The Scientific Revolution transformed Europe. The ideas were astounding and were received differently everywhere. The scientific revolution allowed ideas to be exchanged between countries. The Scientific Revolution created the first true international science community. The Europeans began to see the world as a scientific experiment. The Scientific Method came into widespread use after being created by Francis Bacon and Renee Descartes. Galileo, Kepler, Brahe, and Copernicus all used the Scientific Method in their work with the solar system. The most influential however was Isaac Newton who is famous for his Law of Gravity. The Europeans now looked to reasoning, not the church, to solve problems. Scientists as well as elites in Europe began to look for phenomena’s to explore. They explored world systems and questioned everything. The Scientific Revolution changed Europe by changing how science was done and how it the world was looked at; this revolution …show more content…
This change to the Scientific Method was extremely important to the way ideas were tested and proven. This was a distinct change from the medieval methods that the Europeans were using until around the beginning of the seventeenth century. Before the Scientific Revolution science was still based on Aristotle’s ideas. The scientists believed that the Earth was still and that there were only four elements. The scientific adoption of the Scientific Method was advancement in science because of the testing of hypothesis’ and data collection. So with the new Scientific Method and testing of ideas the new scientists were able to prove that the Earth rotated around the sun and that gravity was important to the rotation of the Earth. Scientists at this time were also able to prove inertia and gravity. While the scientists were able to discover this new knowledge the ways it spread was even more