Crossroads of the World: Intersections of Power and Privilege in the Khumbu
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Authors
Bellows, Ian
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University of Washington Libraries
Abstract
Nicolaus Copernicus, the Polish astronomer and Catholic canon, is one of the most
enigmatic figures in the history of science. His monumental work, De Revolutionibus
orbium coelestium (“On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres”) is credited with
transforming Western astronomy by popularizing a heliocentric model. Such a move had
grave ontological consequences; the very existence of the carefully-synchronized anthropocentric
cosmos was threatened if Copernicus’ theory was considered a physical reality. Copernicus
found an unlikely ally in Andreas Osiander, a fiery Protestant reformer. In his foreword
to De Revolutionibus, originally published anonymously, Osiander urged readers to
consider the Copernican geometry as an innocuous, ontology-free artifice for calculating
planetary motion. His apologetics deflected theological criticism for seventy years
and allowed heliocentrism to become firmly entrenched the European imagination.
