What do you think?
Rate this book


Das Erfolgsrezept der amerikanischen Wissenschafts- und Bestsellerautorin Dava Sobels besteht aus einer gelungenen Mischung aus den Briefen von Maria Celeste, lebendig nachgezeichnetem Zeitgeist und der verständlichen Einführung in Fachwissen. Galileos Tochter ist eine Geschichte von der Wissenschaft, den Sternen und der Liebe, die man so schnell nicht wieder aus der Hand legen wird. --Larissa Carina Seelbach
Paperback
First published October 1, 1999


No detectable strife ever disturbed the affectionate relationship between Galileo & his daughter. Theirs is not a tale of abuse or rejection or intentional stifling of abilities. Rather, it is a love story, a tragedy & a mystery.In the view of the author, the difference discerned "between this vale of tears & the harmony of Paradise precisely echoed Aristotle's distinction between corruptible Earthly matter & the perfection of the heavens." And it his opposition to an Aristotelian view, via Ptolemy, of an earth-centered universe vs. the contention of Copernicus that the sun is at its center, that causes Galileo to be put on trial & ultimately to be imprisoned for his viewpoint, this in spite of his strong Catholic faith & on-going friendship with many of the papal clerics.


I beseech you not to grasp the knife of these current troubles & misfortunes by its sharp edge, lest it injure you, but rather, seizing it by the blunt side, use it to excise the imperfections you may recognize in yourself; so that you rise above the obstacles, so that by piercing through baser realms, arrive at an awareness of the vanity & fallacy of all earthly things, they being ephemeral when compared to the glory of God.Galileo is not just a keen observer of the scientific realm but a crafty expositor of his non-traditional views of the universe and composes a book called Dialogue, wherein 3 figures, one being a stand-in for Galileo, discuss the views of Ptolemy vs. Copernicus, contending that the latter is just a "majestic paradox", this being a diplomatic literary attempt to present both sides of the scientific debate, while allowing the reader to decide. Obviously, even this veiled attempt to further a heliocentric view was done at his peril.


