登陆注册
4615700000011

第11章 COPERNICUS(2)

The first of the great discoveries which Copernicus made relates to the rotation of the earth on its axis. That general diurnal movement, by which the stars and all other celestial bodies appear to be carried completely round the heavens once every twenty-four hours, had been accounted for by Ptolemy on the supposition that the apparent movements were the real movements. As we have already seen, Ptolemy himself felt the extraordinary difficulty involved in the supposition that so stupendous a fabric as the celestial sphere should spin in the way supposed. Such movements required that many of the stars should travel with almost inconceivable velocity.

Copernicus also saw that the daily rising and setting of the heavenly bodies could be accounted for either by the supposition that the celestial sphere moved round and that the earth remained at rest, or by the supposition that the celestial sphere was at rest while the earth turned round in the opposite direction. He weighed the arguments on both sides as Ptolemy had done, and, as the result of his deliberations, Copernicus came to an opposite conclusion from Ptolemy. To Copernicus it appeared that the difficulties attending the supposition that the celestial sphere revolved, were vastly greater than those which appeared so weighty to Ptolemy as to force him to deny the earth's rotation.

Copernicus shows clearly how the observed phenomena could be accounted for just as completely by a rotation of the earth as by a rotation of the heavens. He alludes to the fact that, to those on board a vessel which is moving through smooth water, the vessel itself appears to be at rest, while the objects on shore seem to be moving past. If, therefore, the earth were rotating uniformly, we dwellers upon the earth, oblivious of our own movement, would wrongly attribute to the stars the displacement which was actually the consequence of our own motion.

Copernicus saw the futility of the arguments by which Ptolemy had endeavoured to demonstrate that a revolution of the earth was impossible. It was plain to him that there was nothing whatever to warrant refusal to believe in the rotation of the earth. In his clear-sightedness on this matter we have specially to admire the sagacity of Copernicus as a natural philosopher. It had been urged that, if the earth moved round, its motion would not be imparted to the air, and that therefore the earth would be uninhabitable by the terrific winds which would be the result of our being carried through the air. Copernicus convinced himself that this deduction was preposterous. He proved that the air must accompany the earth, just as his coat remains round him, notwithstanding the fact that he is walking down the street. In this way he was able to show that all a priori objections to the earth's movements were absurd, and therefore he was able to compare together the plausibilities of the two rival schemes for explaining the diurnal movement.

[PLATE: FRAUENBURG, FROM AN OLD PRINT.]

Once the issue had been placed in this form, the result could not be long in doubt. Here is the question: Which is it more likely-- that the earth, like a grain of sand at the centre of a mighty globe, should turn round once in twenty-four hours, or that the whole of that vast globe should complete a rotation in the opposite direction in the same time? Obviously, the former is far the more simple supposition. But the case is really much stronger than this. Ptolemy had supposed that all the stars were attached to the surface of a sphere. He had no ground whatever for this supposition, except that otherwise it would have been well-nigh impossible to have devised a scheme by which the rotation of the heavens around a fixed earth could have been arranged. Copernicus, however, with the just instinct of a philosopher, considered that the celestial sphere, however convenient from a geometrical point of view, as a means of representing apparent phenomena, could not actually have a material existence. In the first place, the existence of a material celestial sphere would require that all the myriad stars should be at exactly the same distances from the earth. Of course, no one will say that this or any other arbitrary disposition of the stars is actually impossible, but as there was no conceivable physical reason why the distances of all the stars from the earth should be identical, it seemed in the very highest degree improbable that the stars should be so placed.

同类推荐
  • 太上老君说补谢八阳经

    太上老君说补谢八阳经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 50 Bab Ballads

    50 Bab Ballads

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 梅花道人遗墨

    梅花道人遗墨

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 根本说一切有部苾刍尼毗奈耶

    根本说一切有部苾刍尼毗奈耶

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Beowulf

    Beowulf

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 遁甲演义

    遁甲演义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 宠物情人

    宠物情人

    当一个看惯了娱乐圈人情冷暖的超级巨星只剩三个月就要失明,情绪失控的背后是因为看似风光的一切即将失去,他参加了一档真人秀来到一个鸡飞狗跳的导盲犬训练中心遇到了自闭却善良的女孩,这是一个关于夏天、萌犬、温暖、治愈的故事。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 日本童话集

