And the book, "A More Perfect Heaven", by Dava Sobel, is just such a book. It is an account of how Copernicus was persuaded to publish his only book, "On The Revolutions".
Sobel also wrote "Longitude", which was made into an excellent docudrama by PBS. Longitude is about how the first clock accurate enough to be used to determine longitude of ships was invented. One minute of time equates to about one nautical mile. While mariners could sight the Sun, planets or stars to determine their longitude, no one knew how to determine how far East or West a ship had traveled since leaving London except by dead reckoning and approximating the time the zenith of certain stars occurred. If a navigator was more than 10 seconds off the destination could be below the horizon and out of sight when the ship arrived at what the navigator thought was its location. To be used to determine longitude a clock must be stable and maintain accuracy to a second in all weather, temperatures and ship motions. Sobel details how a lone, uneducated but skilled craftsman of clocks, won the 10,000 Pound prize for inventing such a clock.
In "On The Revolutions" she details the struggles and fears Copernicus endured and the role Rheticus, a young mathematician barely into his twenties, played in getting his work published.
Sobel also wrote "Longitude", which was made into an excellent docudrama by PBS. Longitude is about how the first clock accurate enough to be used to determine longitude of ships was invented. One minute of time equates to about one nautical mile. While mariners could sight the Sun, planets or stars to determine their longitude, no one knew how to determine how far East or West a ship had traveled since leaving London except by dead reckoning and approximating the time the zenith of certain stars occurred. If a navigator was more than 10 seconds off the destination could be below the horizon and out of sight when the ship arrived at what the navigator thought was its location. To be used to determine longitude a clock must be stable and maintain accuracy to a second in all weather, temperatures and ship motions. Sobel details how a lone, uneducated but skilled craftsman of clocks, won the 10,000 Pound prize for inventing such a clock.
In "On The Revolutions" she details the struggles and fears Copernicus endured and the role Rheticus, a young mathematician barely into his twenties, played in getting his work published.
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