I Take History With My Coffee

64: Unseating Earth: Rheticus, Copernicus, and "On the Revolutions"


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 In the spring of 1539, a brilliant 25-year-old mathematician named Georg Joachim Rheticus did something that could have cost him his life: he crossed into Catholic territory where his Lutheran faith was banned, carrying precious books and a determination to meet the man he believed held the key to understanding the cosmos. That man was Nicolaus Copernicus, a 66-year-old Catholic canon who had spent decades secretly developing a revolutionary theory that would change humanity's view of its place in the universe. Their unlikely partnership - bridging religious schisms, a four-decade age gap, and radical new ideas - would lead to the publication of one of the most important scientific works ever written: On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres. This is the story of how diplomatic skill, scholarly dedication, and the quest for scientific truth overcame the divisions of an age to bring a revolutionary idea into the light. 


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Intro Music: Hayden Symphony #39
Outro Music: Vivaldi Concerto for Mandolin and Strings in D

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I Take History With My CoffeeBy Bruce Boyce