In modern day astronomy, we know that the Moon orbits
the Earth while the Earth orbits the Sun. We also know that the
Sun is itself a star that is part of a huge galaxy that is only
a tiny piece of a large, expanding universe. We have this knowledge
from centuries of observation and studies. Today we have the tools
and technology, like NASA,
that allow us to discover new things about the universe. The ancient
Greeks played an important role in our astronomical thinking of
today. The scientists of the classical era in Greece, along with
the Egyptians and Babylonians,
have laid the foundations of modern astronomy. They charted the
patterns of the stars through naked-eye astronomy and hypothesized
about the placement of our Earth and its relation to our universe.
Their theories have allowed other generations of scientists to
continue with these theories that led us to our modern ways of
thinking. It is important to understand that these ancient astronomers
were not considered scientists, but rather philosophers. The Greeks
considered science to be philosophy.
They were unique from past, present, and future cultures in many
ways, mostly in that they did not let their invented religion determine
the way they explained the world. They were extremely rational
thinkers. Pythagoras, a Greek
mathematician, was the first to create the word cosmos
to describe the universe. His followers, called Pythagoreans,
used numbers in an effort to explain the universe through the
language of mathematics. Most importantly,
the Greeks invented cosmology (the study of the large-scale structure
and dynamics of the universe) and paved the way for future generations
to expand on that knowledge.