The Scientific Revolution: From Copernicus to Newton
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## TL;DR The Scientific Revolution (1543-1687) replaced medieval Aristotelian cosmology with empirical observation and mathematical law. Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler, and Newton established the foundations of modern science. ## Core Explanation Key figures: Copernicus (heliocentrism, 1543), Galileo (telescopic observation — Jupiter's moons, sunspots, 1610), Kepler (elliptical orbits, three laws of planetary motion, 1609-1619), Bacon (empirical method, inductive reasoning), Descartes (analytic geometry, mechanical philosophy), Newton (universal gravitation, calculus, 1687). ## Detailed Analysis The transition from qualitative to quantitative: Galileo's inclined plane experiments measured acceleration with water clocks. Newton's Principia demonstrated that the same physical laws apply to Earth and heavens — the first unification in physics. The Royal Society (founded 1660) institutionalized empirical science. ## Further Reading - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: Scientific Revolution - The Galileo Project (Rice University) - Cambridge History of Science Series ## Related Articles - [Scientific Revolution](../../science/scientific-revolution.md) - [AI for Protein Structure Prediction: AlphaFold and the Folding Revolution](../../ai/ai-for-protein-structure-prediction-alphafold-and-the-folding-revolution.md) - [AI for Science: AlphaFold and the AI-Driven Discovery Revolution](../../ai/ai-for-science.md)