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Sunday, June 26, 2011

Galileo By Mitch Stokes

  Despite a debilitating life-long illness, Galileo changed physics from a purely philosophical subject into one involving
 mathematics and careful observation.  But his innovations didn’t stop there.  He also challenged beliefs about the very
 structure of the universe, arguing that the earth moves around the sun at dizzying speeds.  And, using the telescope,
 Galileo showed philosophers that the sun, moon, and stars aren’t made of an ethereal and unchangeable “fifth element”
 but are composed of the same stuff that ordinary terrestrial objects are. 
      But suggesting such dramatic changes made philosophers uncomfortable.  And because philosophers were unable to
refute Galileo on their own playing field, they sought help from theologians, sending Galileo head long into a conflict
 with church officials.  Galileo appealed to church fathers like St. Augustine to prevent the theologians from making what
 he saw as a tragic mistake.  But intrigues, personality clashes, and misunderstandings led to Galileo’s famous trial and
 condemnation, events misinterpreted as showing a fundamental conflict between science and religion.

I received this book free to share my honest opinion.

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