But
as he walked away from these stupid, foolish, terrifying men, he
said quietly "Eppur si muove" — and still it moves.
I
can't fully explain why that statement has always touched me so profoundly.
A hero would have stood his ground, upholding the freedom of science
to tell the truth, no matter what they did to him. Galileo, outgunned,
scared, and not brave, submitted to their power and their stupidity—but
he never doubted what he damwell knew to be true, and in that stubborn
muttering he told us he was not defeated, not sorry, not stopping.
The truth would outlive these fools, even if he didn't have the
strength to face them down.
He
had disgraced himself in the eyes of fellow scientists, and probably
frightened many of them away from their own pursuit of truth. The
Inquisitors put him under gag order and house arrest, and banned
all his writings. Still he did what his copping out allowed him
to do—he worked, smuggling his manuscripts to faraway printers.
He was still a heretic, but a subversive one, pretending to toe
his oppressors' line. Not what we think of as a hero, but oh so
recognizably, painfully, human.
In
1992, 350 years after his death, the Vatican issued a formal pronouncement
that Galileo had been right about what he saw through his telescope.
Now, the space probe named for this complex, brilliant, touching
heretic will show us more truths from space. Eppur si muove, friends.
And still it moves.
|