How does Galileo use religious beliefs to support the work of science? How is this connected to the ideals of the Renaissance?
Answers
Answer:
Galileo Galilei (1564–1642), professor of mathematics at the University of Padua from 1592 to 1610, was a pillar in the history of our University and a symbol of freedom for research and teaching, well stated in the university motto “Universa Universis Patavina Libertas” (Total freedom in Padua, open to all the world).1 He invented the experimental method, based on evidence and calculation (“science is measure”)2 and was able, by using the telescope, to confirm the Copernican heliocentric theory, a challenge to the Bible. Bertrand Russell (1872–1970), in his book “The Problems of Philosophy” stated: “Almost everything that distinguishes modern world from earlier centuries is attributable to science, which achieved the most spectacular triumphs in the seventeenth century. Together with Harvey, Newton and Keplero, Galileo was a protagonist of this scientific revolution in the late Renaissance”.3
His life was a continuous struggle to defend science from the influence of religious prejudices. He was catholic, forced by the Inquisition to deny his views, and was condemned to home arrest for the rest of his life. Here is the history of his life, a pendulum between science and religious beliefs.
The early period in Pisa
Galileo was born in Pisa from Giulia Ammannati (1538–1620) and Vincenzo Galilei (1520–1591), a musician, on February 15, 1564 (the same month and year when Michelangelo Buonarroti died). On November 5, 1581, he was registered in the faculty of Artists at the University of Pisa as a student of Medicine. In Florence in 1583 he met the mathematician Ostilio Ricci (1540–1603) and took up Mathematics, leaving Medicine, but never graduated. On 1589, he became Lecturer of Maths at the University of Pisa, with a salary of only 60 ducats/year. It was in 1590 that he carried out the famous experiment of falling spheres from the Tower of Pisa.