Title page
of Copernicus' On the Revolutions (De revolutionibus orbium
coelestium).
The book was
published in 1543 in Nuremberg as Copernicus lay on his deathbed,
and was dedicated to Pope Paul III. The second edition was printed in
Basel in 1566, and the third in Amsterdam in 1617.
Copernicus's book did not create controversy in the years
following its publication.
Its main idea has been in circulation
among astronomers for over 30 years, and a preview of the book's
content,
the Narratio Prima of Georg Joachim Rheticus, had been published
in 1540.
The Copernican planetary model
was absorbed and commented upon
in the contemporary technical astronomical literature, notably
by Michael Maestlin and the leading Jesuit astronomer,
Christoph Clavius. In 1551 Erasmus
Rheinhold (1511-1553) published the Prutenic Tables of planetary
positions, which were based on the Copernican model
and enjoyed quite a bit of success.
Religious authorities at first
did not react to book's publication.
This was likely due, at least in part,
to the addition of an anonymous preface, written by the
publication's overseer Andreas Osiander (1498-1552), to the effect
that Copernicus' planetary model should be treated as an hypothesis
to facilitate the computation of planetary positions.
This situation was to change once
Galileo began his so-called Copernican
Crusade.
De Revolutionibus was suspended pending minor corrections
following the 1616 Roman decree against Copernicanism.
Following the controversy over the world systems, culminating with the
publication of Galileo's
Dialogues and his subsequent
trial by the Roman Inquisition,
the book was banned, and remained on the Index of prohibited
books until 1835.
Bibliography:
Copernicus, N., On the Revolutions, edited and translated by E. Rosen,
The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992.
Kuhn, T.S. 1957, The Copernican Revolution, Harvard University Press.
Gingerich, O. 1993, The Eye of Heaven, American Institute of Physics.
Copernicus
Tycho
Kepler
Galileo
Clavius
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