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Except the Catholic Church was pro-science around that time and even funded scientific research. It wasnât anti-science until years later in response to the anti-science Protestant Church gaining in popularity.
LOL nice lips on the Black kid! The only thing missing is him holding a big olâ hunk of watermelon! I mean, as long as youâre doing broad stereotypesâŠ
Listening to my favorite Big Band songs, like (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cCYGyg1H56s) I like to imagine a teenage Mozart listening with me, and speculate how that would change history.
Galileo would best keep that secret about the real origin of the telescope lest he wants to be burned at the stake for witchcraft. I mean, talking to two boys from the future is just what a sorcerer would do.
I suspect maybe âheliocentric theoryâ and âpresenting your theories in an offensive mannerâ would have been difficult to fit in the speech bubbles. Seeing as the church built an observatory during Galileoâs lifetime, however, its unlikely they were bothered by his telescope.
Stiglerâs Law states that no scientific discovery is actually named for the first person who came up with it. Fittingly, Stephen Stigler himself was not the first person to notice this. Relevance here is that the telescope (using lenses to see really far-away things) was invented by an anonymous person in the Netherlands, probably derived from the work of Antonie van Leeuwenhoek with microscopy (using lenses to see really small things).
Further support for my hypothesis that the character Darrin is a nod to fellow cartoonist Darrin Bell is that one of Candorvilleâs characters, Clyde, always refers to his buddy, the protagonist Lemont, as âBig Lâ.
As an aside, one of my favorite bits of cartoon dialog came from that strip:
Lemont: âIf you could have people say just one thing about you at your funeral ⊠what would it be?â
The church didnât give him grief over the telescope â even the Jesuit astronomers used them. They objected to his claims that were counter to their interpretations of the Bible.
Galileo Galilei did not invent the telescope but was the first to use it systematically to observe celestial objects and record his discoveries. His book, Sidereus nuncius or The Starry Messenger was first published in 1610 and made him famous.
The first person to apply for a patent for a telescope was Dutch eyeglass maker Hans Lippershey (or Lipperhey). In 1608, Lippershey laid claim to a device that could magnify objects three times. His telescope had a concave eyepiece aligned with a convex objective lens.
Galileo did not invent the telescope. He was the first one (at least, the first one who published) to look at the sky, rather than out at âwhat are those people doing in the next valley overâ.
The Church didnât get upset at him looking through a telescope; they got upset at him saying âthe moon has spots and flawsâ (the Heavens are perfect, donchaknow) and âJupiter appears to have moonsâ (everything revolves around the Earth).
oldpine52 over 3 years ago
These two are pikers, compared to Bill and Ted.
Concretionist over 3 years ago
Time travel stories all end up either really dumb or REALLY twisty. âBothâ is not uncommon.
wiatr over 3 years ago
The Church is probably still looking for you. Thereâs an executioner waiting.
PoodleGroomer over 3 years ago
Nobody expects a Papal inquisition.
Doug K over 3 years ago
Blame or Credit â depends on the outcome and perspective.
Mediatech over 3 years ago
Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition.
Jason Allen over 3 years ago
Except the Catholic Church was pro-science around that time and even funded scientific research. It wasnât anti-science until years later in response to the anti-science Protestant Church gaining in popularity.
Postcards From Richard Nixon over 3 years ago
LOL nice lips on the Black kid! The only thing missing is him holding a big olâ hunk of watermelon! I mean, as long as youâre doing broad stereotypesâŠ
Geophyzz over 3 years ago
Listening to my favorite Big Band songs, like (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cCYGyg1H56s) I like to imagine a teenage Mozart listening with me, and speculate how that would change history.
samclemens over 3 years ago
âE pur si muove.â
preacherman Premium Member over 3 years ago
Galileo would best keep that secret about the real origin of the telescope lest he wants to be burned at the stake for witchcraft. I mean, talking to two boys from the future is just what a sorcerer would do.
vaughnrl2003 Premium Member over 3 years ago
Serendipity is nothing to apologize for.
Black4dder over 3 years ago
Gallileo wouldnât understand. He didnât speak English.
ManiacEx over 3 years ago
I suspect maybe âheliocentric theoryâ and âpresenting your theories in an offensive mannerâ would have been difficult to fit in the speech bubbles. Seeing as the church built an observatory during Galileoâs lifetime, however, its unlikely they were bothered by his telescope.
KEA over 3 years ago
The Church is excellent evidence that Barnum overestimated humans
Richard S Russell Premium Member over 3 years ago
Stiglerâs Law states that no scientific discovery is actually named for the first person who came up with it. Fittingly, Stephen Stigler himself was not the first person to notice this. Relevance here is that the telescope (using lenses to see really far-away things) was invented by an anonymous person in the Netherlands, probably derived from the work of Antonie van Leeuwenhoek with microscopy (using lenses to see really small things).
Richard S Russell Premium Member over 3 years ago
Further support for my hypothesis that the character Darrin is a nod to fellow cartoonist Darrin Bell is that one of Candorvilleâs characters, Clyde, always refers to his buddy, the protagonist Lemont, as âBig Lâ.
As an aside, one of my favorite bits of cartoon dialog came from that strip:
Lemont: âIf you could have people say just one thing about you at your funeral ⊠what would it be?â
Clyde: âHey! Look! Heâs breathing!â
âDarrin Bell, Candorville, 2010 Sep. 28Cactus-Pete over 3 years ago
The church didnât give him grief over the telescope â even the Jesuit astronomers used them. They objected to his claims that were counter to their interpretations of the Bible.
capral over 3 years ago
Galileo Galilei did not invent the telescope but was the first to use it systematically to observe celestial objects and record his discoveries. His book, Sidereus nuncius or The Starry Messenger was first published in 1610 and made him famous.
The first person to apply for a patent for a telescope was Dutch eyeglass maker Hans Lippershey (or Lipperhey). In 1608, Lippershey laid claim to a device that could magnify objects three times. His telescope had a concave eyepiece aligned with a convex objective lens.
willie_mctell over 3 years ago
Have they been excommunicated? Can they expect the Spanish Inquisition?
robhanold over 3 years ago
Or a child molester
mistercatworks over 3 years ago
It was not the invention of the telescope that got Galileo in trouble. It was his heliocentric view of the Solar System.
MVMartinek over 3 years ago
Galileo did not invent the telescope. He was the first one (at least, the first one who published) to look at the sky, rather than out at âwhat are those people doing in the next valley overâ.
The Church didnât get upset at him looking through a telescope; they got upset at him saying âthe moon has spots and flawsâ (the Heavens are perfect, donchaknow) and âJupiter appears to have moonsâ (everything revolves around the Earth).