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Scientific Revolution What was it? • Changes in the way Europeans thought, using REASON – Systematic doubt (“Prove it!”) – Empirical, sensory verification – Abstraction of human knowledge into separate sciences – View that world works like a machine When was it? • Like the Renaissance, no set beginning date – – – – Newton (1700s)? Galileo (1600s)? Da Vinci (1500s)? Earlier (re-discovery of Aristotle, in 1200s)? Why did it happen? • Trade with Islam brought Europeans the works of Aristotle • Development of Scholasticism – 1100s-1500s – resolve contradictions beteewn church, ancients thru Aristotlean deductive logic • Alchemy (prim. Chemistry) • Humanism – Introduction of Greek (Plato) classics, to Europe – Ultimately led to Prot. Reformation Astronomy: The Greeks • Most believed in a Earth centered (“geocentric”) universe – Look at the stars… – Cycles! – Problem w/ geocentric: planets moved in circles, but also moved backwards (precession) – Problem w/ heliocentric: if Sun at center, Earth moves 1000s of MPH (jump up – where land?) Precession (Epicycles) Astronomy: Copernicus (1473-1543) • In year of his death, published On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres • Proposed sun centered (“heliocentric”) universe Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) • • • Proved orbits were elliptical, not circular His model perfectly predicted planetary motions His book, New Astronomy, inspired Galileo Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) • Referred to as the “Father of Modern Astronomy” • First to use telescope to observe the sky • Masterwork: Dialogues on the Two Chief Systems of the World • Written in style of a conversation, it insisted universe operated along mathematical principles Galileo and the Church • Galileo, a professor, taught his students of his findings • In 1616, Cardinal Roberto Bellarmino personally ordered Galileo NOT to teach the Copernican system • In 1632, he published “Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems”, a criticism of the Geocentric model • In 1632, he was ordered to appear before the Inquisition, accused of heresy Galileo and the Inquisition • Why did the Church care about Galileo? – Psalms 93: “the world is firmly established, it cannot be moved” – Psalms 104: “the LORD set the earth on its foundations; it can never be moved” – Ecclesiastes 1: “and the sun rises and sets, and returns to its place” • In his Dialogues, Galileo personally offended the Pope, a former supporter Decision of the Inquisition • Galileo was required to recant, or deny, his heliocentric beliefs; this was considered heretical • Galileo was ordered imprisoned; later, he was put under house arrest • His “Dialogue” was banned, and any further writing of his was forbidden Scientific Method • Francis Bacon (15611626) advocated inductive thinking – Observe natural phenomena – Derive general principles to explain observations • His idea led to the formal scientific method – Gather evidence – Collect additional data through experimentation – Test hypothesis Isaac Newton (1643-1727) • English physicist, natural scientist, astronomer, mathematician • Believed in “clockwork universe” • 1687 Masterwork = The Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy (known as Principia Mathematica) – – – – Universe was mechanistic Universe explained thru math Laid out attraction of gravity Laid out 3 laws of motion Biology • Antony van Leeuwenhoek (16321723) (“Father of microbiology”) – Use of microscope (up to 500x!) to examine plants, animals – Named cells • Carolus Linnaeus (1707-1778) – Systema Naturae: catalogued all creatures in a system Chemistry • While people were discovering chemical reactions, no one could explain how they worked • Henry Cavendish: discovered hydrogen • Joseph Priestley: discovered oxygen • Antoine Lavoisier: law of conservation of mass • With these (& other) discoveries, Europeans began moving away from belief that all matter was made of 4 elements (Fire, Air, Water, Earth) Electricity • Stephen Gray, 1729: proved electricity could be transmitted through metal wires • 1745: Leyden jar (first electrical storage device, aka…) • Ben Franklin, 1749: lightning = electricity Medicine Dissection of human cadaver by Belgian physician Andreas Vesalius (1514-1564) • Dissections led to investigation of body – – – – Anatomy Circulation of blood Inoculation (live virus) Vaccination (dead virus) • Proposal that body was a natural system, followed predictable and rational ways • Man was mechanistic! The End Newton’s apple tree