If you are interested in knowing about the life and the thoughts of the people that made the changes so your life can be the way it is, just read this and you will know the most important facts. The scientific revolution is the time when the scientists started challenging the thought of the church and started saying what they think, some of them were Isaac Newton ‘the father of the theory of gravity’. Tycho Brahe had the most accurate possible observations before the telescope was created (he had the accurate position of 777 stars) and finally Johannes Kepler for his law of planetary motion. Without the scientific revolution, our life will be a lie and we wouldnt know facts about the world we live in, and we wouldn’t have an example of not …show more content…
Kepler was a fundamental piece of person in the 17th-century scientific revolution. He is known for his laws of planetary motion that were based on his works Astronomia nova, Harmonices Mundi, and Epitome of Copernican Astronomy. These works also provided one of the foundations for Isaac Newton's theory of universal gravitation. Kepler was a math teacher at a seminary school in Graz, where he became a friend of Prince Hans Ulrich von Eggenberg. Later he became an helper or assistant to the astronomer Tycho Brahein Prague, and then the imperial mathematician to Emperor Rudolf II and his two followers Matthias and Ferdinand II. Also, he did a fundamental work in the field of optics and lens , invented an better version of the refracting telescope,the Keplerian telescope, and was mentioned in the telescopic discoveries of his contemporary Galileo Galilei. Kepler also created religious ways to explain and reasoning into his work, motivated by the religious conviction and the faith that God had created the world according to an smart and understanding plan that is accessible through the natural light of reason. Johannes Kepler one of the most important astronomers in the Scientific Revolution Age was probably the father of it because based on his works the Isaac Newton’s theory of universal gravitation was