Scientific Revolution

By kurtw
  • Jan 15, 1543

    Vesalius

    Vesalius
    Andreas Vesalius publishes De humani corporis fabrica, (This talks about the Fabric of the Human Body). This is considered to be the first great modern work of science and the foundation of biology. He found that the circulation of blood is a function of the heart when it's pumping. He also assembled the first human skeleton from cutting open dead bodies.
    Birth - December 31, 1514
    Death - October 15, 1564
  • Jan 15, 1543

    Copernicus

    Copernicus
    Corpernicus published a book about the universe. He rejected the theory that the Earth was the center of the universe and made his own theory. He then came up with the theory that the sun is the center of the universe and the planets orbit it.
    Birth - February 19, 1473
    Death - May 24, 1543
  • Galileo

    Galileo
    Galileo demonstrates that a light object and a heavy object made of the same material, dropped at the same time, will hit the ground at the same time. This was in contrast to the Aristotelian system that heavy objects fall faster than lighter objects.
    Birth - February 15, 1564
    Death - January 8, 1642
  • Francis Bacon

    Francis Bacon
    Bacon tried to create some kind of organization and cooperation in the scientific community by showing how the diverse fields of science relate to one another. In Novum Organum he cites three world-changing inventions: Printing, gunpowder and the compass. These changed the whole world and many studies within it.
    Birth - January 22, 1561
    Death - April 9, 1626
  • Rene Descartes

    Rene Descartes
    He helped create the Deductive method of the scientific method. This changed how theories, hypothesises, and facts are created in modern science. Also, Descartes discusses how motion may be represented as a curve along a graph, defined by its relation to planes of reference.
    Birth - March 31, 1596
    Death - February 11, 1650
  • Newton

    Newton
    He defined gravity as the force that Earth has on all matter. He discovered that white light shows the colors of the rainbow when shown through a prism. In optics, he also invented the reflecting telescope.
    Birth - January 4, 1643
    Death - March 31, 1727