True, Galileo was found to hold a heretical heliocentric belief. However, Copernicus came up with the heliocentric theory a century earlier in 1533, and it wasn't kept a secret from the then-current pope: — Bitter Crank
Further, Copernicus' book on the heliocentric system was published around 1543 or so, about the time Copernicus died at age 70 from the effects of a stroke. Maybe Galileo just rubbed his current pope, Urban VIII, the wrong way. — Bitter Crank
But why blame the church for everything? One Claudius Ptolemy is responsible for the long-running geocentric model of 'the universe'. Why don't you blame this Roman Egyptian for setting science back--a millennia and a half!? — Bitter Crank
This might be where your train goes off the rails. Holy Mother Church was never in charge of whatever constitutes the "scientific establishment". Science marched on, whether the pope thought it was heretical or not. Our "natural evolution" had unfolded long before Jesus, Mary, and Joseph came along. — Bitter Crank
Human beings have been a damned, doomed species from the get go. Our Original Sin occurred when we emotional volatile apes added intelligence, curiosity, and blind ambition to our species. After that it was only a matter of time before we would get our hands on clubs, arrows, bullets, and atomic weapons, and gas ourselves with CO2. — Bitter Crank
Sure, much that happened in western culture after the Renaissance (and the Enlightenment) contributed to the situation we are in. Everything from double-entry bookkeeping, the expansion of credit, harnessing steam, global exploration, capitalism, the French Revolution--it all figures in. The history of cultures just can't be reduced to some simplistic explanation like the pope deciding that Galileo's theory was heretical. — Bitter Crank
Or a kind of job security: If you set out to explore something as vast as space, you'll always have something to do, your life will always be directed toward a goal, you'll always have something to be passionate about and to look forward to.It’s the natural human instinct to explore, but I also think it is sometimes the sublimated longing for Heaven. — Wayfarer
So your argument then, is that the trial of Galileo had no effect on the subsequent development of philosophy or science? — counterpunch
Copernicus, 1473–1543, proposed heliocentric system
Galileo, 1564–1642, heliocentric system, moons of Jupiter...
Kepler, 1571–1630, established that the planets' orbits were elliptical
Cassini, 1625–1712, measured Mars' and Jupiter's rotation time; discovered 4 Saturn moons
Huygens, 1629–1695, improved telescope, theory of light, discovered Saturn's moon Titan
Newton, 1643–1727, theory of forces including gravity
Are you a Catholic by any chance? Is it that you're offended on behalf of mother Church - that she could possibly have made an error? Sticking with the infallibility thing, huh? — counterpunch
So you don't see an epistemological evolution of humankind over time; no progress of knowledge from "less and worse" toward "more and better" - that the Church interfered in? Because for me, it seems like they dumped a huge boulder in the epistemological stream in an attempt to block it, but only succeeded in diverting an irresistible force. — counterpunch
If you look at the lives of the four great astronomers who followed Galileo, it would seem that his heresy trial did not bring astronomy to a screeching halt. — Bitter Crank
Galileo demonstrated that we were not the center of the universe. Darwin explained how we evolved from primitive primates (and worse). Freud revealed that we aren't even in charge of our own minds. Etc. These demotions in status meet with resistance. — Bitter Crank
uncontrolled obliteration in the context of the entire planet from nuclear holocausts, germ warfare run amok, etc. — Outlander
As a 'murican (or Terran / Terrestrial / Earthling), what will make me really sit-up and take notice is (if and) when we drop a (constructed in a hard lunar vaccum) AI-driven "fleet" of (cephalopod-like) submersibles through one or all of the frozen carapaces of the watery moons of Ganymede, Enceladus, Europa and/or Callisto to explore those pitch black oceans where 'extraterrestrial life' most probably resides, and maybe also is most abundant, in this solar system. And I hope this happens before I'm too decrepit or decomposed to appreciate the "eureka" moment. — 180 Proof
I would be horrified to have it confirmed that this is the only planet with life, that no where out there is someone doing it better. Just depressing as hell. — Book273
... (if and) when we drop (constructed in a hard lunar vaccum) an AI-driven "fleet" of (cephalopod-like) submersibles through one or all of the frozen carapaces of the watery moons of Ganymede, Enceladus, Europa and/or Callisto to explore those pitch black oceans where 'extraterrestrial life' most probably resides, and maybe also is most abundant, in this solar system ... — 180 Proof
... a few decades from now (and ratcheted-up on such an 'interplanetary network' infrastructure), power utilization – efficiency – and very robust (photonic processor) neural net systems, etc, I suspect, will make "untethered, autonomous smart bots" feasible – perhaps each running many disposable drones in real-time. — 180 Proof
Btw, deep space travel is for machines -- the tinier the better -- Von Neumann self-replicating/nano-fabricators (e.g. Bracewell Probes), and not living organisms (re: hard radiation exposure is too lethal, transport size increases likelihood of hazardous particulate impacts, life-support limitations & extreme durations between destinations, etc which exponentially compound the costs/risks). — 180 Proof
I was in grade school when the Apollo program was moth-balled and then later we space nerds were pacified with the Space Shuttle program to low earth orbit; by the late 1970s it became clear that manned space flight was dead for the foreseeable future, and lower-cost remote-controlled robotic space probes landers & rovers were the future. It wasn't until I was an engineering student in the early 1980s – as well as reading more hard science fiction than "space opera" – that I began to fully comprehend the physics, and thereby economics, of vehicular space exploration and became an advocate of unmanned (and eventually AI-controlled) space missions. Decades later when President Obama (also a child of the Apollo program) officially transitioned NASA to unmanned space exploration, I welcomed the realism of NASA's new focus.Ad astra ex machina? — 180 Proof
I think it would be extremely extraordinary if life existed only on Earth. — baker
UK Royal Astronomer, Sir Martin Rees and I seem to be on the same page (more or less):Humans (i.e. nano/genetic-augmented not "baseline") will become extraterrestrials, I imagine, once our machines have both sufficient intelligence and technological capability to mega-engineer heavily shielded, solar & fusion-powered (O'Neill / McKendree cylinder) space habitats from space-based resources & raw materials. Maybe (conservatively guesstimating) sometime during the latter half of the 22nd century. — 180 Proof
Musk and my late colleague Stephen Hawking envisaged that the first “settlers” on Mars would be followed by literally millions of others. But this is a dangerous delusion. Coping with the climate crisis is a doddle compared to terraforming Mars. Nowhere in our solar system offers an environment even as clement as the top of Everest. There will be no “planet B” for most of us. But I still want to cheer on those pioneer “Martians” because they will have a pivotal role in shaping what happens in the 22nd century and beyond.
This is because the pioneer settlers – ill-adapted to their new habitats – will have a more compelling incentive than those of us on Earth to literally redesign themselves. They’ll harness the super-powerful genetic and cyborg technologies that will be developed in coming decades. These techniques will be, one hopes, heavily regulated on Earth – but those on Mars will be far beyond the clutches of the regulators. We should wish them luck in modifying their progeny to adapt to alien environments. This might be the first step towards divergence into a new species.
potentially support — Wayfarer
What about life needs supporting anyways? — schopenhauer1
Spaceship Earth — Wayfarer
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