PLATO AND EARLY GREEK PHILOSOPHERS
The early writings of Greek philosophers
were perhaps the first attempts to understand the workings of the
universe, and whilst they did not rely on modern experimentation
as modern day scientists do, they did take a huge step in that direction
by rejecting religious explanations and dismissing the causes
of daily phenomenon's at the hands of the gods. They argued for example
that lightning bolts were not hurled to the ground by an angry Zeus,
but rather a natural product that could be rationally explained.
A philosopher called Lucretius, writing in the first century
BC stated that 'Nature is free and uncontrolled by proud masters
and runs the universe by herself without the aid of gods.' Whilst
these early theorists acknowledged the fact that the universe was
not run by gods, but rather nature, they maintained the fact that
gods still existed, with nature running independently of the divine.
Of course the Greek philosophers came up
with numerous theories as to how the universe works. For Anaximander
we live inside a huge sphere with fire along the outside rim – the
sun is nothing but a hole in the sphere through which we can see
the fire!! However one particular model captured the imagination
of the western world well into the 1600s. This was a version
that was described by Aristotle, who took his assumptions from the
teachings of Plato, and philosophers and scientists alike would
embrace such a theory for centuries to come.
Plato was born in 427 BC and grew
up during the Peloponnesian war. He earned much of his philosophy
in the marketplace, where amongst others Socrates preached,
telling them to question the morals they had been taught. For Socrates
this resulted in him being sentenced to death as the community elders
were not happy. Given the death of his friend and the ongoing war
Plato sought absolute truths with the aim of bringing order to his
life. His universe depended on perfections (only in our own minds
can a circle be perfect – draw one and it may be slightly off).
He picked five ideal shapes and claimed that the elements matched
them: fire was a tetrahedron (a 3 sided pyramid), earth a solid
cube, air an octahedron and water a twenty sided icosahedron. The
planets he believed must travel in circles with a uniform motion.
Whilst there was little evidence to suggest this to be true, even
the planets zig zagged across the sky, Plato thought it to be a
beautiful theory and so true!!
Plato's blindness did not however come from
an inability to see but his disdain for what he saw. He chose to
ignore what he saw and created a theory of the universe with everything
moving in these perfect circles – and then he asked others to formulate
a mathematical model that would fit it. Eudoxus, one of Plato's
pupils, rose to the challenge and described a set of planets sitting
on a series of moving spheres with the earth as their center. The
sun for example had three spheres, one to move around the earth
daily, another slower sphere, which on an annual basis moved to
account for the way the sun appears to move higher in the sky throughout
the seasons, and a third sphere to explain some incorrect observations
of
the time that had the sun changing position on the horizon from equinox
to equinox. Exodus described each planet this way, adding on spheres
moving at different speeds and in different directions, until there
were twenty seven spheres in total.
The model was of course totally innacurate,
but the concept itself was mind boggling. For the first time someone
had produced a mathematical model which correlated to what he saw.
whilst the model didn't perfectly fit the data you could use it to
predict where a planet should be with reasonable accuracy. Effectively
math corresponded to reality. When we see that math correlates to
reality it forces one to believe that the model is correct, and
therefore it is important for scientists to remember how false theories
such as this one have been emphatically believed in the past.
Indeed this theory, with the help of Aristotle,
would be believed for centuries as incecently that we believe today
that the earth goes round the sun. Aristotle himself added a twist
to Exodus's theory, he turned those ephermal spheres into something
solid. Aristotle studied under Plato for some twenty years before
founding his own academy. He was born in northern Greece in 384
BC and inherited Plato's incorrect assumption that the planets
move in circles. He built upon these views and stated that 'the
shape of the heavens must be spherical. That is most suitable to
its substance, and is the primary shape in nature.' The spheres
in Aristotle's cosmology stemmed from Eudoxus's, but they needed
re–working to become reality. He therefore devised a system whereby
each sphere forced the spheres inside to rotate with it. Consequently
he had to add spheres not only to account for the oddities of each
planet's rotation but also to negate movement from the
sphere above it. In the end his version had fifty five concentric,
crystalline spheres and
roughly accounted for most celestial movements. However it failed
to answer a few key questions, including why the planets periodically
shone brighter and larger, as if they had swung closer to us.....

Aristotle's
universe
Despite such short comings this didn't seem
to affect its popularity, and his description of the universe caught
the imagination of mankind. This is the way it works – Everything
on earth is made of the four elements of earth, air, fire and water.
All these elements seek to be at rest at their natural state, earth
and water by moving in a straight line to the centre of the earth,
and fire and air naturally moves in a straight line up. A
rock that moves horizontally, say by being thrown in the air, does
so only because an outer body has forced unnatural motion upon it.
At the beginning of time all of the water and earth naturally fell
down towards the centre of the universe, clumped together and formed
the spherical globe that is the earth. This would automatically
imply that there are no other universes as there would be two conflicting
downs. Away from our atmosphere everything changed...the universe
was made of a heavenly material called ether, which naturally moved
in circles....perfect circles that is. There were spheres for the
moon, the sun, the planets...and then beyond that was an unmoved
mover, the divine force that moved the outer sphere that set each
of the next fifty five moving. whilst Aristotle created a cosmology
that did not require divine intervention, he insisted upon it!
