Nicolaus Copernicus.
Born on Feb. 19, 1473, in Thorn (Torun), Poland, Nicolaus
Copernicus was destined to become, through the publication of his heliocentric
theory 70 years later, one of the seminal figures in the history of scientific
thought. The son of a prosperous merchant, he was raised after his father's
death by a maternal uncle, who enabled him to enter the University of Krakow,
then famous for its mathematics, philosophy, and astronomy curriculum. This
experience stimulated the young Copernicus to study further liberal arts at
Bologna (1496-1501), medicine at Padua, and law at the University of Ferrara,
from which he emerged in 1503 with the doctorate in canon law. Shortly afterward
he returned to Poland and eventually settled permanently at the cathedral in
Frauenberg (Frombork), less than 100 miles from his birthplace. Through his
uncle's influence he had been elected a canon of the church even before his
journey to Italy. Copernicus not only faithfully performed his ecclesiastical
duties, but also practiced medicine, wrote a treatise on monetary reform, and
turned his attention to a subject in which he had long been
interested--astronomy.
By May 1514 Copernicus had written and discreetly circulated in manuscript
his Commentariolus, the first outline of those arguments eventually
substantiated in De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (On the Revolutions of the
Heavenly Spheres, 1543). This classic work challenged the geocentric cosmology
that had been dogmatically accepted since the time of Aristotle. In direct
opposition to Aristotle and to the 2d-century astronomer Ptolemy, who enunciated
the details of the geocentric system based on the celestial phenomena,
Copernicus proposed that a rotating Earth revolving with the other planets about
a stationary central Sun could account in a simpler way for the same observed
phenomena of the daily rotation of the heavens, the annual movement of the Sun
through the ecliptic, and the periodic retrograde motion of the planets.
Anticipated in various aspects by the Pythagoreans and ARISTARCHUS OF SAMOS
(with whom he was familiar), and by the Muslim astronomer Ibn al-Shatir and
certain Christian writers (whose ideas there is no conclusive evidence he knew),
the new theory that Copernicus espoused in De revolutionibus exhibits a peculiar
mixture of both radical and conservative elements. In the midst of his radical
reordering of the structure of the universe, Copernicus still adhered to the
ancient Aristotelian doctrines of solid celestial spheres and perfect circular
motion of heavenly bodies, and he held essentially intact the entire
Aristotelian physics of motion. Moreover, with significant innovations, he clung
to the Ptolemaic representation of planetary motion by means of complicated
combinations of circles called epicycles. Although Copernicus realized that his
theory implied an enormous increase in the size of the universe, he declined to
pronounce it infinite.
These aspects of the Copernican treatise do not mitigate the novelty or the
impact of the final theory, or the author's firm conviction that his system was
an accurate representation of physical reality. Rather, they indicate the scope
of the work that lay ahead and that was effectively addressed in the next
century when Kepler determined the ellipticity of planetary orbits, Galileo
formulated his new concept of motion, and Newton espoused his theory of
universal gravitation.
The enunciation of the heliocentric theory by Copernicus marked the beginning
of the scientific revolution, and of a new view of a greatly enlarged universe.
It was a shift away from the comfortable anthropocentrism of the ancient and
medieval world. A scientific theory that reflected so profoundly on humanity was
not welcomed by the church, and it was only after the publication (1540) of
Narratio prima (A First Account), by an enthusiastic supporter named Rheticus,
that the aged Copernicus agreed to commit to print the theory already outlined
in 1514. An undocumented, but often repeated, story holds that Copernicus
received a printed copy of his treatise on his deathbed. He died on May 24,
1543.
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