and e bookPages704ISBN9780520254817OCLC747411317Dewey Decimal520 94 09031LC ClassQB29 W47 2011Text 1 at the book publisher s websiteLCCN 2009 39562 Contents 1 Summary 2 Central Themes Patterns Theses 6 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksSummary editIn 1543 Nicolaus Copernicus publicly defended his hypothesis that the earth is a planet and the sun a body resting near the center of a finite universe This view challenged a long held widespread consensus about the order of the planets But why did Copernicus make this bold proposal And why did it matter The Copernican Question revisits this pivotal moment in the history of science and puts political and cultural developments at the center rather than the periphery of the story When Copernicus first hit on his theory around 1510 European society at all social levels was consumed with chronic warfare the syphilis pandemic and recurrence of the bubonic plague and soon thereafter Martin Luther s break with the Catholic church Apocalyptic prophecies about the imminent end of the world were rife the relatively new technology of print was churning out reams of alarming astrological prognostications even as astrology itself came under serious attack in July 1496 from the Renaissance Florentine polymath Giovanni Pico della Mirandola 1463 1494 Copernicus knew Pico s work possibly as early as the year of its publication in Bologna the city in which he lived with the astrological prognosticator and astronomer Domenico Maria di Novara 1454 1504 Against Pico s multi pronged critique Copernicus sought to protect the credibility of astrology by reforming the astronomical foundations on which astrology rested But his new hypothesis came at the cost of introducing new uncertainties and engendering enormous resistance from traditionalists in the universities Westman shows that efforts to answer Pico s critique became a crucial unifying theme over the three generations of the first phase of what he calls the early modern scientific movement a long sixteenth century from the 1490s to the 1610s that laid the foundations for the great transformations in natural philosophy in the century that followed Central Themes Patterns Theses 6 edit1 To avoid projecting current classifications of knowledge onto the past Westman argues that categories of knowledge and their meanings should be regarded as bound to time and place In Copernicus s lifetime 1473 1543 and well into the seventeenth century astronomy and astrology constituted a compound subject called the science of the stars Each part of this disciplinary couple could be further subdivided into theoretical and practical parts Authors who contributed to the literature of the heavens described themselves with various names that might look familiar but which no longer carry currently specialized meanings such as mathematician or physician and astronomer Westman uses astronomer astrologer first coined by Gerard Simon Kepler astronome astrologue Paris 1979 and also his own term heavenly practitioner terms of reference intended to be consistent with the historical agents own self designations Similarly he contends that historical actors located the topic of planetary order within the domains of theoretical astronomy and theoretical astrology as opposed to their practical counterparts 2 Copernicus s initial turn to the heliocentric planetary arrangement occurred in the context of his encounter with Pico della Mirandola s wide ranging attack on the science of the stars and in particular Pico s contention that astrologers did not agree about the order of the planets Disputationes adversus astrologiam divinatricem Bologna Benedictus Hectoris 1496 Copernicus was especially bothered by the uncertain ordering of Venus and Mercury However like Johannes Regiomontanus s Epitome of Ptolemy s Almagest Venice 1496 which was an important model for Copernicus De revolutionibus Nuremberg 1543 astrology is nowhere mentioned in either work 3 The controversy about the principles of astrological prognostication persisted as a major motive that drove debates about the heavens from the late fifteenth to the early seventeenth century Those debates took place within a nexus of political cultural arrangements defined by the churches both Catholic and Protestant the universities and the royal princely and imperial courts At mid sixteenth century Wittenberg the Lutheran reformer university rector Philipp Melanchthon 1497 1560 advocated a theology that stressed divine presence in nature and prophetic or prognosticative activity as a natural inborn human desire to know God s works Astronomer astrologers at Wittenberg most notably Erasmus Reinhold 1511 1553 and his many students read De revolutionibus selectively ignoring the re ordering of the planets and instead extracted from Copernicus s work those calculational models that could be geometrically transformed into the framework of a stationary earth Superficially this Wittenberg Interpretation has sometimes been taken to refer to the methodological view known as instrumentalism that scientific theories are just useful instruments of prediction but Reinhold retained a realist view with respect to the solid spheres that carried the planets 4 In the face of Pico s critique there were different kinds of efforts to improve astrological prognostication during the sixteenth century and Copernicus s proposal to reform theoretical astronomy was but one of