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Loading... Galileo's Daughter: A Drama of Science, Faith, And Loveby Dava Sobel
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. An interesting look at the life of Galileo as well as the wasted brilliance of his daughter. Iteresting to think how many great minds have been lost throughout history simply because they were women. I always forget that I don't like Dava Sobel. http://nwhyte.livejournal.com/1290623... Galileo was born in 1564, two months before Shakespeare, but he outlived the English playwright by 26 years. Indeed, if Galileo too had died in 1616, he would be remembered as a promising observer and mathematician, killed off shortly after a theological rebuke came his way from Cardinal Bellarmine - his only major work then published was The Starry Messenger, with the Dialogue Concerning the Two World Systems, which caused his biggest difficulties with the Church, not completed until 1632. I have never been completely convinced by the revisionist story that one often gets (including from such unlikely quarters as Thomas Henry Huxley) that Galileo basically brought his condemnation by the Inquisition on himself. The story is a complex one and tends to get told as one of patronage politics gone wrong. Sobel, rightly in my view, brings us back to the scientific truth of Galileo's observations; and whatever the reasoning and motives for Pope Urban VIII's pursuit of him, the fact remains that the ecclesiastical authorities were given all the right information and came up with the wrong answer, and while Sobel doesn't rub it in, she doesn't veer from the central point either. The central point is not, in fact, Galileo's daughter; the title of the book is misleading. Galileo's life is very charmingly illustrated by the letters he received from his daughter Sister Maria Celeste, born in 1600, over the period from 1623 to her early death in 1634, which of course cover the key moments of his own career. I shall always now think of him gardening in his leather jacket. But I think Sobel misses an opportunity to reflect on the life prospects of women like Galileo's daughters, immured in the Poor Clares convent in their early teens - and their mother, who bore the scientist three children before marrying someone else. It is a necessary but absent piece of context. Still, the book is a very good example of how to take a particular motherlode of primary source material and weave a good story around it. A little disappointing: Having read Longitude by the same author, I find this book a little disappointing. Indeed, it is more a long-drawn out tale of Galileo rather than of his daughter. Although the tale of Galileo is interesting and very well researched, his daughter's letters do not add much to the story and tend to become boring and repetitive. no reviews | add a review
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While Galileo tangled with the Church, Maria Celeste--whose adopted name was a tribute to her father's fascination with the heavens--provided moral and emotional support with her frequent letters, approving of his work because she knew the depth of his faith. As Sobel notes, "It is difficult today ... to see the Earth at the center of the Universe. Yet that is where Galileo found it." With her fluid prose and graceful turn of phrase, Sobel breathes life into Galileo, his daughter, and the earth-centered world in which they lived. --Sunny Delaney
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:55 -0400)
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I have learned so much from it so far, but it takes more concentration than I am willing to put into it. I regret that the writing is too dry for my tastes. (