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Next 136-102 Darwinism: Man, Woman and Nature in the History of Biology

 136-101 History of Astronomy

Credit Points

12.5 1st year

Coordinator

Dr Keith Hutchison

Semester

1

Contact

Three hours of lectures and tutorials a week

Subject Description

This unit examines a dramatic change in European conceptions of the universe that took place during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. In the Middle Ages, humanity saw itself as occupying a unique Earth, at the centre of a finite hierarchical universe, and the focus of God's attention. In the sixteenth century, the astronomer Copernicus proposed that the Sun was at the centre of the universe - which the Earth orbited the Sun as one of the planets. A few astronomers took his idea seriously, and eventually managed to convert the educated world to the Copernican theory. With the idea that the Earth was just another planet came the idea that the Sun was just another star, and also the modern conception of space as effectively infinite, plus the possibility that life existed elsewhere. What made people change their view of the universe so drastically? How good was the evidence produced by Copernicus' followers? Were there other reasons, perhaps religious or political, for accepting or opposing the new cosmology? Why did people care so greatly whether the Earth moved? These are the sorts of questions which are central to the course.

Assessment

Written work not exceeding 4000 words together with a 3-hour examination. Exemption from the examination may be granted on the basis of the written work and/or a class test late in the semester.

Prescribed Texts

Departmental Course Notes.

  • Kuhn T S, The Copernican Revolution.


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