Page:The Gradual Acceptance of the Copernican Theory of the Universe.djvu/106

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of so many and divers combustible materials, it would soon burst into flames and be reduced to ashes![1]

During the 18th century at Louvain the Copernican doctrine was warmly supported, but as a theory. A MS. of a course given there in 1748 has come down to us, in which the professor, while affirming its hypothetical character, described it as a simple, clear and satisfactory explanation of the phenomena, then answered all the objections made against it by theologians, physicists, and astronomers.[2] A few years earlier, (1728) a Jesuit at Liège, though well acquainted with Newton's work, declared: "For my part I do not doubt the least in the world that the earth is eternally fixed, for God has founded the terrestrial globe, and it will not be shaken."[3] Another priest stated in the first chapter of his astronomy that the sun and the planets daily revolve around the earth; then later on, he explained the Copernican and the Tychonic schemes and the Cartesian theory of motion with evident sympathy.[4] Two others, one a Jesuit in 1682 at Naples,[5] the other in 1741 at Verona, frankly preferred the Tychonic system, and the latter called the system found by "Tommaso Copernico" a mere fancy.[6] Still another priest, evidently well acquainted with Bradley's work, as late as in 1774 declared that there was nothing decisive on either side of the great controversy between the systems.[7] At this time, however, a father was teaching the Copernican system at Liège without differentiating between thesis and hypothesis.[8] And a Jesuit, while he denied (1772) universal gravitation, the earth's movement, and the plurality of inhabited worlds, declared that the Roman Congregation had done wrong in charging these as heretical suggestions. In fact, M. Monchamp, himself a Catholic priest at Louvain, declared that the Newtonian proofs were considered by many in the 18th century virtually to abrogate the condemnation of 1616 and 1633; hence the professors of the seminary at Liège had adopted the Copernican system.[9]


  1. Cited in Monchamp: 335 note.
  2. Ibid: 326.
  3. Ibid: 330.
  4. Fontana: Institutio, II, 32-35.
  5. Ferramosca: Positiones… :19.
  6. Piccoli: La Scienza, 4, 7.
  7. Spagnio, De Motu, 81.
  8. Monchamp: 331.
  9. Monchamp: 345.
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