They both agreed everything revolves around the Sun. this answer was improved by me! ok the answer is correct, but Copernicus and Galileo believed that all planets including the Earth, revovlves around the Sun which is a ball of plasma (a little science haha!). ARISTOTLE WAS SOOO WRONG WITH PLOTOLOMY! THE PLANETS AND SUN DO NOT REVOVLVE AROUND THE EARTH! AND ARISTOTLE WAS VERY SMART AND PROBABLY THE GREATEST PHILOSOPHER OF all TIME BUT HE SAID MANY THINGS WRONG LIKE ALL MEN ARE BORN SLAVES AND THAT THE PLANET THEORY TOO! SO NOT ALL PHILOSOPHERS ARE RIGHT! the inquisition was wrong of putting Galileo through all that trouble. At the end of the inquisition court, Galileo muttered under his lips, "you fools i am right, the earth does move and does not stay still."
no
nicolaus died in 1543
and Galileo wasnt even born until 1564
Newton and Galileo knew that earth rotated while rotating around the sun. Copernicus believed the earth to be in one place moving around the sun.
the studies of Copernicus and Galileo changed that view by having sex
I suspect the answer you're looking for is Galileo Galilei. It just has two problems: Galileo didn't "invent the telescope", nor did he "develop a heliocentric view of the universe." The telescope was invented in the Netherlands; Galileo simply improved on it and was probably the first to apply it to astronomical observations instead of just looking for distant ships. Also, Copernicus is (properly) credited with the heliocentric view; Galileo's observations supported this, but he didn't come up with it.
No, he developed therious on te heliocentric universe
During the Scientific Revolution of the 17th century, astronomers Copernicus and Galileo discovered controversial information about the universe. Copernicus proposed a heliocentric theory that suggested the sun was the center of the universe which Galileo supported with more evidence. Copernicus's work "On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres" and Galileo's "Dialogue on the Two Chief Systems of the World" were both declared unbiblical by the church. Both Copernicus and Galileo were thought of as going against the official position of the church and the church didn't like this because they didn't want people to doubt them. This also upset the church because they believed the sun was created for the earth to provide light and the fact that the earth spins on its axis and orbits the sun would prove the bible is inaccurate. When Galileo was ordered to recant his works, he agreed but as he walked away mumbled "And yet it does move".
He was to wise
the studies of Copernicus and Galileo changed that view by having sex
Yes, Voltaire supported the heliocentric view of the universe proposed by Copernicus. He wrote about it in his work "Elements of Newton's Philosophy" where he praised the advancements made by Copernicus, Galileo, and Newton in understanding the cosmos.
Nicolas Copernicus
The modern scientific view of the universe is based on extensive research and the facts that came out of that research. Contributors include Copernicus, Galileo, Newton, Darwin, Kelvin, Curie, Einstein, Hawking and thousands of others.
I suspect the answer you're looking for is Galileo Galilei. It just has two problems: Galileo didn't "invent the telescope", nor did he "develop a heliocentric view of the universe." The telescope was invented in the Netherlands; Galileo simply improved on it and was probably the first to apply it to astronomical observations instead of just looking for distant ships. Also, Copernicus is (properly) credited with the heliocentric view; Galileo's observations supported this, but he didn't come up with it.
Copernicus and Aristotle
No, it was Copernicus who developed that view. Galileo agreed with it, however.
No, he developed therious on te heliocentric universe
During the Scientific Revolution of the 17th century, astronomers Copernicus and Galileo discovered controversial information about the universe. Copernicus proposed a heliocentric theory that suggested the sun was the center of the universe which Galileo supported with more evidence. Copernicus's work "On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres" and Galileo's "Dialogue on the Two Chief Systems of the World" were both declared unbiblical by the church. Both Copernicus and Galileo were thought of as going against the official position of the church and the church didn't like this because they didn't want people to doubt them. This also upset the church because they believed the sun was created for the earth to provide light and the fact that the earth spins on its axis and orbits the sun would prove the bible is inaccurate. When Galileo was ordered to recant his works, he agreed but as he walked away mumbled "And yet it does move".
He was to wise
Galileo, Newton, Nicolas Copernicus, Kepler, Einstein. Also, every satellite, every telescope, and every modern day scientist or citizen for that matter.
Galileo Galilei