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  1. On the one hand, the Scientific Revolution was all high theory—not applied to actual devices and machines. The people who invented key industrial technologies weren't slogging through Newton's notoriously difficult texts. Most were not scholars at all, and had been educated only through practical apprenticeships.

  2. Copernican Revolution, shift in the field of astronomy from a Ptolemaic geocentric understanding of the universe to a heliocentric understanding as articulated by Nicolaus Copernicus in the 16th century. This challenge to the long-standing model marked the start of the Scientific Revolution.

  3. Jan 15, 2021 · Science and Technology. The Enlightenment was notable for its scientific revolution, which changed the manner in which the people of Europe approached both science and technology. This was the direct result of philosophic enquiry into the ways in which science should be approached. The most important figures in this change of thinking were ...

  4. Scientific Revolution - Physics, Copernicus, Galileo: The battle for Copernicanism was fought in the realm of mechanics as well as astronomy. The Ptolemaic–Aristotelian system stood or fell as a monolith, and it rested on the idea of Earth’s fixity at the centre of the cosmos. Removing Earth from the centre destroyed the doctrine of natural motion and place, and circular motion of Earth ...

  5. Nov 6, 2023 · the microscope. the pendulum clock. the thermometer. the barometer. the air pump. Newton's Reflecting Telescope. Science Museum, London (CC BY) The above were all part of "a collection of technical instruments that became catalysts for scientific advance in the course of the seventeenth century" (Jardine, 9).

  6. Aug 22, 2023 · The microscope was one of the most significant inventions of the Scientific Revolution, opening up completely new and miniaturised worlds.The first microscopes were invented in the first quarter of the 17th century in the Netherlands, but soon scientists across Europe were using the instrument to make new and often bewildering discoveries in the fields of botany, entomology, and anatomy.

  7. Sep 1, 2023 · As the Scientific Revolution progressed, instruments like the thermometer, telescope, and microscope were no longer being used to prove existing theories of knowledge were correct but to discover entirely new areas of knowledge. Another distinct feature of the Scientific Revolution was the collaboration between scientists across different ...

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