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344 pages, Kindle Edition
First published October 26, 2010
What kept coming to me as I read was the how complex life was for him. He had to deal with skeptics and haters and critics. He had to deal with family and "friends" who wanted money and/or favors, and some downright moochers. And, he had to deal with illness, and eventually, blindness. I would say, even though he was a genius, he lived a rather sad and unhappy life.
The research and detail this book offers is truly amazing. Mostly supported facts and very little supposition. Although a little dry at times, I enjoyed this book a great deal.
“we must pay particular attention to those sources that bring us closest to Galileo's conversation with his disciples, and to those texts (the margins of books, for example) that Galileo least feared would be read by anyone else. We may not be able to speak with the dead, but we can sometimes listen in on their conversations, and even catch them thinking aloud. In this book I deliberately give such snatches of overheard conversation much greater weight than they have had in previous studies of Galileo.” (page 46, eBook)
“Galileo's central claim is that the Scriptures are adapted to our understanding, while nature is not. Nature, he says, is ‘inexorable and immutable’. But of course it is a fundamental teaching of Christianity that nature is occasionally adapted in order to communicate with us – this is what a miracle is.” (page 246)
“Spinoza was the first to argue that the Bible is not literally the word of God but rather a work of human literature;...He also insisted that ‘divine providence’ is nothing but the laws of nature, that miracles (understood as violations of the natural order of things) are impossible and belief in them is only an expression of our ignorance of the true causes of phenomena,…” (Nadler, Steven. A Book Forged in Hell: Spinoza's Scandalous Treatise and the Birth of the Secular Age . Princeton University Press. Kindle Edition, Location 55/5276)