Nicolaus Copernicus — "The earth, too, has other motions than that of the daily rotation."
The earth, too, has other motions than that of the daily rotation.
The earth, too, has other motions than that of the daily rotation.
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"The celestial sphere is finite and spherical."
"For it is the work of a good mathematician to compute the motions of the heavenly bodies, and to predict their positions at any given time."
"The Universe has been wrought for us by a supremely good and orderly Creator."
"I am aware that I have made myself liable to be laughed at by those who consider it an absurdity to suppose that the earth moves."
"I consider the planets themselves to be divine, living creatures."
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Earth doesn't merely spin on its axis once every 24 hours — it also moves in other fundamental ways. It orbits the Sun annually and undergoes a slow axial wobble called precession. This directly contradicted the dominant belief that Earth sat perfectly still at the universe's center. The statement is a calm, logical assertion that our planet participates in multiple simultaneous motions, each measurable and mathematically describable.
Copernicus spent over 30 years as a cathedral canon in Frombork, Poland, quietly developing his heliocentric model away from academic scrutiny. This quote encapsulates his central breakthrough: Earth has at least three distinct motions — daily rotation, annual orbital revolution around the Sun, and slow axial precession. A meticulous mathematician, he waited until the year of his death in 1543 to publish De revolutionibus, partly fearing the intellectual and religious backlash this idea would provoke.
In Copernicus's early 16th-century Europe, Ptolemaic geocentrism — Earth motionless at the cosmos's center — was entrenched doctrine in universities, the Catholic Church, and Aristotelian philosophy, unchanged for 1,400 years. The Renaissance was reviving classical mathematical rigor, and explorers were reshaping geographical knowledge. The Protestant Reformation was fracturing religious authority. Claiming Earth moves in multiple ways was scientifically radical and theologically dangerous, explaining why Copernicus circulated his ideas privately for decades before publication.
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