Neha Patil (Editor)

The Copernican Revolution (book)

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Language
  
English

ISBN
  
0-674-17103-9

Author
  
Thomas Kuhn

Subject
  
History of astronomy

Pages
  
297

Originally published
  
1957

Page count
  
297

Country
  
United States of America

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Media type
  
Print (Hardcover and Paperback)

Similar
  
Thomas Kuhn books, Cosmology books

The Copernican Revolution is a 1957 book by Thomas Kuhn, in which Kuhn provides an analysis of the Copernican Revolution, documenting the pre-Ptolemaic understanding through the Ptolemaic system and its variants until the eventual acceptance of the Keplerian system.

Kuhn argues that the Ptolemaic system provided broader appeal than a simple astronomical system but also became intertwined in broader philosophical and theological beliefs. Kuhn argues that this broader appeal made it more difficult for other systems to be proposed.

Summation

Kuhn summarized at the end of The Copernican Revolution, citing the permanent achievements of Copernicus and Newton, while comparing the incommensurability of Newtonian physics with Aristotelian concepts that preceded the then new physics. Kuhn also noted that discoveries, such as that produced by Newton, were not in agreement with the prevailing world view during his lifetime.

References

The Copernican Revolution (book) Wikipedia