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the university of his native city that his attention was arrested

by the vibrations of a lamp suspended from the ceiling of the

cathedral; and before he had quitted the church; while the choir

was chanting mediaeval anthems; he had compared those vibrations

with his own pulse; which after repeated experiments; ended in the

construction of the first pendulum;applied not as it was by

Huygens to the measurement of time; but to medical science; to

enable physicians to ascertain the rate of the pulse。  But the

pendulum was soon brought into the service of the clockmakers; and

ultimately to the determination of the form of the earth; by its

minute irregularities in diverse latitudes; and finally to the

measurement of differences of longitude by its connection with

electricity and the recording of astronomical observations。  Thus

it was that the swinging of a cathedral lamp; before the eye of a

man of genius; has done nearly as much as the telescope itself to

advance science; to say nothing of its practical uses in common

life。



Galileo had been destined by his father to the profession of

medicine; and was ignorant of mathematics。  He amused his leisure

hours with painting and music; and in order to study the principles

of drawing he found it necessary to acquire some knowledge of

geometry; much to the annoyance of his father; who did not like to

see his mind diverted from the prescriptions of Hippocrates and

Galen。  The certain truths of geometry burst upon him like a

revelation; and after mastering Euclid he turned to Archimedes with

equal enthusiasm。  Mathematics now absorbed his mind; and the

father was obliged to yield to the bent of his genius; which seemed

to disdain the regular professions by which social position was

most surely effected。  He wrote about this time an essay on the

Hydrostatic Balance; which introduced him to Guido Ubaldo; a famous

mathematician; who induced him to investigate the subject of the

centre of gravity in solid bodies。  His treatise on this subject

secured an introduction to the Grand Duke of Tuscany; who perceived

his merits; and by whom he was appointed a lecturer on mathematics

at Pisa; but on the small salary of sixty crowns a year。



This was in 1589; when he was twenty…five; an enthusiastic young

man; full of hope and animal spirits; the charm of every circle for

his intelligence; vivacity; and wit; but bold and sarcastic;

contemptuous of ancient dogmas; defiant of authority; and therefore

no favorite with Jesuit priests and Dominican professors。  It is

said that he was a handsome man; with bright golden locks; such as

painters in that age loved to perpetuate upon the canvas; hilarious

and cheerful; fond of good cheer; yet a close student; obnoxious

only to learned dunces and narrow pedants and treadmill professors

and zealous priests;all of whom sought to molest him; yet to whom

he was either indifferent or sarcastic; holding them and their

formulas up to ridicule。  He now directed his inquiries to the

mechanical doctrines of Aristotle; to whose authority the schools

had long bowed down; and whom he too regarded as one of the great

intellectual giants of the world; yet not to be credited without

sufficient reasons。  Before the 〃Novum Organum〃 was written; he

sought; as Bacon himself pointed out; the way to arrive at truth;

a foundation to stand upon; a principle tested by experience;

which; when established by experiment; would serve for sure

deductions。



Now one of the principles assumed by Aristotle; and which had never

been disputed; was; that if different weights of the same material

were let fall from the same height; the heavier would reach the

ground sooner than the lighter; and in proportion to the difference

of weight。  This assumption Galileo denied; and asserted that; with

the exception of a small difference owing to the resistance of the

air; both would fall to the ground in the same space of time。  To

prove his position by actual experiment; he repaired to the leaning

tower of Pisa; and demonstrated that he was right and Aristotle was

wrong。  The Aristotelians would not believe the evidence of their

own senses; and ascribed the effect to some unknown cause。  To such

a degree were men enslaved by authority。  This provoked Galileo;

and led him to attack authority with still greater vehemence;

adding mockery to sarcasm; which again exasperated his opponents;

