Galileo's Vision
Four hundred years ago, the Italian scientist looked into space and changed our view of the universe
- By David Zax
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
So when Galileo, then 45 years old, turned his telescope to the heavens in the fall of 1609, it was a small act of dissent. He saw that the Milky Way was in fact "a congeries of innumberable stars," more even than his tired hand could draw. He saw the pockmarked surface of the moon, which, far from being perfectly spherical, was in fact "full of cavities and prominences, being not unlike the face of the Earth." Soon he would note that Jupiter had four moons of its own and that Venus had moonlike phases, sometimes waxing to a disk, sometimes waning to a crescent. He later saw imperfections in the Sun. Each discovery drew Aristotle's system further into question and lent ever more support to the dangerously revolutionary view that Galileo had privately come to hold—set out just a half-century earlier by a Polish astronomer named Nicolaus Copernicus—that Earth traveled around the Sun.
"I give infinite thanks to God," Galileo wrote to the powerful Florentine statesman Belisario Vinta in January of 1610, "who has been pleased to make me the first observer of marvelous things."
Like many figures whose names have endured, Galileo wasn't shy about seeking fame. His genius for astronomy was matched by a genius for self-promotion, and soon, by virtue of several canny decisions, Galileo's own star was rising.
In Tuscany, the name Medici had been synonymous with power for centuries. The Medici family acquired and wielded it through various means—public office, predatory banking and alliances with the powerful Catholic Church. Conquest of territory was a method favored in the late 16th century, when the head of the family, Cosimo I, seized many regions neighboring Florence. The family took a keen interest in science and its potential military applications.
The Medicis may have needed scientists, but scientists—and especially Galileo—needed the Medicis even more. With a mistress, three children and an extended family to support, and knowing that his questioning of Aristotelian science was controversial, Galileo shrewdly decided to court the family's favor. In 1606, he dedicated a book about a geometric and military compass to his student Cosimo II, the family's 16-year-old heir apparent.
Then, in 1610, on the occasion of his publication of The Starry Messenger, which detailed his telescopic findings, Galileo dedicated to Cosimo II something far greater than a book: the very moons of Jupiter. "Behold, therefore, four stars reserved for your illustrious name," wrote Galileo. "...Indeed it appears that the Maker of the Stars himself, by clear arguments, admonished me to call these new planets by the illustrious name of Your Highness before all others." (Galileo chose the name "Cosmian stars," but Cosimo's office requested "Medicean stars" instead, and the alteration was duly made.) "The Starry Messenger was a job application," says Owen Gingerich, an astronomer and science historian at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics—and, sure enough, Galileo got just what he had been seeking: the Medicis' patronage.
He could hardly have hoped for better patrons, as the Franklin exhibit made clear. It included scores of intricately wrought instruments from the family's collection. The fanciful names of the ingenious contraptions hint at their function and describe their forms: nautical planispheres, gimbaled compasses, horary quadrants, armillary spheres. One of the oldest surviving astrolabes, an instrument for calculating the position of the Sun and stars, was on exhibit, as was a set of brass and steel compasses believed to have belonged to Michelangelo, another Medici beneficiary. (Galileo's telescope and the rest of the collection have since returned to Florence.)
Though capable of measuring the world in various ways and to various ends—determining the caliber of projectiles, surveying land, aiding navigation—some of the instruments were never used, having been collected for the very purpose to which museums put them today: display. A few, such as a compass that collapses into the shape of a dagger, demonstrate the era's alliance of science and power. But they also illustrate its blending of science and art—the gleaming artifacts rival works of sculpture. They tell, too, of a growing awareness that, as Galileo said, nature was a grand book ("questo grandissimo libro") written in the language of mathematics.
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Comments (9)
I just wanted to say really quick that I am in the middle of working on a huge project and this article really helped me end some confusion I had. :)
Posted by Jade Evans on October 2,2012 | 05:55 PM
This is very interesting. I guess, that would be the best telescopes for sale
Posted by bushidodadon475 on July 29,2011 | 05:37 PM
Check the Scriptures for yourselves, people. Nowhere does Galileo contradict SCRIPTURE! He just contradicted Aristotle,and Greek thought, that was adopted by the Roman Catholic Church at the time. Get the facts straight,PLEASE! That is in the Scriptures of the Holy Bible. I challenge you to find out, using accurate to the original language scriptural text, anywhere the HOLY BIBLE contradicts Galileo.
Knowing your prejudices, I probably just wasted typing time here!
Posted by Dawn Mertz on June 1,2010 | 03:51 PM
As an alumni of Galileo High School in San Francisco, CA, I thoroughly enjoyed and appreciated the article by David Zax. I forwarded the information regarding this article to my former high school in hopes that present day students will have an opportunity to learn a bit more about his life and discoveries. Galileo School has, by the way, the distinction of having an observatory as part of its structure.
Posted by Monica Kirkland on September 16,2009 | 01:37 PM
This article really impress me on how a scientist had to struggle with an old rigid faith. it is awfully inspiring...
Posted by Dion on September 13,2009 | 09:21 AM
Let us celebrate Galileo, the natural world and the scientific method on Galileo day. A holiday on leap day, once every 4 years.
Posted by sam gardner on September 10,2009 | 11:09 PM
The struggle Galileo had with his observations that contra-dicted a 1000 year tradition brought to mind an older "truth" that is only recently being challenged. And while the position of man in the universe is certainly more basic, the site of the earliest world war remains fascinating. Iman Jacob Wilkins' lifetime of studying Homer's writings convinced him that the so-called Trojan War did not take place on the shores of the Aegean Sea between Greeks and modern-day Anatolians as classical scholars have taught for thousands of years. By his study of the geography and descriptions within Homer's writings, Wilkins concludes that Homer indeed describes a real war that took place (he believes) between European Celts and native Celts in East Anglia, England. Two clearly repeated references in Homer's Iliad refer to the "grey waters" on which the ships sailed and the "tides" the sailors encountered. After watching two movies recently shot in the northern Aegean, it is obvious that anyone describing those waters would label them "blue or turquoise or green" but certainly not "grey." And there are little in the way of tides in the Mediterranean. I do not know where the Trojan War took place, but I think I know where it did not. I wonder if it will take another 300 years for scholars to question seriously the established "truth."
PFM
Posted by Philip F Myers Jr on August 25,2009 | 10:53 AM
Found this article beneficial and interesting to read.The lucidity of style impressed me.
Posted by Sujata Roy on August 2,2009 | 04:24 AM
This is a very interesting article about Galileo and his life. Mr. David Zax should be proud of his writing skills.
Posted by Dennis Green on July 26,2009 | 01:24 AM