Galileo: Uniformity of Nature and Experimental Physics
The Renaissance became one of the factors for the Scientific Revolution, bringing on the renewal of ancient times which led to the discovery of “ancient scientific texts (1).” This time period of the Renaissance also known as “the century of genius (1)” brought on a new view of nature bringing about ideas of great minds such as that of Galileo. He could be described as a Renaissance man, gifted in many areas as a talented musician, an artist, a cultivated humanist, an astronomer, and a physicist (1).
A substantial part of Galileo’s work was related to mechanics, and he was the first to apply mathematics to its analysis; earning the status as the founder of modern mechanics and experimental physics (2). He also introduced the use of pendulums instead of clocks and proposed the law of uniform acceleration between falling objects. Finally, he developed the telescope with which he discovered the craters of the moon,......
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