Galileo

Italian philosopher, astronomer and mathematician
in full Galileo Galilei
born Feb. 15, 1564, Pisa [Italy]
died Jan. 8, 1642, Arcetri, near Florence
Main
Italian natural philosopher, astronomer, and mathematician
who made fundamental contributions to the sciences of
motion, astronomy, and strength of materials and to the
development of the scientific method. His formulation of
(circular) inertia, the law of falling bodies, and parabolic
trajectories marked the beginning of a fundamental change in
the study of motion. His insistence that the book of nature
was written in the language of mathematics changed natural
philosophy from a verbal, qualitative account to a
mathematical one in which experimentation became a
recognized method for discovering the facts of nature.
Finally, his discoveries with the telescope revolutionized
astronomy and paved the way for the acceptance of the
Copernican heliocentric system, but his advocacy of that
system eventually resulted in an Inquisition process against
him.
Early life and career
Galileo was born in Pisa, Tuscany, on February 15, 1564, the
oldest son of Vincenzo Galilei, a musician who made
important contributions to the theory and practice of music
and who may have performed some experiments with Galileo in
1588–89 on the relationship between pitch and the tension of
strings. The family moved to Florence in the early 1570s,
where the Galilei family had lived for generations. In his
middle teens Galileo attended the monastery school at
Vallombrosa, near Florence, and then in 1581 matriculated at
the University of Pisa, where he was to study medicine.
However, he became enamoured with mathematics and decided to
make the mathematical subjects and philosophy his
profession, against the protests of his father. Galileo then
began to prepare himself to teach Aristotelian philosophy
and mathematics, and several of his lectures have survived.
In 1585 Galileo left the university without having obtained
a degree, and for several years he gave private lessons in
the mathematical subjects in Florence and Siena. During this
period he designed a new form of hydrostatic balance for
weighing small quantities and wrote a short treatise, La
bilancetta (“The Little Balance”), that circulated in
manuscript form. He also began his studies on motion, which
he pursued steadily for the next two decades.
In 1588 Galileo applied for the chair of mathematics at
the University of Bologna but was unsuccessful. His
reputation was, however, increasing, and later that year he
was asked to deliver two lectures to the Florentine Academy,
a prestigious literary group, on the arrangement of the
world in Dante’s Inferno. He also found some ingenious
theorems on centres of gravity (again, circulated in
manuscript) that brought him recognition among
mathematicians and the patronage of Guidobaldo del Monte
(1545–1607), a nobleman and author of several important
works on mechanics. As a result, he obtained the chair of
mathematics at the University of Pisa in 1589. There,
according to his first biographer, Vincenzo Viviani
(1622–1703), Galileo demonstrated, by dropping bodies of
different weights from the top of the famous Leaning Tower,
that the speed of fall of a heavy object is not proportional
to its weight, as Aristotle had claimed. The manuscript
tract De motu (On Motion), finished during this period,
shows that Galileo was abandoning Aristotelian notions about
motion and was instead taking an Archimedean approach to the
problem. But his attacks on Aristotle made him unpopular
with his colleagues, and in 1592 his contract was not
renewed. His patrons, however, secured him the chair of
mathematics at the University of Padua, where he taught from
1592 until 1610.
Although Galileo’s salary was considerably higher there,
his responsibilities as the head of the family (his father
had died in 1591) meant that he was chronically pressed for
money. His university salary could not cover all his
expenses, and he therefore took in well-to-do boarding
students whom he tutored privately in such subjects as
fortification. He also sold a proportional compass, or
sector, of his own devising, made by an artisan whom he
employed in his house. Perhaps because of these financial
problems, he did not marry, but he did have an arrangement
with a Venetian woman, Marina Gamba, who bore him two
daughters and a son. In the midst of his busy life he
continued his research on motion, and by 1609 he had
determined that the distance fallen by a body is
proportional to the square of the elapsed time (the law of
falling bodies) and that the trajectory of a projectile is a
parabola, both conclusions that contradicted Aristotelian
physics.
Telescopic discoveries
At this point, however, Galileo’s career took a dramatic
turn. In the spring of 1609 he heard that in the Netherlands
an instrument had been invented that showed distant things
as though they were nearby. By trial and error, he quickly
figured out the secret of the invention and made his own
three-powered spyglass from lenses for sale in spectacle
makers’ shops. Others had done the same; what set Galileo
apart was that he quickly figured out how to improve the
instrument, taught himself the art of lens grinding, and
produced increasingly powerful telescopes. In August of that
year he presented an eight-powered instrument to the
Venetian Senate (Padua was in the Venetian Republic). He was
rewarded with life tenure and a doubling of his salary.
