“You wonder that there are so few followers of the Pythagorean opinion [that the earth moves] while I am astonished that there have been any up to this day who have embraced and followed it. Nor can I ever sufficiently admire the outstanding acumen of those who have taken hold of this opinion and accepted it as true: they have, through sheer force of intellect, done such violence to their own senses as to prefer what reason told them over that which sensible experience plainly showed them to be the contrary. For the arguments against the whirling [the rotation] of the earth we have already examined are very plausible, as we have seen; and the fact that the Ptolemaics and the Aristotelians and all their disciples took them to be conclusive is indeed a strong argument of their effectiveness. But the experiences which overtly contradict the annual movement [the movement of the earth around the sun] are indeed so much greater in their apparent force that, I repeat, there is no limit to my astonishment when I reflect that Aristarchus and Copernicus were able to make reason so conquer sense that in defiance of the latter, the former became mistress of their belief.”
Salviati
Salviati is a fictional character in Galileo Galilei's 'Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems.' He represents Galileo's own views, especially concerning the movement of the Earth.
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Salviati Quote: Courage of Reason Over Sense – The Truth About Earth's Movement
Salviati on the power of reason conquering the senses – an inspiring quote about Earth's movement from Galileo Galilei's Dialogue.
Salviati is the fictional character in Galileo Galilei's famous work 'Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems' who advocates for the Copernican view of the Earth's movement. He serves as the voice for Galileo's arguments in the scientific discourse of the Renaissance.



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