登陆注册
14727000000006

第6章 PTOLEMY.(3)

What Ptolemy saw in the movements of the stars led him to the conclusion that they were bright points attached to the inside of a tremendous globe. The movements of this globe which carried the stars were only compatible with the supposition that the earth occupied its centre. The imperceptible effect produced by a change in the locality of the observer on the apparent brightness of the stars made it plain that the dimensions of the terrestrial globe must be quite insignificant in comparison with those of the celestial sphere. The earth might, in fact, be regarded as a grain of sand while the stars lay upon a globe many yards in diameter.

So tremendous was the revolution in human knowledge implied by this discovery, that we can well imagine how Ptolemy, dazzled as it were by the fame which had so justly accrued to him, failed to make one further step. Had he made that step, it would have emancipated the human intellect from the bondage of fourteen centuries of servitude to a wholly monstrous notion of this earth's importance in the scheme of the heavens. The obvious fact that the sun, the moon, and the stars rose day by day, moved across the sky in a glorious never-ending procession, and duly set when their appointed courses had been run, demanded some explanation. The circumstance that the fixed stars preserved their mutual distances from year to year, and from age to age, appeared to Ptolemy to prove that the sphere which contained those stars, and on whose surface they were believed by him to be fixed, revolved completely around the earth once every day. He would thus account for all the phenomena of rising and setting consistently with the supposition that our globe was stationary.

Probably this supposition must have appeared monstrous, even to Ptolemy. He knew that the earth was a gigantic object, but, large as it may have been, he knew that it was only a particle in comparison with the celestial sphere, yet he apparently believed, and certainly succeeded in persuading other men to believe, that the celestial sphere did actually perform these movements.

Ptolemy was an excellent geometer. He knew that the rising and the setting of the sun, the moon, and the myriad stars, could have been accounted for in a different way. If the earth turned round uniformly once a day while poised at the centre of the sphere of the heavens, all the phenomena of rising and setting could be completely explained. This is, indeed, obvious after a moment's reflection.

Consider yourself to be standing on the earth at the centre of the heavens. There are stars over your head, and half the contents of the heavens are visible, while the other half are below your horizon. As the earth turns round, the stars over your head will change, and unless it should happen that you have taken up your position at either of the poles, new stars will pass into your view, and others will disappear, for at no time can you have more than half of the whole sphere visible. The observer on the earth would, therefore, say that some stars were rising, and that some stars were setting. We have, therefore, two totally distinct methods, each of which would completely explain all the observed facts of the diurnal movement. One of these suppositions requires that the celestial sphere, bearing with it the stars and other celestial bodies, turns uniformly around an invisible axis, while the earth remains stationary at the centre. The other supposition would be, that it is the stupendous celestial sphere which remains stationary, while the earth at the centre rotates about the same axis as the celestial sphere did before, but in an opposite direction, and with a uniform velocity which would enable it to complete one turn in twenty-four hours. Ptolemy was mathematician enough to know that either of these suppositions would suffice for the explanation of the observed facts. Indeed, the phenomena of the movements of the stars, so far as he could observe them, could not be called upon to pronounce which of these views was true, and which was false.

Ptolemy had, therefore, to resort for guidance to indirect lines of reasoning. One of these suppositions must be true, and yet it appeared that the adoption of either was accompanied by a great difficulty. It is one of his chief merits to have demonstrated that the celestial sphere was so stupendous that the earth itself was absolutely insignificant in comparison therewith. If, then, this stupendous sphere rotated once in twenty-four hours, the speed with which the movement of some of the stars must be executed would be so portentous as to seem well-nigh impossible. It would, therefore, seem much simpler on this ground to adopt the other alternative, and to suppose the diurnal movements were due to the rotation of the earth. Here Ptolemy saw, or at all events fancied he saw, objections of the weightiest description. The evidence of the senses appeared directly to controvert the supposition that this earth is anything but stationary. Ptolemy might, perhaps, have dismissed this objection on the ground that the testimony of the senses on such a matter should be entirely subordinated to the interpretation which our intelligence would place upon the facts to which the senses deposed. Another objection, however, appeared to him to possess the gravest moment. It was argued that if the earth were rotating, there is nothing to make the air participate in this motion, mankind would therefore be swept from the earth by the furious blasts which would arise from the movement of the earth through an atmosphere at rest.

同类推荐
  • 太公金匮

    太公金匮

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 紫阳真人内传

    紫阳真人内传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 律抄

    律抄

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 易象图说外篇

    易象图说外篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 兜率不磷坚禅师语录

    兜率不磷坚禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 希腊罗马英豪列传(Ⅴ)

    希腊罗马英豪列传(Ⅴ)

    本书出自古罗马历史学家普鲁塔克之手。书中记载了包括恺撒、安东尼、梭伦等50名古希腊罗马政治家和军事统帅的事迹,既是一部体例松散的古代史,也开了西方世界传记文学的先河,对之后两千年的西方哲学、史学和文学都产生过重大的影响。
  • 小学生枕边书3:启发小学生的100个哲理故事

    小学生枕边书3:启发小学生的100个哲理故事

    这是一本专门针对小学生而编写的故事书。书中囊括了一百个具有人生哲理的小故事。这些小故事短小精粹、情节简单、可读性强、道理深刻。适合小学生进行阅读。
  • 爍闪流溪痕

    爍闪流溪痕

    他在异象中被发现,无法得知他是碰巧出现在异象发生地或者是异象造就了他。他有过弱小受欺的时刻,也有强大到万人瞩目之时。一个个离奇古怪的事情发生在他身上,神战的惊天骇浪冲击在他眼前,他为了达到他的目的,不得不参与其中。只是庆幸,有优雅的精灵在他身边。etc
  • 蜜汁二婚进行时:渣男老公别挡道

    蜜汁二婚进行时:渣男老公别挡道

    渣男老公红杏出墙加冷血无情怎么办?直接踹了!初恋打着爱情的幌子和老公狼狈为奸算计我怎么办?但是对面那个多金帅气高大威猛还要让我救命之恩当以身相许的男人怎么办?
  • 欺天大圣

    欺天大圣

    那是数万年的执念–成仙,天玄百域,万族林立,无数天骄为重连那条断路前赴后继,只为成就万古第一仙,当世仙之王,天命不在,末法当世,王昊轮回超脱承载万道,终问鼎巅峰,踏出自己不朽大道。“苍天无目断我仙,吾当化圣必欺天”
  • 爱上美女大小姐

    爱上美女大小姐

    韩烨本是国家特殊部门职员,但是在大学毕业之后,却请假回到老家,进了镇上的厂子,就为了报父母当年的仇恨。治病救人,拳碎黑暗,棒打富二代,谁惹了他,就只有一个结果,那就是死!
  • 九九加一,爱情静好

    九九加一,爱情静好

    你爱我,为我做了99件事;我爱你,为你做了1件事。爱情里没有公不公平,有的只是“甘愿”......
  • 疯妖

    疯妖

    家族阴谋致使少年家破人亡,转世流亡妖域修妖,继承帝位,杀伐天下。若我苟延残喘一时,定将昨日之痛百倍奉还!上讨仙界天庭,下征妖域兽界。一日是大帝,终生为大帝。
  • 风翔万里
  • 谬仙

    谬仙

    仙,又如何;神,又能如何……来自荒古的少年冷焱,肩负着使命,他独自一人回到以前的大陆……仇人?又会有怎样的艰难险阻,他将如何一人力挽狂澜?