the physical world follows natural laws.
geology was the first science affected by the scientific revolution.
How did the scientific method contribute to the Scientific Revolution?B.It provided a way to test a hypothesis
Scientific revolution was applied first on physics, Newton's and Enistian's and Quantum theories ,So plate tectonics basically changed our view on earth mechanism that it made a revolution in Geo science.
It represented a change in scientific thought
the scientific method.
the physical world follows natural laws.
the physical world follows natural laws.
the physical world follows natural laws (apex)
The people who were part of the scientific revolution was mainly thinkers. Copernicus, Galileo, Newton, and Kepler.
Scientific Reasoning
the physical world follows natural laws. -Alzie
Nicolaus Copernicus put forward a heliocentric theory.
Answer this question…The Industrial Revolution began when people applied the principles of the scientific revolution to farming and manufacturing
it enabled thinkers to share new ideas with many people. --Cesar Gonzalez(tu_papi96)
It help people realize that the things that they had always been told to believe in can be questioned, and proven to be wrong. From the examples of Newton, Galileo, and Copernicus, Italian philosophers realized that they could think for themselves. The Scientific Revolution helped pave a way for Enlightenment thinkers. Ever since Newton explained the laws governing nature by using reason, people admired him. People started to look for laws governing human behavior as well. They wanted to apply reason and the scientific method to all aspects of society (government, religion, Economics, and education).
In the scientific revolution, the traditional authority was the Catholic Church and the teachings of ancient scholars like Aristotle and Ptolemy. These authorities were often challenged by new thinkers like Copernicus, Galileo, and Newton who made groundbreaking discoveries that contradicted existing beliefs.
Isaac Newton was an English physicist and is seen as one of the leading thinkers in the scientific revolution. Despite all of his scientific breakthroughs, he is perhaps best known for the allegory of an apple falling on his head, and thus discovering gravity.