A More Perfect Heaven: How Copernicus Revolutionized the Cosmos
Dava Sobel
I read A More Perfect Heaven eleven years ago, 31-Oct-2011. In my memory it disappointed, because it was about the personalities who kicked off the Copernican revolution more than the science. I realize that to many readers, that is the book's principle recommendation -- they find people more interesting than science, and scientists are interesting only in their personal triumphs, disappointments, and rivalries.
In my opinion, such story telling fundamentally distorts science. Science is a process for arriving at truth, and to the extent it works, the truths arrived at do not depend on the personalities who do the job. Thus we see, over and aver again through history, two or even three scientists arriving at the same result independently. For the individuals, who naturally want credit, this may be an annoyance, but for Science itself, it is a triumph. In fact, Copernicus was not the first to propose a heliocentric universe.
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