Galileo, Reconsidered
The first biography of Galileo Galilei resurfaces and offers a new theory as to why the astronomer was put on trial
- By Mike Price
- Smithsonian.com, August 12, 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
Nick Wilding, an associate professor of history at Georgia State University, heard the libraries were up for auction and immediately called the Sotheby's representative in charge of the affair. Wilding asked him, doubtfully, if in the collection he had chanced across a particular title: Galilaeus Galilaeus His Life: In Five Books, by Thomas Salusbury. "To my surprise, he said, 'Why, yes, actually. I've got it right here,'" Wilding recalls. He hopped on the next plane to London.
Perusing the tattered tome at Sotheby's auction house, Wilding became the first person to study Salusbury's mysterious biography of Galileo in almost 200 years. Inside the timeworn document itself, Wilding discovered clues that allowed him to piece together its elusive, seemingly cursed history.
Wilding discovered that the manuscript itself solves one mystery: why did this copy survive the Great Fire when its siblings were burned? The book is incomplete. It is missing a chunk in the middle and ends abruptly, mid-sentence, in the middle of the final of five books. And tellingly, some of the pages are full of proofreader's marks. For Wilding, these clues point to one conclusion: The copy that exists today was an incomplete version taken home by a proofreader, away from the fire's epicenter, and spared from the brunt of the disaster.
The text's curious state—unfinished and annotated—provided Wilding with insights into the overlapping worlds inhabited by Galileo, Salusbury and the publishing industry. Like many works of the time, it has its share of inconsistencies, partly because Galileo's apprentice Viviani controlled the firsthand evidence and Salusbury had to rely on secondary sources.
"Quite a lot of it is wrong," Wilding says. "But that makes it even more interesting for historians because you have to explain the mistakes as well as the facts." For example, Salusbury parrots rumors of the time that Galileo was an illegitimate child, and that his wife tore up many of his scientific papers at the request of a nefarious priest. Modern scholars know both claims are false; in fact, Galileo never even married. But these inaccuracies point to the rampant anti-Catholic, misogynistic sentiments of many in the Italian scientific circle at the time, Wilding says. "For them, it was, 'Bad priest! Stupid women!'"
But the most striking finding might not be an error at all. Salusbury presents a novel motivation for Galileo's infamous trial, Wilding says. If people know anything about Galileo's trial, it's usually that the church disapproved of his advocacy of the idea that the earth orbits the sun. In many people's minds, Galileo is a kind of martyr figure for science and a cautionary tale against allowing religious authority to trump scientific inquiry.
"There's been a very long discussion about the trial—what happened, who won—and to some extent that's still going on today," Wilding says. "The usual interpretation is that this was the great rift between science and religion. You've got this arrogant scientist up against a dogmatic church, and in that head-ramming, the pope's going to win."
Not that modern scholars give much credence to the traditional science-vs.-religion interpretation of the trial. Most Galilean researchers today agree that politics played a much bigger role than religious closed-mindedness, but there is spirited disagreement about the specifics. Some think the pope was angry at being parodied by Galileo's character Simplicius in Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems. Other scholars have suggested that church leaders felt Galileo had tricked them into granting him a license to write the book by not revealing its Copernican leanings. But "Salusbury's explanation is kind of refreshingly new," Wilding says.
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Related topics: Astronomers Famous Scientists Astronomy
Additional Sources
"The Return of Thomas Salusbury's Life of Galileo (1664)," by Nick Wilding. The British Journal for the History of Science (2008), 41:241-265.









Comments (11)
This article was extremely helpful to me, as I am doing a full biography on Galileo Galilei. It has a very unique and interesting perspective! Thank you for such a wonderful source of information.
Posted by Chandler Bieber on December 20,2011 | 10:11 AM
I'm having trouble in finding any truth behind this article. I'm currently wokring on my ninth grade end of course term paper and my quest is to decipher, or a least make an attempt to decipher, the reasons for Galileos persecution. Although this article presents information from quite an interesting viewpoint, it is embeded in very little factual foundation and I will most likely not use as a tool for any further research.
Posted by Abigail Juarez on April 2,2009 | 10:17 PM
Considering the current mixture of politics and religion in the political climate of the U.S., who is to say that the reasons for the persecution of Galileo weren't political. There is nothing that prevents that classic case of irrationalism from being both religious and political. After all, the essential end goal of politics and religion is the same. Ruling people. And, what better way to accomplish that end than to combine them.
Posted by John on August 24,2008 | 11:08 AM
What a wonderful article. For those of us who are writers who spend years researching great historic people of the past it makes one wonder what else might be hidden and undocumented in some of these old private libraries in Britain, Italy, France Ireland and even in America. Thanks quite fascinating. Basil Walsh, Delray Beach, Florida
Posted by Basil Walsh on August 23,2008 | 11:07 AM
This is not just a case of religion vs science. It's a refusal to accept new ideas in science as well. When William Harvey first announced that the heart circulated blood, he was chastised severely by other doctors as well who believed Galen's idea that the liver turned food into blood.
Posted by Louis Steiner on August 22,2008 | 03:44 PM
Great article; Thanks! I am getting ready to do a planetarium show that deals with the great Galileo and others of his time; This article helps.
Posted by Norman J. Dean on August 21,2008 | 09:51 PM
Searching for single-factor causation is a waste of time. This is too complex for simple explanation. eb
Posted by E.Beechert on August 21,2008 | 06:30 PM
Yet another example of the most corrupt organization, the Catholic Church, wielding undue influence over those who disagree. A practice that continues to flout common sense even today. Galileo may have had much more to offer mankind, had he been left to follow his on course without impediment.
Posted by David V Deal Jr on August 21,2008 | 05:36 PM
Interesting; would like to know the true reason bbf
Posted by Blanche B Fries on August 21,2008 | 05:14 PM
There is nothing new in the Galileo biography by Thomas Salusbury, except a crude suggestion that is nothing more than an estimation. As with many other approaches or biographies, whenever an attempt is initiated to reduce the events of and about the Galileo trial to one specific cause - and thereby eliminating the importance of all other causes - the mismatch of the historical reality is almost predicted. The Galileo trial is a complex affair in a complex multi-characteristic environment. That there are important political aspects to take into consideration is a long known fact since the publications of SOLLE (1980). There are political, historical, religious, theological, scientifical and personal aspects that in their interactive complexity form the conditions of the Galileo trial.
Posted by Matthias Dorn on August 21,2008 | 04:11 PM
I was born exactly 413 years after this genius and he's one of my heros!
Posted by Phil E. Drifter on August 20,2008 | 09:09 AM
To quote Stravinsky in his critique of the various performances of his startling "Rite of Spring," when he came to Leonard Bernstein's, the one word: "Wow"
Posted by Leonard Marcus on August 19,2008 | 01:30 PM
Interesting story. Why could the present owner not be contacted with the help of Sotheby's to ask his permission to copy the book?
Posted by alex roth on August 18,2008 | 02:33 AM
"Duke of Medici"???? There's no such critter. Cosimo de' Medici and his descendants were Grand Dukes of Tuscany.
Posted by corrigens on August 17,2008 | 11:18 PM