Skip to main content
Revolution of Copernicus 
 
How did Copernicus’ Theory Change the World?
Nicolaus Copernicus, the father of modern astronomy, was a Polish 
astronomer. He was the first modern European scientist to propose the 
Heliocentric Theory of the Universe, which states that the Earth and 
other planets revolve around the Sun. Prior to the publication of his 
monumental astronomical work, The Six Books on the Revolutions of the 
Celestial Spheres, in 1543, European astronomers held that the Earth was
 at the center of the universe, a position shared by most ancient 
philosophers and biblical writers. Copernicus argued that the Earth 
rotated around its axis on a daily basis and that gradual shifts in this
 axis represented seasonal changes, in addition to correctly postulating
 the order of known planets from the Sun and a relatively accurate 
estimate of their orbital periods.
 
For more than 1,000 years, Ptolemy’s system was accepted European 
cosmology, but by the time Copernicus came, astronomical evidence had 
thrown some of his theories into confusion. Astronomers couldn’t agree 
on the order of the planets from Earth, and Copernicus dealt with this 
problem at the beginning of the 16th century.
Nicolaus Copernicus and heliocentric theory 
 Between 1508 and 1514, Nicolaus Copernicus wrote Commentariolus, or 
“Little Commentary,” a short astronomical treatise that laid the 
groundwork for his heliocentric system (centered on the sun). During his
 lifetime, the work was never published. He correctly postulated the 
relative distances of the known planets, including the Earth, from the 
sun during the discussion, as well as an estimate of their orbital 
periods.
 
Copernicus’ heliocentric theory was far from revolutionary, as it 
created as many problems as it solved. Heavy objects, for example, have 
always been assumed to fall to Earth because the Earth is the center of 
the universe. Why would they do this in a solar-powered system? He 
maintained the ancient belief that circles ruled the heavens, but his 
evidence demonstrated that even in a sun-centered universe, planets and 
stars did not revolve in circular orbits around the sun. Copernicus 
postponed the publication of his great astronomical work, “De 
revolutionibus orbium coelestium libri vi”, or “six books on the 
revolutions of the celestial spheres,” for almost his entire life due to
 these and other challenges. Completed around 1530, it was not published
 until 1543 – the year of his death.  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
Comments
Post a Comment