Page 4 - A Brief History of Time - Stephen Hawking
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A Brief History of Time - Stephen Hawking... Chapter 1
Figure 1:1
The planets themselves moved on smaller circles attached to their respective spheres in order to account for
their rather complicated observed paths in the sky. The outermost sphere carried the so-called fixed stars,
which always stay in the same positions relative to each other but which rotate together across the sky. What
lay beyond the last sphere was never made very clear, but it certainly was not part of mankind’s observable
universe.
Ptolemy’s model provided a reasonably accurate system for predicting the positions of heavenly bodies in the
sky. But in order to predict these positions correctly, Ptolemy had to make an assumption that the moon
followed a path that sometimes brought it twice as close to the earth as at other times. And that meant that the
moon ought sometimes to appear twice as big as at other times! Ptolemy recognized this flaw, but nevertheless
his model was generally, although not universally, accepted. It was adopted by the Christian church as the
picture of the universe that was in accordance with Scripture, for it had the great advantage that it left lots of
room outside the sphere of fixed stars for heaven and hell.
A simpler model, however, was proposed in 1514 by a Polish priest, Nicholas Copernicus. (At first, perhaps for
fear of being branded a heretic by his church, Copernicus circulated his model anonymously.) His idea was that
the sun was stationary at the center and that the earth and the planets moved in circular orbits around the sun.
Nearly a century passed before this idea was taken seriously. Then two astronomers – the German, Johannes
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