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Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 1983

Pages: 203-225

ISBN (Hardback): 9789048183760

Full citation:

Hillel Levine, "Paradise not surrendered", in: Epistemology, methodology, and the social sciences, Berlin, Springer, 1983

Paradise not surrendered

Jewish reactions to Copernicus and the growth of modern science

Hillel Levine

pp. 203-225

in: Robert S. Cohen, Mark W. Wartofsky (eds), Epistemology, methodology, and the social sciences, Berlin, Springer, 1983

Abstract

Copernicus's sixteenth century formulation of a heliocentric cosmos, elaborated during the next one hundred and fifty years through the work of Bruno, Kepler, Galileo and Newton, has been considered a turning point not only in astronomy but in the growth of scientific knowledge and in the history of ideas. The shift from belief in the well-ordered cosmos in which the earth occupies the central position to notions of an expanded universe in which man and his familiar world are relegated to an insignificant corner played a paramount role in the process whereby, as Alexandre Koyré put it, "human or at least European minds underwent a deep revolution which changed the very framework and patterns of our thinking."1 Even while it was still a subject of debate within astronomic coteries, poets such as Donne and Milton intuited the broader social and religious implications of the altered conceptions of the planetary arrangements.

Cited authors

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 1983

Pages: 203-225

ISBN (Hardback): 9789048183760

Full citation:

Hillel Levine, "Paradise not surrendered", in: Epistemology, methodology, and the social sciences, Berlin, Springer, 1983