Ptolemy
The correct answer is Copernicus. I just took the test.
Nicolaus Copernicus, a Polish astronomer, proposed the heliocentric model in the 16th century, suggesting that the Sun is at the center of the universe with the Earth and other planets orbiting around it. This idea challenged the prevailing geocentric model, where Earth was considered the center of the universe.
Aristotle did not believe that the Sun was at the center; he thought Earth was. Aristarchus, a Greek astronomer, is probably the earliest person we know of who supported a heliocentric solar system.
Ptolemy was the first person to introduce the theory of a geocentric universe, a universe in which everything revolves around the earth itself. But in 1543, Nicolas Copernicus was the first person to introduce and prove the idea that the universe is heliocentric, a universe in which everything revolves around the sun.
The geocentric Solar system theory was first proposed by ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle and further developed by astronomer Claudius Ptolemy. This theory placed Earth at the center of the universe with all celestial bodies, including the Sun, planets, and stars, orbiting around it.
The third.
No. He was the first in Western society to legitimately propose that the sun was the center, but it took others to prove it. The sun is not the center of the universe, merely the center of our solar system.
He was the guy who first thought the earth was the center of the universe
Copernicus.
Nicolus Copernicus
Charles eniteisn
The first scientist to say the earth is not the centre of the whole universe was Nicolaus Copernicus early in the sixteenth century.
Galileo Galilei
Copernicus was a polish astronomer that first formed the theory that the Earth was at the center of the universe.
The theory about the first cause, known as the cosmological argument, suggests that something must have caused the existence of the universe. This "first cause" is often understood as a necessary being or God that initiated the chain of causation that led to the creation of the universe.
Nicolaus Copernicus was the first person to say that the universe revolved around the sun. Before that, it was highly accepted that the earth was the center of the universe.
No--he believed that the sun was the center of the universe.
Albert Einstein.Related Information:Einstein who's General Theory of Relativity and Principle of Equivalence (see links below), suggests that curved space/time, defines the universe as geodesic and may have no actual center. So Earth, like everything else in our universe, exists on its geodesic plane and not at its center.The death of the theory of an Earth-centered universe began when Copernicus first suggested that Earth was not even the center of our solar system. Though this idea was not well received at the time, it was later confirmed by the classic observations and calculations of GalileoThe answer of Albert Einstein fails to account for the fact that the center of the universe question was answered well before Einstein was born.