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The Hinge of the World: In Which Professor Galileo Galilei, Chief Mathematician and Philosopher to His Serene Highness the Grand Duke of Tuscany, and His Holiness Urban VIII

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Richard Goodwin has been admired as a policymaker, political commentator, essayist, outspoken lawyer, writer of controversial books - and now as a dramatist. His subject is one that lies at the heart of everything we call the epic struggle between the great Tuscan scientist Galileo and his arch-opponent, Pope Urban VIII - once a companionable fellow-philosopher, now the prince of a church threatened by Galileo's new natural science.
Goodwin has discerned the points of human tension in the spiritual and philosophical drama that Galileo and the Pope embody. In a richly detailed, vividly plotted play that truly "reads like a novel," we see how powerful, sometimes tragic forces shaped their dispute, forces that would doom Galileo's life yet redeem his ideas, that vindicated Pope Urban's authority in the short term but weakened it in the end.

209 pages, Hardcover

First published June 1, 1998

30 people want to read

About the author

Richard N. Goodwin

16 books15 followers
Richard Goodwin was born in Boston on 7th December, 1931. He graduated from Tufts University in 1953. He then went on to study law at Harvard University.

Goodwin joined the Massachusetts State bar in 1958. He worked for Felix Frankfurter before being appointed as special counsel to the Legislative Oversight Subcommittee of the U.S. House of Representatives.

In 1959 John F. Kennedy appointed Goodwin as a member of his speech writing staff. The following year he became Kennedy's assistant special counsel. Goodwin was also a member of Kennedy's Task Force on Latin American Affairs and in 1961, was appointed Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs, a position he held until 1963. As one of Kennedy's specialists in Latin-American affairs, Goodwin helped develop the Alliance for Progress, an economic development program for Latin America. Goodwin also served as secretary-general of the International Peace Corps.

After Kennedy's death Goodwin joined the staff of President Lyndon B. Johnson where he worked as a speechwriter and adviser. Goodwin resigned in 1965 and became a fellow at the Center for Advanced Studies at Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut and a visiting professor of public affairs at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Goodwin continued to be involved in politics and wrote speeches for presidential candidates Robert Kennedy, Eugene McCarthy and Edmund Muskie. He also wrote for several magazines, including The New Yorker and Rolling Stone. He also published The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys (1986) and Remembering America (1988).

In March, 2001, Goodwin was a member of a United States delegation that visited the scene of the Bay of Pigs battle. The party included Arthur Schlesinger (historian), Robert Reynolds, (the CIA station chief in Miami during the invasion), Jean Kennedy Smith (sister of John F. Kennedy), Alfredo Duran (Bay of Pigs veteran) and Wayne S. Smith (Executive Secretary of his Latin American Task Force).

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Profile Image for Avaris.
103 reviews2 followers
September 27, 2018

A fantastic read. I learned quite a bit as the author included notes about some of the things going on in the period, and would love to go see a showing of this play. 

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