according to who specifically?
The theory of cosmology that Copernicus proposed is called the heliocentric theory. This theory placed the Sun, rather than the Earth, at the center of the solar system, with the planets orbiting around it.
The heliocentric theory proposes that the Sun is at the center of our solar system, and the planets, including Earth, orbit around it. This idea was introduced by Nicolaus Copernicus in the 16th century and replaced the geocentric model that positioned Earth at the center.
he thought it was a way to help improve the solar system
The earliest known person to suggest that the Earth revolved around a "central fire" was the Greek astronomer and mathematician Aristarchus of Samos, in about 260BCE. But that notion was overtaken by the "more obviously correct" philosophy of Aristotle, who may have been the wrong-est man to ever live. The concept and name of the "heliocentric" theory was re-invented by Nicholas Copernicus, sometime around 1525.
Nothing but he abandoned the geocentric theory quite early. Later he got in trouble for proclaiming that the heliocentic theory was the absolute truth, when scientific knowledge at that time did not provide enough evidence for the claim. He was put on trial by the Vatican for heresy and in court he was asked to provide proof of his statements. Previously he had said he had a proof but that the cardinals were too stupid to understand it, but in court he was forced to admit there was no proof and he recanted. However Galileo's important discovery of moons orbiting Jupiter showed that not everything in the Universe revolves round the Earth, and this was a building brick on which eventully more and more evidence was added until in the 18th century after the theory of gravity came along most people believed that the Sun is at the centre. The discovery of stellar parallax in the 19th century put the finishing touch to the heliocentric theory.
Explain that, to a scientist, the word "theory" does NOT mean "hunch" or "unsupported idea" -- the scientific word for that is "hypothesis." A "theory" is an over-arching idea that has passed rigorous, experimental tests. In scientific parlance, calling "the Big Bang" a "theory" is akin to calling a heliocentic solar system a "theory." For many years, the ideas first proposed by Jesuit priest George LeMaitre -- now known as "the Big Bang" -- were simply hypotheses. His ideas, however, did make specific predictions about what results we would get if we did certain experiments. These experiments were first done fifty years ago, and the results were EXACTLY as predicted by Big Bang Cosmology. Since then, Big Bang Cosmology has continued to pass one scientific test after another, just like Copernicus' heliocentric model. That is why it has now been elevated to a "theory." Note, of course, that there are people who despise science, and will not only misuse the word "theory," but make a concerted effort to spread this confusion to other people.
It is a scientific theory
Indiana is a lien theory state.Indiana is a lien theory state.Indiana is a lien theory state.Indiana is a lien theory state.
Theory-practice-theory take existing theory in education, apply to distance learning, develop new theory Practice-research-theory see what is happening in distance learning, submit to research, develop theory from results Theory-theory-research/practice build on an initial theory to develop a second theory, then apply and test it
Theory of law. Theory of the climate. Theory of lax. Theory of vandals. Newtons's theory of mass.
A common theory is a theory which has not been proven or a theory without evidence.
the divine right theory