Galileo's work came into conflict with the church because he advocated a heliocentric model of out solar system. This conflicted with what it says in The Bible.
Galileo's work supporting the heliocentric model challenged the geocentric views held by the Catholic Church. The Church saw his ideas as heretical and forced him to recant his views under threat of excommunication. The conflict was resolved centuries later in 1992 when the Catholic Church formally acknowledged that Galileo was right and that the Church's judgment against him was a mistake.
Galileo's work came into conflict with the church because he advocated a heliocentric model of out solar system. This conflicted with what it says in The Bible.
His findings frightened both the catholic and Protestant leaders because they went against the church teachings and authority. The conflict was solved when Galileo stood before court and knelt before the cardinals and read aloud a signed confession in which he agreed that the ideas of Copernicus that he said were real, we're false.
Galileo raised ecclesiastic hackles because he challenged the church-sanctioned, astronomical doctrine of his day: that the the earth stood at the center of both the solar system and the known universe.
Galileo had a falling out with the church over his scientific papers regarding the Earth revolving around the sun. This went against the church belief's at the time and Galileo was forced to go to Rome for a trail and denounce his scientific findings.
The Church did not disapprove of Galileo's work. What they disapproved of was that he was teaching his findings as fact when they were simply unproven theories. Even Galileo stated that he could not proven them.
The Church condemned Galileo's astronomical findings because they contradicted the prevailing geocentric view of the universe, which was considered by the Church to be in line with biblical teachings. Galileo's support for heliocentrism challenged the Church's authority and interpretation of scripture, leading to his trial and subsequent condemnation.
Galileo promoted the heliocentric idea. Galileo was teaching the heliocentric theory of the universe as fact when it was, at the time, unproven. The Church asked him to revise his teaching to reflect that it was not a fact but only a theory or hypothesis. Most Church officials were on Galileo's side but agreed that he should tone down is rhetoric. Galileo had a very sharp tongue and was quite sarcastic in his remarks and that did little to help his case. Most of Galileo's disagreement with the Catholic Church was over his caustic personality and refusal to listen to reason. He was advanced the case for heliocentrism - which was accepted by some of the Church, and the Pope had previously approved it when Nicholas Copernicus put it forward, and the Pope actually wrote a foreword to his work. Galileo's problem was that he wouldn't listen to reason and accept ANY advice.
The astronomer who agreed with the heliocentric theory and was imprisoned for his investigations was Galileo Galilei. He supported the idea that the Earth orbits the Sun, which challenged the prevailing geocentric view. His advocacy of this theory led to a conflict with the Catholic Church, resulting in his house arrest in 1633. Despite the consequences, Galileo's work laid the groundwork for modern astronomy.
Because he found out that the earth was not the center the center of the universe, the catholic church didn't want to believe that it was true. they have ONLY RECENTLY apologized and said " oh oops my bad , it is true ". :)Because he found out that the earth was not the center the center of the universe, the catholic church didn't want to believe that it was true.
Galileo Galilei didn't work for anybody but he taught students such as Sagredo.
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".