Hedshaker
New member
Our Galaxy revolves around others, which guarantees that the sun, spinning with our galaxy, revolves around the earth as well.
Illustration: a tether ball always revolves around the pole, but with the earth spinning, while the ball is sitting still, the pole can be said to revolve around the ball as much as the ball is said to revolve around the pole.
Everything is in motion. But regarding what I believe the OP is suggesting I think we can safely rules out geocentricism as an option, regardless what the Bible may or may not have indicated.
Aristarchus of Samos proposed an heliocentric system long before Copernicus, which I didn't know until just now. How about that? I actually learned something useful from my time here :think:
Still, the church sure frowned upon Copernicus for his audacity.
Copernicus (1473-1543) was not the first person to claim that the Earth rotates around the Sun. In Western civilization, ancient Greek astronomer Aristarchus of Samos is generally credited with being the first person to propose a Sun-centred astronomical hypothesis of the universe (heliocentric). At that time, however, Aristarchus’s heliocentrism gained few supporters and 18 centuries would then pass before Renaissance astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus produced a fully predictive mathematical model of a heliocentric system.
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