Galileo's Daughter: A Historical Memoir of Science, Faith, and Love
Galileo's Daughter: A Historical Memoir of Science, Faith, and Love book cover

Galileo's Daughter: A Historical Memoir of Science, Faith, and Love

Paperback – November 1, 2000

Price
$11.94
Format
Paperback
Pages
432
Publisher
Penguin Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0140280555
Dimensions
5.59 x 0.94 x 8.5 inches
Weight
14.1 ounces

Description

"Sobel is a master storyteller...she brings a great scientist to life." — The New York Times Book Review . "Innovative history and a wonderfully told tale." — Newsweek . Dava Sobel is an award-winning former science writer for The New York Times . The author of the bestselling Longitude and Galileo’s Daughter , Sobel’s work has also appeared in Audubon , Discover , Life , and The New Yorker . Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter One She who was so precious to you Most Illustrious Lord Father We are terribly saddened by the death of your cherished sister, our dear aunt; but our sorrow at losing her is as nothing compared to our concern for your sake, because your suffering will be all the greater, Sire, as truly you have no one else left in your world, now that she, who could not have been more precious to you, has departed, and therefore we can only imagine how you sustain the severity of such a sudden and completely unexpected blow. And while I tell you that we share deeply in your grief you would do well to draw even greater comfort from contemplating the general state of human misery, since we are all of us here on Earth like strangers and wayfarers, who soon will be bound for our true homeland in Heaven, where there is perfect happiness, and where we must hope that your sister's blessed soul has already gone. Thus, for the love of God, we pray you. Sire, to be consoled and to put yourself in His hands, for, as you know so well, that is what He wants of you; to do otherwise would be to injure yourself and hurt us, too, because we lament grievously when we hear that you are burdened and troubled, as we have no other source of goodness in this world but you. I will say no more, except that with all our hearts we fervently pray the Lord to comfort you and be with you always, and we greet you dearly with our ardent love. From San Matteo, the 10th day of May 1623. Most affectionate daughter, S. Maria Celeste The day after his sister Virginia's funeral, the already world-renowned scientist Galileo Galilei received this,the first of 124 surviving letters from the once-voluminous correspondence he carried on with his elder daughter. She alone of Galileo's three children mirrored his own brilliance, industry, and sensibility, and by virtue of these qualities became his confidante. Galileo's daughter, born of his long illicit liaison with the beautiful Marina Gamba of Venice, entered the world in the summer heat of a new century, on August 13, 1600-the same year the Dominican friar Giordano Bruno was burned at the stake in Rome for insisting, among his many heresies and blasphemies, that the Earth traveled around the Sun, instead of remaining motionless at the center of the universe. In a world that did not yet know its place, Galileo would engage this same cosmic conflict with the Church, treading a dangerous path between the Heaven he revered as a good Catholic and the heavens he revealed through his telescope. Galileo christened his daughter Virginia, in honor of his "cherished sister." But because he never married Virginia's mother, he deemed the girl herself unmarriageable. Soon after her thirteenth birthday, he placed her at the Convent of San Matteo in Arcetri, where she lived out her life in poverty and seclusion. Virginia adopted the name Maria Celeste when she became a nun, in a gesture that acknowledged her father's fascination with the stars. Even after she professed a life of prayer and penance, she remained devoted to Galileo as though to a patron saint. The doting concern evident in her condolence letter was only to intensify over the ensuing decade as her father grew old, fell more frequently ill, pursued his singular research nevertheless, and published a book that brought him to trial by the Holy Office of the Inquisition. The "we" of Suer Maria Celeste's letter speaks for herself and her sister, Livia-Galileo's strange, silent second daughter, who also took the veil and vows at San Matteo to become Suor Arcangela. Meanwhile their brother, Vincenzio, the youngest child of Galileo and Marina's union, had been legitimized in a fiat by the grand duke of Tuscany and gone off to study law at the University of Pisa. Thus Suor Maria Celeste consoled Galileo for being left alone in his world, with daughters cloistered in the separate world of nuns, his son not yet a man, his former mistress dead, his family of origin all deceased or dispersed. Galileo, now fifty-nine, also stood boldly alone in his worldview, as Suor Maria Celeste knew from reading the books he wrote and the letters he shared with her from colleagues and critics all over Italy, as well as from across the continent beyond the Alps. Although her father