them 5 The appearance of unforeseen singular celestial novelties between 1572 and 1604 pushed a handful of astronomer astrologers to consider whether alternative planetary orderings including those of Copernicus Tycho Brahe 1546 1601 Nicolaus Reimars Baer 1551 1600 and Paul Wittich 1546 1586 could better explain the unanticipated phenomena 6 This consideration of alternatives was the first major instance of underdetermination in the history of science where the same observational evidence equally supports two logically different hypotheses although the historical agents were unaware of the epistemological generality of that problem It resulted in new kinds of controversies and raised unprecedented questions about weighting the criteria for adjudicating among different hypotheses including ancient authority scriptural compatibility simplicity explanatory breadth predictive accuracy and physical coherence 7 The second generation followers of Copernicus Michael Maestlin 1550 1631 Thomas Digges 1546 1595 Giordano Bruno 1548 1600 Christopher Rothmann ca 1550 1600 did not constitute a socially and intellectually unified movement And the failure of the high profile third generation proponents Johannes Kepler 1571 1630 and Galileo Galilei 1564 1638 to forge a cooperative and productive alliance around their defense of the Copernican theory is a particularly notable instance of this larger pattern of disunity 8 Shared social context underdetermined the adoption of new theoretical claims Many Copernicans for example were attracted to court settings because those spaces were more open to novelty than traditional university settings But while court patronage allowed for rhetorical and philosophical diversity it fails to explain why particular figures like Galileo adopted specific theoretical claims such as the Copernican hypothesis 9 Galileo s famous telescopic claims can be thought of as introducing the discovery of recurrent novelties into the debate about alternative hypotheses Unlike novas and comets which seemed to appear only when God wanted to send a message a human being with an instrument could make phenomena like the moon s rough surface never before seen distant stars or Jupiter s planets appear and disappear Success in convincing others of the reality of these phenomena occurred largely through print rather than by live demonstrations with the instrument 10 The main social locus of change of belief was not some twentieth century like scientific community but the master disciple relationship that was rooted in the all male cultures of the universities and modeled on the paternalistic structures of the family 11 The Copernican Question proposes a new periodization that argues for an early modern scientific movement chronologically a Long Sixteenth Century that began with the late fifteenth century conflict about the status of astrological prognostication and ended in the early seventeenth century when the Catholic Church extended its skepticism and its enforcement machinery about naturalistic foreknowledge to the reality of the heliocentric planetary ordering Rather than revolutionary paradigmatic rupture this periodization offers a picture of gradual multi generational change that broadly conjoins a backward looking veneration for ancient tradition with a forward looking modernizing valuation of change and novelty 12 Kepler Epitome of Copernican Astronomy 1618 21 and Galileo s Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems 1632 consolidated a critical mass of novel physical claims and arguments developed between the 1580s and the telescopic discoveries of 1610 13 While Kepler and Galileo disagreed on some important issues Galileo for example never accepted Kepler s elliptical orbits together their presentations made possible a multifaceted robust public debate 1620s 40s that a new generation of modernizing natural philosophers including Rene Descartes 1596 1650 Pierre Gassendi 1592 1655 Marin Mersenne 1588 1648 and Thomas Hobbes 1588 1679 selectively incorporated into their own original arguments with tradition bound natural philosophers in the universities In this period the Copernican Question became a struggle that overtly involved natural philosophy a battle framed as one between competing world systems 13 By 1651 the Jesuit astronomer Giovanni Battista Riccioli 1598 1651 writing in the shadow of Galileo s Trial in 1633 produced a massive work Almagestum novum in which he assembled 49 arguments in favor of the daily and annual motions of the Earth as against 77 arguments contrary to the Earth s motions While presenting the decision between the two as a contrasting of probable arguments in the end he decisively eliminated any uncertainty by appeal to both sacred authority and Divine Scriptures 7 14 Although the midcentury modernizers were all followers of Copernicus s system like the late sixteenth defenders of Copernicus they continued to be disunified in the kinds of principles and arguments to which they appealed For example a proposal that side stepped the difficult technical arguments grounding Kepler s ellipses and Galileo s falling bodies and which helped to popularize support with new audiences was the argument for a plurality of worlds Building on Giordano Bruno s claim that God must have used his omnipotence to create an infinite universe with innumerable worlds and Galileo s telescopic discovery of a moon with Earthlike characteristics