Mostly because the "church" kept insisting that their stories were true even when they had been proven untrue.
well they were both revolutions. renaissance was a revolution in art and the scientific revolution was a revolution in well, science. i think when people started to figure out that there were neewer ways to do things and create things then that started the scientific revolution.
No, the Scientific Revolution came after the Renaissance. The Renaissance, which spanned roughly from the 14th to the 17th centuries, was a period of renewed interest in art, literature, and classical learning. The Scientific Revolution, occurring primarily in the 16th and 17th centuries, built upon the intellectual foundations laid during the Renaissance, leading to significant advancements in science and a shift in the way people understood the natural world.
Like all changes and new ideas, this involved many scientists who wanted to know more and why things were the way that they were. If you think about how the wheel was invented, it took many people thinking of ways to move large things over long distances. It didn't take a 'ah haw' moment, it took trial and error. The Scientific Revolution began when people began to use the scientific method to explain what they were seeing. It took a very long time and it is still going on today. For example: What is a worm hole?
Some notable scientists from the scientific revolution include Galileo Galilei, who made important contributions to the fields of physics and astronomy; Johannes Kepler, who formulated the laws of planetary motion; and Isaac Newton, who developed the laws of motion and universal gravitation.
People viewed that the Earth was spinning around the Sun rather than the Sun spinning around the Earth and they questionned the Church.
Answer this question…The Industrial Revolution began when people applied the principles of the scientific revolution to farming and manufacturing
The "Scientific Revolution" did not weaken the Catholic Church, the Scientific Revolution was brought about by the Catholic Church. Nearly everyone who contributed to it for centuries was Catholic, in many notable cases, they were even clergy or monks. People of a protestant or secular viewpoint often make the claim that the scientific revolution led to a weakening of the Church because the Church relied on things not seen, while science relied on provable facts, but this is a straw argument, and doesn't touch the reality that everyone actually doing the science was a Catholic.
The Catholic Church denounced the theories of the Scientific Revolution because they challenged the Church's teachings on the natural world, which were based on a literal interpretation of the Bible. The Church saw these new scientific ideas as a threat to its authority and a potential source of heresy.
The ideas of the Scientific Revolution led people to believe that the universe could be understood through empirical proof. It led them to question the divine right of kings.
The people who were part of the scientific revolution was mainly thinkers. Copernicus, Galileo, Newton, and Kepler.
the scientific revolution was believed to change history of course and people socially and intellectually
Answer this question…The Industrial Revolution began when people applied the principles of the scientific revolution to farming and manufacturing
because it changed the way people think and the church was wrong about the earth being in the middle it was the sun.
One way that science changed during the scientific revolution was to cause people to question their scientific beliefs. They were curious, they wanted to know more about the world that they lived in. The scientific method was important during this time.
The Scientific Revolution led to the enlightenment. People began to question, think and use reason by challenging customs and traditional roles.
It caused people to think
The radicals, the philosophers and so on..