Italian astronomer and mathematician who was the first to use a telescope to study the stars; demonstrated that different weights descend at the same rate; perfected the refracting telescope that enabled him to make many discoveries (1564-1642)
There's only one problem: Galileo won't be ready for another four years.
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News of Hans Lippershey's 1608 patent reached Galileo Galilei the following year.
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The Cardinal firmly and clearly showed Galileo the error of his way.
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Glasgow's got a good chunk of that market but not for Galileo.
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Just look how often they've been proven wrong -Galileo, Columbus, Scopes.
Ús de Galileo Galilei en anglès
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News of Hans Lippershey's 1608 patent reached GalileoGalilei the following year.
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Unfortunately, it came 189 years too late to do GalileoGalilei any good.
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They produced a theory of impetus that influenced GalileoGalilei in the 17th century.
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This was GalileoGalilei, one of the most extraordinary scientific observers of any age.
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The ever-glorious name of GalileoGalilei crowns her immortality.
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In 1610 GalileoGalilei observed the sun and noticed its surface was not uniformly bright.
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Arguably the most infamous trial of the Inquisition was that of the astronomer GalileoGalilei.
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Proof of this came two thousand years later when GalileoGalilei observed it with his simple telescope.
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Then two astronomers-theGerman Johannes Kepler and the Italian GalileoGalilei-startedpublicly to support the Copernican theory.
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In 1610, the great natural philosopher GalileoGalilei became the first human to observe the rings of Saturn.
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After many centuries, the Christian Church admitted officially the situation and rehabilitated GalileoGalilei, but not Giordano Bruno.
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In 1613 the Pisan mathematician GalileoGalilei claimed that the telescope he had invented proved that Copernicus's system was correct.
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Modern science can be said to have had its beginning in the work of GalileoGalilei (1564-1642).
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You sent the tragedy of ' GalileoGalilei,' by Samuel Brown, in one of the Cornhill parcels; it contained, I remember, passages of very great beauty.
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In January 1610, Pisan natural philosopher GalileoGalilei pointed a small refracting (spyglass-type) telescope of his own manufacture at the bright dot of Jupiter.
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The 1633 trial of GalileoGalilei (1564-1642) before the Roman Inquisition is frequently cited to demonstrate that science and the Catholic Church are(...)