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The Earth but a Satellite of the Sun

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 January 2010

Extract

New ideas of a really fundamental character are always received with horror and alarm by the general public, and are vigorously repudiated. When Fred Hoyle, in a brilliant series of broadcasts, remarked that his physico-mathematical calculations indicated that newly created hydrogen was being continuously injected into the Universe, the B.B.C. had to take hasty countermeasures. A well-known authoress of detective stories and religious pl ys, followed by a respected professor of science, declared on the air that the earlier t lks had been merely speculative. A similar role was filled in 1543 by the theologian Andreas Osiander, who added a Preface to Copernicus's startling book De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium (the author having just died), to the effect that he had only intended as a mathematical hypothesis, not as a matter of fact, to picture a rotating globe revolving round the Sun. From the point of view of pure geometry it was, it is true, merely a matter of a change of coordinates. People settled back comfortably for another sixty or seventy years, until Galileo made certain awkward observations with his new telescope.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1958

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References

REFERENCES

1Taylor, E. G. R. (1935). Early ideas of the form and size of the Earth. This Geogr.J., 85, 65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2Johnson, F. R. (1937). Astronomical thought in Renaissance England.Google Scholar