and doubtless laid the foundation of that personal hostility which

afterwards pursued him to the prison of the Inquisition。  This

blended arrogance and asperity in a young man was offensive to the

whole university; yet natural to one who had overturned one of the

favorite axioms of the greatest master of thought the world had

seen for nearly two thousand years; and the scorn and opposition

with which his discovery was received increased his rancor; so that

he; in his turn; did not render justice to the learned men arrayed

against him; who were not necessarily dull or obstinate because

they would not at once give up the opinions in which they were

educated; and which the learned world still accepted。  Nor did they

oppose and hate him for his new opinions; so much as from dislike

of his personal arrogance and bitter sarcasms。



At last his enemies made it too hot for him at Pisa。  He resigned

his chair (1591); but only to accept a higher position at Padua; on

a salary of one hundred and eighty florins;not; however; adequate

to his support; so that he was obliged to take pupils in

mathematics。  To show the comparative estimate of that age of

science; the fact may be mentioned that the professor of scholastic

philosophy in the same university was paid fourteen hundred

florins。  This was in 1592; and the next year Galileo invented the

thermometer; still an imperfect instrument; since air was not

perfectly excluded。  At this period his reputation seems to have

been established as a brilliant lecturer rather than as a great

discoverer; or even as a great mathematician; for he was

immeasurably behind Kepler; his contemporary; in the power of

making abstruse calculations and numerical combinations。  In this

respect Kepler was inferior only to Copernicus; Newton; and Laplace

in our times; or Hipparchus and Ptolemy among the ancients; and it

is to him that we owe the discovery of those great laws of

planetary motion from which there is no appeal; and which have

never been rivalled in importance except those made by Newton

himself;laws which connect the mean distance of the planets from

the sun with the times of their revolutions; laws which show that

the orbits of planets are elliptical; not circular; and that the

areas described by lines drawn from the moving planet to the sun

are proportionable to the times employed in the motion。  What an

infinity of calculation; in the infancy of sciencebefore the

invention of logarithms;was necessary to arrive at these truths!

What fertility of invention was displayed in all his hypotheses;

what patience in working them out; what magnanimity in discarding

those which were not true!  What power of guessing; even to hit

upon theories which could be established by elaborate

calculations;all from the primary thought; the grand axiom; which

Kepler was the first to propose; that there must be some numerical

or geometrical relations among the times; distances; and velocities

of the revolving bodies of the solar system!  It would seem that

although his science was deductive; he invoked the aid of induction

also: a great original genius; yet modest like Newton; a man who

avoided hostilities; yet given to the most boundless enthusiasm on

the subjects to which he devoted his life。  How intense his

raptures!  〃Nothing holds me;〃 he writes; on discovering his great

laws; 〃I will indulge in my sacred fury。  I will boast of the

golden vessels I have stolen from the Egyptians。  If you forgive

me; I rejoice。  If you are angry; it is all the same to me。  The

die is cast; the book is written;to be read either now; or by

posterity; I care not which。  It may well wait a century for a

reader; as God has waited six thousand years for an observer。〃



We do not see this sublime repose in the attitude of Galileo;this

falling back on his own conscious greatness; willing to let things

take their natural course; but rather; on the other hand; an

impatience under contradiction; a vehement scorn of adversaries;

and an intellectual arrogance that gave offence; and impeded his

career; and injured his fame。  No matter how great a man may be;

his intellectual pride is always offensive; and when united with

sarcasm and mockery it will make bitter enemies; who will pull him

down。



Galileo; on his transfer to Padua; began to teach the doctrines of

Copernicus;a much greater genius than he; and yet one who

provoked no enmities; although he made the greatest revolution in

astronomical knowledge that any man ever made; since he was in no

haste to reveal his discoveries; and stated them in a calm and

inoffensive way。  I doubt if new discoverers in science meet with

serious opposition when men themselves are not attacked; and they

are made to appeal to calm intelligence; and war is not made on

those Scripture texts which seem to controvert them。  Even

theologians receive science when science is not made to undermine

theological declarations; and when the divorce of science from

revelation; reason from faith; as two distinct realms; is

vigorously insisted upon。  Pascal incurred no hostilities for his

scientific investigations; nor Newton; nor Laplace。  It is only

when scientific men sneer at the Bible because its declarations

cannot always be harmonized with science that the hostilities of

theologians are provoked。  And it is only when theologians deny

scientific discoveries that seem to conflict with texts of

Scripture; that opposition arises among scientific men。  It would

seem that the

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