Galileo was now one of the highest-paid professors at the
university. In the fall of 1609 Galileo began observing the
heavens with instruments that magnified up to 20 times. In
December he drew the Moon’s phases as seen through the
telescope, showing that the Moon’s surface is not smooth, as
had been thought, but is rough and uneven. In January 1610
he discovered four moons revolving around Jupiter. He also
found that the telescope showed many more stars than are
visible with the naked eye. These discoveries were
earthshaking, and Galileo quickly produced a little book,
Sidereus Nuncius (The Sidereal Messenger), in which he
described them. He dedicated the book to Cosimo II de Medici
(1590–1621), the grand duke of his native Tuscany, whom he
had tutored in mathematics for several summers, and he named
the moons of Jupiter after the Medici family: the Sidera
Medicea, or “Medicean Stars.” Galileo was rewarded with an
appointment as mathematician and philosopher of the grand
duke of Tuscany, and in the fall of 1610 he returned in
triumph to his native land.
Galileo was now a courtier and lived the life of a
gentleman. Before he left Padua he had discovered the
puzzling appearance of Saturn, later to be shown as caused
by a ring surrounding it, and in Florence he discovered that
Venus goes through phases just as the Moon does. Although
these discoveries did not prove that the Earth is a planet
orbiting the Sun, they undermined Aristotelian cosmology:
the absolute difference between the corrupt earthly region
and the perfect and unchanging heavens was proved wrong by
the mountainous surface of the Moon, the moons of Jupiter
showed that there had to be more than one centre of motion
in the universe, and the phases of Venus showed that it
(and, by implication, Mercury) revolves around the Sun. As a
result, Galileo was confirmed in his belief, which he had
probably held for decades but which had not been central to
his studies, that the Sun is the centre of the universe and
that the Earth is a planet, as Copernicus had argued.
Galileo’s conversion to Copernicanism would be a key turning
point in the scientific revolution.
After a brief controversy about floating bodies, Galileo
again turned his attention to the heavens and entered a
debate with Christoph Scheiner (1573–1650), a German Jesuit
and professor of mathematics at Ingolstadt, about the nature
of sunspots (of which Galileo was an independent
discoverer). This controversy resulted in Galileo’s Istoria
e dimostrazioni intorno alle macchie solari e loro accidenti
(“History and Demonstrations Concerning Sunspots and Their
Properties,” or “Letters on Sunspots”), which appeared in
1613. Against Scheiner, who, in an effort to save the
perfection of the Sun, argued that sunspots are satellites
of the Sun, Galileo argued that the spots are on or near the
Sun’s surface, and he bolstered his argument with a series
of detailed engravings of his observations.
Galileo’s Copernicanism
Galileo’s increasingly overt Copernicanism began to cause
trouble for him. In 1613 he wrote a letter to his student
Benedetto Castelli (1528–1643) in Pisa about the problem of
squaring the Copernican theory with certain biblical
passages. Inaccurate copies of this letter were sent by
Galileo’s enemies to the Inquisition in Rome, and he had to
retrieve the letter and send an accurate copy. Several
Dominican fathers in Florence lodged complaints against
Galileo in Rome, and Galileo went to Rome to defend the
Copernican cause and his good name. Before leaving, he
finished an expanded version of the letter to Castelli, now
addressed to the grand duke’s mother and good friend of
Galileo, the dowager Christina. In his Letter to the Grand
Duchess Christina, Galileo discussed the problem of
interpreting biblical passages with regard to scientific
discoveries but, except for one example, did not actually
interpret the Bible. That task had been reserved for
approved theologians in the wake of the Council of Trent
(1545–63) and the beginning of the Catholic
Counter-Reformation. But the tide in Rome was turning
against the Copernican theory, and in 1615, when the cleric
Paolo Antonio Foscarini (c. 1565–1616) published a book
arguing that the Copernican theory did not conflict with
scripture, Inquisition consultants examined the question and
pronounced the Copernican theory heretical. Foscarini’s book
was banned, as were some more technical and nontheological
works, such as Johannes Kepler’s Epitome of Copernican
Astronomy. Copernicus’s own 1543 book, De revolutionibus
orbium coelestium libri vi (“Six Books Concerning the
Revolutions of the Heavenly Orbs”), was suspended until
corrected. Galileo was not mentioned directly in the decree,
but he was admonished by Robert Cardinal Bellarmine
(1542–1621) not to “hold or defend” the Copernican theory.
An improperly prepared document placed in the Inquisition
files at this time states that Galileo was admonished “not
to hold, teach, or defend” the Copernican theory “in any way
whatever, either orally or in writing.”
Galileo was thus effectively muzzled on the Copernican
issue. Only slowly did he recover from this setback. Through
a student, he entered a controversy about the nature of
comets occasioned by the appearance of three comets in 1618.
After several exchanges, mainly with Orazio Grassi
(1583–1654), a professor of mathematics at the Collegio
Romano, he finally entered the argument under his own name.