Whilst Aristotle's cosmology became dogma
one other ancient philosopher give the grounding to make this theory
stable. Aristotle's spheres still didn't correspond well to everything
observed, producing a mechanical model took a true mathematician,
Ptolemy.
He knew that as the planets moved around
the earth they appeared to stop and go backwards for a while. To
account for this Ptolemy added a twist to the orbits, claiming that
each planet moved in tight little circles, and it was the very centre
of this circle that moved in a gigantic circular orbit around the
earth. This little extra orbit was labeled an epicycle. His model
corresponded quite well with what we see. The biggest weakness in
Ptolemy's model was his complicated description of Mars. Mars, orbiting
the sun so close to us, has the hardest path to pin down if you
are afflicted with an incorrect theory. Mars just refuses to move
in perfect circles and Mars therefore was destined to be the first
nail in the coffin for both Ptolemy and Aristotle.
Brahe (born 1546) and Kepler
(born 1575) were two individuals who worked together during the
1600s, Brahe's observations of the universe were unsurpassed throughout
the world and Kepler was a brilliant mathematician – and so whilst
the relationship between the two was at times volatile, at the same
time they needed each other. After one such altercation Brahe asked
Kepler to describe the orbit of Mars, knowing full well that the
greats of history had long since struggled and failed to come up
with anything. Whilst Kepler was confident enough to say 'give me
a week' it actually took him eight years, but when he eventually
did it turned Ptolemy's model on its head. Until someone decided
to map the orbit of Mars first, and then determine the math that
described it theories would prove to be inaccurate, yet Brahe and
Kepler nudged cosmology closer to the science we know by rectifying
this mistake.
One night after dinner Brahe looked up at
the sky and noticed a new star smack in the middle of the constellation
Cassiopeia, and for the following few weeks it was even visible
throughout the daytime. Over the next year and a half it faded and
eventually disappeared...he had witnessed a supernova, the gigantic
explosion that occurs during a stars last death throes....whilst
he didn't know that he had witnessed such an event. All he knew
was that he had witnessed the impossible, the perfect ever constant
starry sky had just changed. The next time he saw a comet he took
measurement, and presented the argument that this comet was far
above the moon (below the moon was the only place where such changes,
other comets, could have been possible) and so there was not just
a change in the heavens but a body slicing right through Aristotle's
crystalline celestial spheres. with the level of detail presented
Brahe's destruction of the Aristotelian universe was hard to reject.
This was one of his major contributions to cosmology, but his largest
maybe his incredible attention to detail.
However Brahe was also a slave to his pre–conceptions.
Unable to convince himself that the earth moved and unable to make
his observations match a geocentric universe, Brahe recorded a solar
system in which the sun and the moon orbited the earth, whilst all
the other planets revolved around the sun.
It was at university that Kepler first discovered
Copernicus, learning of a sun centred world from his mentor Mastlin.
So it was Kepler who was one of the first astronomers to be thoroughly
indoctrinated in a heliocentric universe–he never doubted that the
sun stood still whilst the earth rotated around it. whilst taking
up post as a maths teacher Kepler had a flash of inspiration. For
years he had long wrestled with the question of why there were six
planets, not five and not seven. However as he stood in front of
his class one day he thought that the planets themselves might be
organized according to the five platonic ideal shapes. First came
Mercury's circular orbit, imagine an octahedron positioned
around that circle the way any regular shape can be snugly fit around
a sphere. Put another sphere around that and you get the orbit for
Venus. Next an icosahedron , the sphere of the earths orbit, then
a dodecohedran, Mars, then a pyramid, Jupiter, then a cube, and
finally Saturn. This pretty arrangement of geometry now showed why
each planet's orbit was just so far out and no further.
As it happened the ratios among the planets
didn't perfectly match up to the ratios of the solids, and we now
know that there are more than six planets. We also know that invoking
the platonic solids as a logical reason for why there were six doesn't
make much sense to begin with. Brahe invited Kepler to work with
him in 1600. Upon studying Brahe's details of the martian orbit
, Kepler realised that the planet did not move at a constant speed,
yet it was not until years later that Kepler had to face facts–Aristotle's
perfect circles must go. Kepler showed that the planets moved in
egg shaped oval, in ellipses. Many ignored such an idea, including
Galileo Galilei, the only other contemporary scientist who believed
that the earth revolved around the sun.
The earth centred universe of Aristotle
and Ptolemy held sway on western thinking for almost 2000 years.
Then in the 16th century a new idea was proposed by the polish astronomer
Nicolai Copernicus (1473 – 1543). He proposed that the sun, not
the earth, was at the centre of the solar system. He called this
model a heliocentric system, and in this new ordering the earth
is just another planet, and the moon orbits the earth rather than
the sun

The
Copernicus Universe
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