    日本童话集

    本书中的童话和传说故事来源众多,其中数篇选自日本神话集《古事记》,另有多篇记载着每代人的童年时光,由保姆或学生凭着依稀记忆诉说而成。书中诸多人物已成为日本艺术舞台上倍受欢迎的形象。在本书完成汇编前,多篇童话已被译为英文,经由多种形式流传。其余童话可能较晚进入英文读者的视野。格雷丝·詹姆斯,作家,1882年生于日本东京,1965年卒于意大利罗马。作品以儿童文学及日本民俗为主。除了《日本童话集》之外,还著有《约翰与玛丽》儿童冒险系列。
  • 王小波全集(第三卷)

    王小波全集(第三卷)

    小波的作品一直盛行不衰,王小波的小说在世界文学之林中创造出属于他的美,这美就像一束强光,刺穿了时间的阻隔,启迪了一代又一代刚刚开始识字读书的青年的心灵。其次,这个现象也表明,王小波批评的对象有些还活得好好的。而到今天,这些话语、这些思想仍是我们的社会所需要的。我们从王小波的长盛不衰只能得出这样的结论:在中国,自由主义理念的传播还任重而道远。王小波所虚构的艺术之美,以及他通过对现实世界的批评所传播的自由主义理念,已经在这个世界的文化和思想宝库中占据了一席之地,虽然并没有一个像诺贝尔文学奖之类的证书来印证这一点,但是,我们相信,时间就是他作品价值的证书。
  • 虎妹孟加拉

    虎妹孟加拉

    住在美国的富二代玉叶喜爱猛兽,她收养了一只老虎,投入很深感情,而和人的情感却很疏离。小说讲述了中国新一代青年的另一种困惑和焦虑,人与人,人与动物的复杂关系,题材独特,细节精彩,值得关注。老树驾着银色老丰田,从伯克利北边山腰林间的家里一路飞驰而来,刚下高速就连遇两个红灯。情急中,平时绝少冒脏话的老树忍不住连骂了几声娘。他盯着高挂在前方路中间的那团鲜红,双眼发花。暗夜里,路口交通灯的控制程序将优先权给了横向交叉的大道,弄得红灯一亮,通往奥克兰山上的车子简直要等到永远。
  • 有病治病,无病防身

    有病治病,无病防身

    做自己的健康顾问,自己就是最好的医生。俯拾之间即是强身保健妙法,举手投足尽享不生病的自在。叩齿咽津、耳压通经、净血排毒、食疗方、辨病治病绝招……最简单、最实用,让你在不知不觉中拥有不生病的智慧,享受健康快乐的生活。增强体质,享受不生病的自在,“武器”就在你手中。
  • 帮扶苏当皇帝

    帮扶苏当皇帝

    只是因为上书反对自家老爹,就立刻被贬去边疆做监军,荷华表示,做儿子做到扶苏这个份上,也是醉了。什么?系统君你说我的主线任务就是要帮这个“史上第一倒霉太子”当上皇帝?难度太高了吧?!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 影帝的天命少女

    影帝的天命少女

    相亲是被逼着去的,算命是被逼着算的,综艺是被逼着上的,任务也是被逼着接的。人前女王高冷霸气,人后无赖撒泼打滚。出门必上热搜你怪我咯!好吧,这全都是天命的错,谁让它有那么强大的副作用呢。天命:呵,凭什么让我背锅。
  • 百战奇略(中华国学经典)

    百战奇略(中华国学经典)

    《百战奇略》是一部以论述作战原则和作战方法为主旨的古代军事理论专著。不仅继承和发展厂我国古代的军事思想,而且搜集和存录了大量古代战争战例资料。它搜集了自春秋迄五代1645年间散见于21种史籍的各种类型的战例百则,并且这百则战例,大多都有战争发生的时间和资料来源,为后人检索战争资料,研究中国古代军事史,提供了极大方便。
  • 读心兵王

    读心兵王

    兵王重生,绑系统,有神功,能读心,会医术,擅长撩妹和被妹撩……简单粗暴,谁敢不服?(新书《都市终极神医》已发布)