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Tycho Brahe Quotes

Danish astronomer and chemist (d. 1601), Birth: 14-12-1546, Death: 24-10-1601 Tycho Brahe Quotes
1.
Those who study the stars have God for a teacher.
Tycho Brahe

2.
The mouse is wise, but the cat is wiser.
Tycho Brahe

3.
May I not seem to have lived in vain.
Tycho Brahe

4.
An astronomer must be cosmopolitan, because ignorant statesmen cannot be expected to value their services
Tycho Brahe

5.
Now it is quite clear to me that there are no solid spheres in the heavens, and those that have been devised by the authors to save the appearances, exist only in the imagination.
Tycho Brahe

Similar Authors: Carl Sagan Margaret Thatcher Angela Merkel Galileo Galilei Louis Pasteur Emanuel Swedenborg Johannes Kepler Arthur Eddington Linus Pauling Primo Levi Michael Faraday Edward Weston Nicolaus Copernicus Fred Hoyle Marie Curie
6.
And when statesman or others worry [the scientist] too much, then he should leave with his possessions.
Tycho Brahe

7.
So mathematical truth prefers simple words since the language of truth is itself simple.
Tycho Brahe

8.
The star [Tycho's supernova] was at first like Venus and Jupiter, giving pleasing effects; but as it then became like Mars, there will next come a period of wars, seditions, captivity and death of princes, and destruction of cities, together with dryness and fiery meteors in the air, pestilence, and venomous snakes. Lastly, the star became like Saturn, and there will finally come a time of want, death, imprisonment and all sorts of sad things.
Tycho Brahe

Quote Topics by Tycho Brahe: Stars Science Sky Simple Truth Is Years Eye Cat War Eccentric Wisdom Too Much Orbit Men Heaven Matter Astronomers Real Ignorant Vain Certain Language Age Church Moon Wise Scientist Mars God Worry
9.
Behold, directly overhead, a certain strange star was suddenly seen . . . Amazed, and as if astonished and stupified, I stood still
Tycho Brahe

10.
And when statesmen or others worry him [the scientist] too much, then he should leave with his possessions. With a firm and steadfast mind one should hold under all conditions, that everywhere the earth is below and the sky above and to the energetic man, every region is his fatherland.
Tycho Brahe

11.
When I had satisfied myself that no star of that kind had ever shone before, I was led into such perplexity by the unbelievability of the thing that I began to doubt the faith of my own eyes.
Tycho Brahe

12.
That the machine of Heaven is not a hard and impervious body full of various real spheres, as up to now has been believed by most people. It will be proved that it extends everywhere, most fluid and simple, and nowhere presents obstacles as was formerly held, the circuits of the Planets being wholly free and without the labour and whirling round of any real spheres at all, being divinely governed under a given law.
Tycho Brahe

13.
There is something eccentric in the orbit of Mars.
Tycho Brahe

14.
When, according to habit, I was contemplating the stars in a clear sky, I noticed a new and unusual star, surpassing the other stars in brilliancy . . . . There had never before been any star in that place in the sky.
Tycho Brahe

15.
It was not just the Church that resisted the heliocentrism of Copernicus.
Tycho Brahe

16.
Because the region of the Celestial World is of so great and such incredible magnitude as aforesaid, and since in what has gone before it was at least generally demonstrated that this comet continued within the limits of the space of the Aether, it seems that the complete explanation of the whole matter is not given unless we are also informed within narrower limits in what part of the widest Aether, and next to which orbs of the Planets [the comet] traces its path, and by what course it accomplishes this.
Tycho Brahe

17.
From his observations, he concluded that it [Tycho's supernova] was not some kind of comet or a fiery meteor, whether these be generated beneath the Moon or above the Moon, but that it is a star shining in the firmament itself - one that has never previously been seen before our time, in any age since the beginning of the world.
Tycho Brahe

18.
The body of the Earth, large, sluggish and inapt for motion, is not to be disturbed by movement (especially three movements), any more than the Aetherial Lights [stars] are to be shifted, so that such ideas are opposed both to physical principles and to the authority of the Holy Writ which many time: confirms the stability of the Earth (as we shall discuss more fully elsewhere).
Tycho Brahe

19.
For those [observations] that I made in Leipzig in my youth and up to my 21st year, I usually call childish and of doubtful value. Those that I took later until my 28th year [i.e., until 1574] I call juvenile and fairly serviceable. The third group, however, which I made at Uraniborg during approximately the last 21 years with the greatest care and with very accurate instruments at a more mature age, until I was fifty years of age, those I call the observations of my manhood, completely valid and absolutely certain, and this is my opinion of them.
Tycho Brahe