First off, I promised myself before, that I won't be participating in this section of iStorya in depth. However in light of this recent news article...
Copernicus's remains identified - Telegraph
Main St. USA: Copernicus' Remains Identified Through DNA
I began to ponder on the thought of how religious (esp. Christian) people might feel if say, hypothetically, Copernicus wasn't born.
Why is this question significant.
It is said that modern civilization owes its existence to the concept known as "Copernican Heliocentrism"
Copernican heliocentrism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia which, like everyone already knows, the idea that the Sun (and not the Earth) is at the center of the Solar System.
This challenged the view of the Earth-centered universe, and thus, ideas long held by religious orders about the presence of heaven and hell and other spiritual places were also questioned. Face it--to the common man, someone proposing an idea that the sun is at the center of things, and that the earth goes around it must be totally absurd, considering the fact that when he looks up at the sky everyday, he sees with his own eyes, that the sun rises in the east and then sets in the west, and everything in the sky moves around the earth. This earth-centered system, perpetuated by Egyptian astronomer-geographer Claudius Ptolemy (100-170 AD), lasted to the 1500s C.E. The Catholic Church favored this earth-centered view because it left room for heaven and hell to exist.
So basically, when Copernicus published his work, nagkaproblema ang church, because how will they now explain to their congregations, their followers, where heaven or hell was, if the Earth was not in fact, the center of all things in the universe? And this led to other ideological miseries of the church, because how come Jupiter is larger than the earth, and it has more moons than the Earth, meaning there are more superior planets in terms of size and satellite number?
To make a long story short, the modern world as we know it, especially this (re)discovery by Copernicus (the ancient Greeks were first to develop this Sun-centered idea, but their ideas were lost) was changed by findings in astronomy--the hold of the church on its people became lesser, and thus this paved the way for civilizations and societies to adapt the scientific method (some in generous, but others in self-serving means) to pursue progress and development for their lives.
Now going back to the question--if you are a devout Christian, particularly a Catholic, would you be happier living in a world where Nicolaus Copernicus didn't exist, or wasn't born? Because you'd know the consquences to this--the church would stay in power--the idea of heaven and hell would be stronger and more influential among people--people would be more "virtuous" (as defined by Catholicism), there will be no "scientific method" and thus only what the Church says must be true...
...do you think you'll enjoy the world better then, if Copernicus didn't exist?
-RODION