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The celestial worlds discover'd

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About This Book

A speculative natural-philosophy treatise argues from telescopic observation and analogy that other planets and moons may have landscapes, vegetation, and inhabitants comparable in kind to those on Earth. It combines mathematical demonstration where astronomy permits with carefully qualified conjecture elsewhere, citing lunar plains and mountains and the satellites of Jupiter and Saturn as evidence of kinship among worlds. The work surveys how differences in illumination, motion, and atmosphere might shape local climates, organisms, and productions, and it anticipates and answers common objections by distinguishing degrees of certainty and proposing plausible, restrained scenarios for extraterrestrial life.

About the Author

Huygens, Christiaan portrait

Christiaan Huygens

Christiaan Huygens was a Dutch mathematician, physicist, and astronomer, renowned for his contributions to the understanding of light and planetary motion. He is best known for his work "Treatise on Light," where he formulated the wave theory of light, significantly advancing the field of optics. Huygens also made notable contributions to astronomy, particularly with his book "The Celestial Worlds Discover'd," which explored the possibility of life on other planets and the nature of the universe. His innovative ideas laid the groundwork for future scientific discoveries and established him as a pivotal figure in the scientific revolution of the 17th century.

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