
Contents
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The Copernican Situation at the End of the 1580S The Copernican Situation at the End of the 1580S
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Counterfactuai Kepler Counterfactuai Kepler
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Kepler's Copernican Formation at Tübingen, 1590-1594 Kepler's Copernican Formation at Tübingen, 1590-1594
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Kepler's Shift in the Astronomer's Role Kepler's Shift in the Astronomer's Role
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Kepler's Physical-Astrological Problematic and Pico Kepler's Physical-Astrological Problematic and Pico
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Dating Kepler's Encounter with Pico Dating Kepler's Encounter with Pico
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A Tübingen Scenario? A Tübingen Scenario?
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The Gold Nugget The Gold Nugget
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Prognosticating (and Theorizing) in Graz Prognosticating (and Theorizing) in Graz
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Kepler's Copernican Cosmography and Prognostication Kepler's Copernican Cosmography and Prognostication
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The Divine Plan, Archetypal Causes, and the Beginning of the World The Divine Plan, Archetypal Causes, and the Beginning of the World
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From Kepler's Polyhedral Hypothesis to the Logical and Astronomical Defense of Copernicus From Kepler's Polyhedral Hypothesis to the Logical and Astronomical Defense of Copernicus
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11 The Emergence of Kepler's Copernican Representation
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Published:July 2011
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Abstract
At the end of the 1580s, Nicolaus Copernicus's theory was one alternative amid a proliferating field of representations of celestial order. Copernicus's proponents were distributed among different networks—and also largely separated by them. Yet the Wittenberg interpretation had made certain parts of Copernicus's work both familiar and credible. References to Copernican parameters in academic textbooks were common from the 1550s onward. Heavenly practitioners of all stripes were using Erasmus Reinhold's Copernican planetary tables. Copernican planetary modeling practices had made serious inroads among a small group of unusually capable students of De Revolutionibus. This chapter examines Johannes Kepler's formation as an active adherent of Copernicus's central theory. First, it describes the Copernican situation at the end of the 1580s, and then looks at Kepler's Copernican formation at Tübingen between 1590 and 1594. It also discusses Kepler's shift in the astronomer's role, his physical-astrological problematic and encounter with Giovanni Pico della Mirandola, prognosticating (and theorizing) in Graz, Copernican cosmography and prognostication, Kepler's polyhedral hypothesis, and his logical and astronomical defense of Copernicus.
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