Scientific Revolution Essay

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    The discoveries made during the Scientific Revolution were incredible, impactful, and never even thought about before. However, these new discoveries were constantly under fire from the church. Even so, the breakthroughs kept coming, and the church couldn’t stop them. Some of these scientific discoveries are still in use today, and were the building blocks to modern science. The people who made these revelations were the scientists who first found out that the earth revolved around the sun, or that

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    What was the Scientific Revolution and why was it so important to Europe? What did the scientific revolution help develop during time? These are some of the questions that many ask themselves when asked to define scientific revolution and enlightenment in the 17th/ 18th century. The terms “Scientific Revolution” and “Enlightenment” are used to describe two important phases that Europe came across during the 1500s to the 1800s. The 17th century scientific revolution left a huge impact on Europe leading

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    The Scientific Revolution began in the 1500's. New observations and theories about the natural world created a different mindset about the study of our Earth. This eventually caused people to dismiss the traditional religious teachings about our planet. Nicolaus Copernicus, Galileo Galilei, and Isaac Newton were pioneering scientists that came up with ground breaking discoveries and theories. Nicolaus Copernicus came up with the heliocentric theory. This was the idea that Earth, and all of the other

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    In the mid 1500’s, the Scientific Revolution altered the way the opinions of the masses. This change paved a new way of thinking for Europeans. More than 1,000 years ago, individuals concluded that the Earth was the center of the universe. Tycho Brahe, a Danish astronomer was interested in studying science eclipses; in Germany he studied mathematics and astronomy. In 1571 when he was 25 years old, the King of England granted him the island of Denmark and extra money to build his own observatory.

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    Scientific Revolution When I attended middle school after I immigrated, I could not acclimate to the strange environment, school systems and textbooks written in English. Everyone around me spoke English fluently. I thought I succeeded with English in China; however, I lost all of my confidence after I went to school. My science teacher, Mrs. H. provided me a thick textbook. I tried to catch up with other kids. However, I realized I could not understand much of the content. A helpless feeling

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    The scientific revolution was a significant period for scientific discovery and growth, which started in the 1500’s and ended in the 1700’s. For thousands of years, people have observed and tracked the “heavenly bodies” to find some insight into how the universe functions. The planets are probably named after Greek and Roman gods because of the pagan belief that the heavenly bodies were gods and goddesses. The age old theory that the earth was the center of the universe was argued by Copernicus

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    Lisa Jardine’s Ingenious Pursuits: Building the Scientific Revolution provides a comprehensive breakdown of the discoveries that defined the Scientific Revolution and the history behind them. The story of the scientific revolution truly begins with a separation between the Catholic Church and the denizens of Europe brought on by the Protestant Reformation. This separation led directly to the questioning of the church and what they deemed to be true. The growing suspicion of the church applied not

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    "Where the spirit does not work with hand, there is no art" - Leonardo Da Vinci 1543-1800 was the time period when the Scientific Revolution existed. It helped emerge modern science and the way our society was formed. This period consisted of developments in astronomy, mathematics, biology, and physics. Many different scientists helped shape the Scientific Revolution, one of those great scientists was Leonardo Da Vinci. Leonardo Da Vinci was born on April 15th, 1452, in Vinci, Italy. As

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    radical scientific changes in this period it has become known as the scientific revolution. While this did bring around the dissolution that was prominent in the middle ages, it did not mean that the middle ages was without its own scientific breakthroughs. Scholars started to learn languages such as Latin and Greek

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    from our textbooks and read from primary sources we have learned that Europe has transformed a lot throughout history. Europe has gone through the Renaissance, the Industrial Revolution and many other turning points. The most important turning point in European history is the Scientific Revolution. The Scientific Revolution is important because the way people understood the universe, medicine, anatomy and chemistry changed. It also led to the Enlightenment, which brought about human reason as well

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