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Start Of The Scientific Revolution

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1. Ever since the beginning of the 13th century, there has been a major development in technology. It started with accurate language translators and writers. By this time, the natural philosophy began to be enlarged by popular scholastics. Then the scientific method started to come around following mathematics and this was used to study and understand nature. Then a lot of Aristotle's scientific writings started to teach people more about math and technology. People then started to learn about algebra and then the Oxford calculators were invented to mathematically study the kinematics of motion. These are all developments that have paved the way for the Scientific Revolution. 2. Copernicus was the man who invented the complete heliocentric cosmology. He is the one that said the Earth is not the center of the universe. Copernicus' heliocentric theory was the start of the Scientific Revolution in the 16th and 17th centuries. After Copernicus showed his heliocentric theory to the world, man could no longer think different about the Earth or the universe. Vesalius was the founder of modern science of anatomy. He had a huge role in …show more content…

Roger Bacon was a Philosopher from England. He loved the works of science so he went to school and studied science. He studied, taught, and wrote books about science, and then he finally created the scientific method. Galileo Galilei was a physicist, astronomer, and a mathematician from Italy. He made major contributions to the Scientific Revolution. He contributed to the Scientific Revolution by his inventions. Galileo Galilei basically invented the telescope because of his improvements to the telescope. He made so many major improvements so that the telescope could be able to reach farther points. He also invented the thermometer, but Galileo called it the thermoscope. The thermoscope looks like a thermometer but only it does not have a scale. It wasn't as useful as the thermometer, but it still measured the differences in

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