Il saggiatore (The Assayer), published in 1623, was a
brilliant polemic on physical reality and an exposition of
the new scientific method. Galileo here discussed the method
of the newly emerging science, arguing:
Philosophy is written in this grand book, the universe,
which stands continually open to our gaze. But the book
cannot be understood unless one first learns to comprehend
the language and read the letters in which it is composed.
It is written in the language of mathematics, and its
characters are triangles, circles, and other geometric
figures without which it is humanly impossible to understand
a single word of it.
He also drew a distinction between the properties of
external objects and the sensations they cause in us—i.e.,
the distinction between primary and secondary qualities.
Publication of Il saggiatore came at an auspicious moment,
for Maffeo Cardinal Barberini (1568–1644), a friend,
admirer, and patron of Galileo for a decade, was named Pope
Urban VIII as the book was going to press. Galileo’s friends
quickly arranged to have it dedicated to the new pope. In
1624 Galileo went to Rome and had six interviews with Urban
VIII. Galileo told the pope about his theory of the tides
(developed earlier), which he put forward as proof of the
annual and diurnal motions of the Earth. The pope gave
Galileo permission to write a book about theories of the
universe but warned him to treat the Copernican theory only
hypothetically. The book, Dialogo sopra i due massimi
sistemi del mondo, tolemaico e copernicano (Dialogue
Concerning the Two Chief World Systems, Ptolemaic &
Copernican), was finished in 1630, and Galileo sent it to
the Roman censor. Because of an outbreak of the plague,
communications between Florence and Rome were interrupted,
and Galileo asked for the censoring to be done instead in
Florence. The Roman censor had a number of serious
criticisms of the book and forwarded these to his colleagues
in Florence. After writing a preface in which he professed
that what followed was written hypothetically, Galileo had
little trouble getting the book through the Florentine
censors, and it appeared in Florence in 1632.
In the Dialogue’s witty conversation between Salviati
(representing Galileo), Sagredo (the intelligent layman),
and Simplicio (the dyed-in-the-wool Aristotelian), Galileo
gathered together all the arguments (mostly based on his own
telescopic discoveries) for the Copernican theory and
against the traditional geocentric cosmology. As opposed to
Aristotle’s, Galileo’s approach to cosmology is
fundamentally spatial and geometric: the Earth’s axis
retains its orientation in space as the Earth circles the
Sun, and bodies not under a force retain their velocity
(although this inertia is ultimately circular). But in
giving Simplicio the final word, that God could have made
the universe any way he wanted to and still made it appear
to us the way it does, he put Pope Urban VIII’s favourite
argument in the mouth of the person who had been ridiculed
throughout the dialogue. The reaction against the book was
swift. The pope convened a special commission to examine the
book and make recommendations; the commission found that
Galileo had not really treated the Copernican theory
hypothetically and recommended that a case be brought
against him by the Inquisition. Galileo was summoned to Rome
in 1633. During his first appearance before the Inquisition,
he was confronted with the 1616 edict recording that he was
forbidden to discuss the Copernican theory. In his defense
Galileo produced a letter from Cardinal Bellarmine, by then
dead, stating that he was admonished only not to hold or
defend the theory. The case was at somewhat of an impasse,
and, in what can only be called a plea bargain, Galileo
confessed to having overstated his case. He was pronounced
to be vehemently suspect of heresy and was condemned to life
imprisonment and was made to abjure formally. There is no
evidence that at this time he whispered, “Eppur si muove”
(“And yet it moves”). It should be noted that Galileo was
never in a dungeon or tortured; during the Inquisition
process he stayed mostly at the house of the Tuscan
ambassador to the Vatican and for a short time in a
comfortable apartment in the Inquisition building. (For a
note on actions taken by Galileo’s defenders and by the
church in the centuries since the trial, see BTW: Galileo’s
condemnation.) After the process he spent six months at the
palace of Ascanio Piccolomini (c. 1590–1671), the archbishop
of Siena and a friend and patron, and then moved into a
villa near Arcetri, in the hills above Florence. He spent
the rest of his life there. Galileo’s daughter Sister Maria
Celeste, who was in a nearby nunnery, was a great comfort to
her father until her untimely death in 1634.
Galileo was then 70 years old. Yet he kept working. In
Siena he had begun a new book on the sciences of motion and
strength of materials. There he wrote up his unpublished
studies that had been interrupted by his interest in the
telescope in 1609 and pursued intermittently since. The book
was spirited out of Italy and published in Leiden,
Netherlands, in 1638 under the title Discorsi e
dimostrazioni matematiche intorno a due nuove scienze
attenenti alla meccanica (Dialogues Concerning Two New
Sciences). Galileo here treated for the first time the
bending and breaking of beams and summarized his
mathematical and experimental investigations of motion,
including the law of falling bodies and the parabolic path
of projectiles as a result of the mixing of two motions,
constant speed and uniform acceleration. By then Galileo had
become blind, and he spent his time working with a young
student, Vincenzo Viviani, who was with him when he died on
January 8, 1642.