Was Copernicus's model of the Solar System accepted by the people of his time?(1 point)

Responses

Yes
Yes

No
No
Question 2
Explain why it was, or was not.(3 points)

1 answer

Question 1: Was Copernicus's model of the Solar System accepted by the people of his time?
Response: No.

Question 2: Explain why it was, or was not.

  1. Challenged Established Beliefs: Copernicus's heliocentric model challenged the long-standing geocentric view that placed the Earth at the center of the universe, which was widely accepted by both the Church and society due to its alignment with Aristotelian astronomy and theological beliefs.

  2. Lack of Empirical Evidence: At the time, Copernicus did not provide sufficient empirical evidence to support his heliocentric model. The technology available was limited, and many of his contemporaries did not observe changes that would convincingly support the new model over the old Ptolemaic system.

  3. Cultural and Religious Resistance: The innate resistance to changing established cosmological views was compounded by religious implications. The Catholic Church and other institutions viewed the heliocentric model as heretical, leading to a slow acceptance of Copernicus's ideas in later centuries, primarily through the work of astronomers such as Galileo and Kepler.