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11 - The never-ending Galileo story

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 May 2006

Peter Machamer
Affiliation:
University of Pittsburgh
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Summary

This essay is concerned with the myth of Galileo and, thus, with his image as a hero and martyr. It does not endeavor to state who Galileo was or what he did, but deals rather with people's expectations of who he was; in other words how his image and the image of his science have evolved from his time to the present day.

Galileo's great qualities and skills as a scientist are well known, but he was also an accomplished writer, wielding his sharp pen as a major protagonist in an age of upheaval, and he was the most famous martyr of science. His fate is, therefore, an endless source of material for an epic, enough to satisfy every age's demand for hero worship. This is why Bertolt Brecht chose to write his famous play Galileo.

It is nothing new that Galileo has been a subject of worship since his own day. It is agreed among Galilean scholars that the Galileo story is often distorted by popular as well as scholarly literature. Moreover, Galileo is naturally idolized. If we cannot, or do not wish to, safeguard historical description from circumstantial influences or fashions, let us at least try to explore the twilight zone between "true" history and myth.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1998

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