As optics improved, man began to see the solar system. Tycho Brahe in Denmark, Nicolaus Copernicus of Poland, Johannes Kepler of Germany, and Italy's Galileo Galilei all began to see a new relationship between the world and the stars. Their questions, and their non-religious answers, toppled the idea that man?and the Church?are at the center of the universe. The Science and Discovery series recreates history's four-thousand-year journey of scientific progress. Science has often challenged and upset conventional wisdom. This is a story of vested interests and independent thinkers, experiments and theories, change and progress. Aristotle, Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo, Newton, Darwin, and Einstein all make appearances.
Nonfiction is not a genre I read enough. I am completing a library bingo challenge and looked for an audio book that interested me. This book gave me facts, theories, and the historical backgrounds of the astronomical discoveries. I learned a lot about the struggles of scientists in astronomy, as their theories conflicted with church doctrine at the time. I have retained a few important facts and concepts, so I am more knowledgeable about astronomy than when I started.
This is a nice clean summary of the history of Astronomy from Ptolemy to Galileo. They simplified it considerably, but didn't make any mistakes. I think they gave the wrong impression of Galileo at times. He was an irritable man, did not suffer fools gladly no matter who you were and knew the ins-and-outs of the Vatican. In essense his "punishment" was to stay at "Club Fed". I don't believe he was in any serious danger.
This audiobook is less than 3 hours which I think was restricted to this length to accommodate the cassette tapes they originally appeared on.
This book is good for anyone who is interested in the history of Astronomy. The most shocking part of the book for me was when I learned that in 1582, Pope Gregory XIII adjusted the calendar... the date went from October 4th to October 15th... there was no October 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th, 12th, 13th, or 14th in 1582... It wasn't until about 1920 that all major cultures used the same calendar (AKA: The Gregorian Calendar, named after Pope Gregory XIII).
Expected more about astronomy itself, not the author's unhappiness about Christianity and The Roman Catholic Church. "Before there was science, there was superstition." Tells me all I need to know about Jack Arnold's bias.
This is a wonderful history of astronomy. It also does an excellent job of explaining why the church was threatened by this new science. The narrator was engaging and things flowed well.
Interesting information … non- even anti- religion. It does explain WHY the church felt threatened. “Ignorance is bliss to those who would live in hell.” (The Holy Bible )…
The use of actors for narrating longer quotes was annoying when I first started listening to these books, but I now find it charming.
This was a review of the basic history of moder day astronomy, put together well so I didn't mind the loads of information that was stuff I already knew. It may be my mood, but I found this particularly successful in bringing together a long story into this short burst of information.
I appreciate a good overview of a topic, and the effort with this audiobook was to semi-dramatize the story of Astronomy by having actors voice the direct quotations of people like Galileo. However, the writing was quite stilted, and it felt like a patchwork piece assembled factory style as part of the Science & Discovery series.
An informative overview of astronomy's early beginnings, with a focus on Galileo, Copernicus, and Brahe, et al. A short audio book that uses multiple voice actors to convey the historical perspective.