Galileo Galilei — "I do not hope for any relief, and that is because I have committed no crime."
I do not hope for any relief, and that is because I have committed no crime.
I do not hope for any relief, and that is because I have committed no crime.
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"I hold it to be an error to believe that the truths of faith and the truths of science are contradictory."
"It is a great pity that there are so few who are interested in the true causes of things."
"I have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night."
"The universe is an immense, eternal, and infinite work, which can be understood only by the one who created it."
"It is a great error to believe that the truths of faith are in any way contrary to the truths of reason."
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The speaker declares innocence as the reason they expect no mercy or leniency. When you have done nothing wrong, you cannot perform the expected ritual of confession and repentance that might earn clemency. True innocence becomes a trap — the system demands admission of guilt as the price of relief, which an honest person cannot pay.
Galileo spoke these words during his 1633 Inquisition trial for supporting heliocentrism. He refused to genuinely recant his astronomical findings, knowing they were correct. Though he ultimately signed a formal abjuration under threat of torture, he privately maintained his innocence — reportedly muttering 'and yet it moves.' Science was his crime only in the Church's eyes, never his own.
The early modern period saw the Catholic Church wielding enormous authority over intellectual life through the Inquisition. Galileo's trial occurred amid the Counter-Reformation, when the Church aggressively policed doctrine after Protestant challenges. His telescope had overturned Ptolemaic cosmology, threatening scriptural authority. Scientists who contradicted Church teaching faced not peer review but heresy charges, imprisonment, and torture.
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