John Wilkins argued that an infinite omnipotent god must have used his power to create other living beings to occupy a plurality of other sun centered worlds In his Discovery of a World in the Moone 1638 Wilkins broached the probability of an Earthlike moon with lunar inhabitants the dark areas interpreted as seas the entire body surrounded by a vaporous atmosphere The existence of Lunatics was further testimony to the divine wisdom 7 And the pluralist argument became a significant resource for attracting adherents to a multiplicity of sun centered systems in an infinite universe 15 In England prominent midcentury astrologers like Vincent Wing 1619 1668 and Thomas Streete 1621 1689 learned their Copernicus through Kepler and Descartes and associated the accuracy of their predictions with Kepler s Rudolfine Tables 1627 16 Isaac Newton 1642 1727 and Robert Hooke 1635 1702 were members of a generation that encountered the Copernican Question not directly through Copernicus s De revolutionibus but as a controversy already matured and refracted through the midcentury literature of the heavens and natural philosophy Newton himself made his earliest acquaintance with the Copernican ordering and Kepler s elliptical orbits through the astronomer astrologers Wing and Streete Ultimately however he rejected the claims of astrology as a form of idolatry much as did Pico based upon the projection of human qualities onto the stars and planets and contrary to Newton s belief in the power of God to act directly in the world without need of intermediaries However like Copernicus Newton never published his views about astrology 16 The problem of closure Westman argues that the diversity already evident at the beginning of the seventeenth century persisted among Copernicus s midcentury followers To identify oneself publicly with the Copernican arrangement or to declare its truth did not entail allegiance to the uniform set of commitments in natural philosophy evoked by the nineteenth and twentieth century term Copernicanism The Copernican question achieved closure an end to questioning and criticism from competing alternatives in different ways among different audiences These endings occurred through no single proof and with audiences as variously overlapping as almanac readers practicing astrologers planetary table makers extraterrestrializers itinerant scientific lecturers and of course philosophizing astronomers and high end new style natural philosophers 7 17 Newton s powerful achievement was his construction of a natural philosophy of mathematizable forces in which the sun s position at or near the center of the planets could be deduced rather than assumed as a premise as Copernicus had done The Copernican system is proved a priori Newton wrote for if the common center of gravity is calculated for any position of the planets it either falls in the body of the Sun or will always be very close to it 7 And unlike Copernicus Tycho Brahe or Kepler in the long sixteenth century he made no effort to fix astrology See also editThe Scientific Revolution The History of science in the Renaissance The Renaissance History of astronomyReferences edit The Copernican Question Prognostication Skepticism and Celestial Order by Robert S Westman the Montreal Review July 2012 Retrieved 2014 01 12 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a External link in code class cs1 code journal code help Rabin Sheila J Summer 2012 Robert S Westman The Copernican Question Prognostication Skepticism and Celestial Order Renaissance Quarterly 65 2 559 561 doi 10 1086 667300 JSTOR 667300 S2CID 163357025 Vanden Steven March 2013 The Copernican Question Prognostication Skepticism and Celestial Order by Robert S Westman The British Journal for the History of Science 46 1 151 159 doi 10 1017 S0007087413000137 hdl 1854 LU 8522801 JSTOR 41809829 Dear Peter 2011 Copernicus and the Science of the Stars Science 334 6056 598 600 Bibcode 2011Sci 334 598D doi 10 1126 science 1213727 JSTOR 41351620 S2CID 128944007 Broecke Steven Vanden 2013 Review The Copernican Question Prognostication Skepticism and Celestial Order Free PDF download available Academia edu The British Journal for the History of Science 46 151 159 doi 10 1017 S0007087413000137 hdl 1854 LU 8522801 The British Journal for the History of Science Vol 46 pages 151 159 Westman Robert S May 2013 The Copernican Question Revisited A Reply to Noel Swerdlow and John Heilbron Perspectives on Science 21 1 100 136 doi 10 1162 POSC a 00087 ISSN 1063 6145 S2CID 57568360 a b c d WESTMAN ROBERT S 2020 COPERNICAN QUESTION prognostication skepticism and celestial order S l UNIV OF CALIFORNIA PRESS p 512 ISBN 978 0 520 35569 9 OCLC 1120697196 External links editOfficial website Heilbron J L 2012 Robert Westman on Galileo and Related Matters Perspectives on Science 20 3 379 388 doi 10 1162 POSC a 00072 S2CID 57566908 Westman Robert S 2013 The Copernican Question Revisited A Reply to Noel Swerdlow and John Heilbron Perspectives on Science 21 100 136 doi 10 1162 POSC a 00087 S2CID 57568360 Westman Robert S July 1990 Chapter 4 Proof Poetics and Patronage Reappraisals of the Scientific Revolution United Kingdom Cambridge University Press pp 167 205 ISBN 9780521348041 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Copernican Question amp oldid 1153722068, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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