• acockworkorange
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    4 months ago

    ? What were Ancient Greek and Romans seeing in the sky with the naked eye then?

    • pruwyben@discuss.tchncs.de
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      4 months ago

      Lots of people saw it before him. Apparently he (supposedly) just happened to never see it.

      Strangely his Wikipedia page says he made 3 observations of Mercury.

      • Successful_Try543@feddit.org
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        4 months ago

        Copernikus wrote in De revolutionibus:

        „The planet tortured us with many riddles and great hardship as we explored its wanderings“.

        So he observed him for three times, but it wasn’t easy.

      • acockworkorange
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        4 months ago

        But look at the wording in the title. “Not even Copernicus”. Like seeing Mercury is something extremely out of the ordinary.

  • Lvxferre
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    4 months ago

    The so-called heliocentric “theory” is an artifice of someone who, having sour grapes for never seeing Mercury IRL, found some shitty excuse to blame his failures on the sky. /s

    Serious now. I’m sceptic on the claim, that Copernicus never saw Mercury. Sure, he wouldn’t need it for his theory, but he was still interested and curious about the sky. Mercury is a pain to observe but definitively doable, and you get, like, eight good chances per year, that can be predicted with geocentric ephemerides. His best bets would be Jan-Mar (drier than other months in Poland, so there’s a bit less mist).