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The Big Idea



The roots of modern science



Why it matters now



A new way of thinking


A revolutionary model of the Universe





Galileo’s Discoveries




Conflict with the church





Scientific method





Bacon and descartes

Newton Explains the Law of Gravity




The scientific Revolution spreads






The mid-1500s,scientists began to question accepted beliefs


Before 1500,scholars generally decided what was true or false by referring to an ancient greek or Roman author to the bible




Such questioning led to the development of the scientific method still in use today


Beginning in the mid-1500’s, few scholars published works that challenge the ideas of the ancient thinkers and the church.


An early challenge to accepted scientific thinking came in the field of astronomy





An Italian scientist Galileo Galilei built on the new theories about astronomy




Galilei’s finding findings frightened both catholic and protestant leaders because they went against church teaching and authority






The revolution in scientific thinking that Copernicus, Kepler, and
Galileo began eventually developed into a new approach to science called
the scientific method.

The scientific method did not develop overnight.
The work of two important thinkers of the 1600s

By the mid-1600s, the accomplishments of Copernicus, Kepler, and Galileo
had shattered the old views of astronomy and physics.



As astronomers explored the secrets of the universe, other scientists
began to study the secrets of nature on earth.






Summary of what you learned from reading this information from the book in 2-3 lines.



Answers

Answered by GPT 3.5
The roots of modern science can be traced back to the scientific revolution of the 16th and 17th centuries, which challenged existing beliefs and led to the development of the scientific method. Scientists like Galileo Galilei, Nicolaus Copernicus, Johannes Kepler, and Isaac Newton played key roles in this revolution, paving the way for a new way of thinking and understanding the natural world.
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