That the Earth is a center of the Universe. The root of this model is already in Timaeus by Plato where Timaeus describes it.
The geocentric model, also known as the Ptolemaic system, is a theory that was developed by philosophers in Ancient Greece and was named after the in science and technology, the geocentric model seems preposterous.
Though many accepted the geocentric model of the universe, it was designed by the famous astronomer Ptolemy.
He developed a better geocentric model than the one that was made before it
astroneomers were not shunned because of the geocentric model but the heliocentric model (with the sun in the middle of the universe). This was because religious leaders believed that god created the earth as the center of the universe and this idea was believed by nearly everybody.
The Greek astronomer Claudius Ptolemy believed that Earth was at the center of the universe in his geocentric model, which was widely accepted in the ancient world. This view held sway until the heliocentric model proposed by Copernicus in the 16th century challenged it.
A heliocentric model of the universe. Church believed in a geocentric model.
Plato and his student Aristotle believed in the geocentric theory. It was the ruling explanation model about how our solar system was put together for several hundreds of years.
The geocentric model, also known as the Ptolemaic system, is a theory that was developed by philosophers in Ancient Greece and was named after the in science and technology, the geocentric model seems preposterous.
Geocentric means considering the Earth as the center.
Nicolaus Copernicus
Though many accepted the geocentric model of the universe, it was designed by the famous astronomer Ptolemy.
Aristotle was a geocentric believer( the earth was at the center of the universe.
He developed a better geocentric model than the one that was made before it
Nicolaus Copernicus < NOVA NET ANSWER
There is no geocentric model of the earth!
Eudoxus believed in geocentric that means the orbits of the planets go in a perfect circle
Nicolaus Copernicus < NOVA NET ANSWER