had started his career as a professor of mathematics, teaching first at Pisa and then at Padua, every philosopher in Europe tied Galileo's name to the most startling series of astronomical discoveries ever claimed by a single individual. In 1609, when Suor Maria Celeste was still a child in Padua, Galileo had set a telescope in the garden behind his house and turned it skyward. Never-before- seen stars leaped out of the darkness to enhance familiar constellations; the nebulous Milky Way resolved into a swath of densely packed stars, mountains and valleys pockmarked the storied perfection of the Moon; and a retinue of four attendant bodies traveled regularly around Jupiter like a planetary system in miniature. "I render infinite thanks to God," Galileo intoned after those nights of wonder, "for being so kind as to make me alone the first observer of marvels kept hidden in obscurity for all previous centuries." The newfound worlds transformed Galileo's life. He won appointment as chief mathematician and philosopher to the grand duke in 1610, and moved to Florence to assume his position at the court of Cosimo de' Medici. He took along with him his two daughters, then ten and nine years old, but he left Vincenzio, who was only four when greatness descended on the family, to live a while longer in Padua with Marina. Galileo found himself lionized as another Columbus for his conquests. Even as he attained the height of his glory, however, he attracted enmity and suspicion. For instead of opening a distant land dominated by heathens, Galileo trespassed on holy ground. Hardly had his first spate of findings stunned the populace of Europe before a new wave followed: He saw dark spots creeping continuously across the face of the Sun, and "the mother of loves," as he called the planet Venus, cycling through phases from full to crescent, just as the Moon did. All his observations lent credence to the unpopular Sun-centered universe of Nicolaus Copernicus, which had been introduced over half a century previously, but foundered on lack of evidence. Galileo's efforts provided the beginning of a proof. And his flamboyant style of promulgating his ideas-sometimes in bawdy humorous writings, sometimes loudly at dinner parties and staged debates- transported the new astronomy from the Latin Quarters of the universities into the public arena. In 1616, a pope and a cardinal inquisitor reprimanded Galileo, warning him to curtail his forays into the supernal realms. The motions of the heavenly bodies, they said, having been touched upon in the Psalms, the Book of Joshua, and elsewhere in the Bible, were matters best left to the Holy Fathers of the Church. Galileo obeyed their orders, silencing himself on the subject. For seven cautious years he turned his efforts to less perilous pursuits, such as harnessing his Jovian satellites in the service of navigation, to help sailors discover their longitude at sea. He studied poetry and wrote literary criticism. Modifying his telescope, he developed a compound microscope. "I have observed many tiny animals with great admiration," he reported, "among which the flea is quite horrible, the gnat and the moth very beautiful; and with great satisfaction I have seen how flies and other little animals can walk attached to mirrors, upside down." Shortly after his sister's death in May of 1623, however, Galileo found reason to return to the Sun-centered universe like a moth to a flame. That summer a new pope ascended the throne of Saint Peter in Rome. The Supreme Pontiff Urban VIII brought to the Holy See an intellectualism and an interest in scientific investigation not shared by his immediate predecessors. Galileo knew the man personally-he had demonstrated his telescope to him and the two had taken the same side one night in a debate about floating bodies after a banquet at the Florentine court. Urban, for his part, had admired Galileo so long and well that he had even written a poem for him, mentioning the sights revealed by "Galileo's glass." The presence of the poet pope encouraged Galileo to proceed with a long-planned popular dissertation on the two rival theories of cosmology: the Sun-centered and the Earth-centered, or, in his words, the "two chief systems of the world." It might have been difficult for Suor Maria Celeste to condone this course-to reconcile her role as a bride of Christ with her father's position as potentially the greatest enemy of the Catholic Church since Martin Luther. But instead she approved of his endeavors because she knew the depth of his faith. She accepted Galileo's conviction that God had dictated the Holy Scriptures to guide men's spirits but proffered the unraveling of the universe as a challenge to their intelligence. Understanding her father's prodigious capacity in this pursuit, she prayed for his health, for his longevity, for the fulfillment of his "every just desire." As the convent's apothecary, she concocted elixirs and pills to strengthen him for his studies and protect him from epidemic diseases. Her letters, animated by her belief in Galileo's innocence of any heretical depravity, carried him through the ordeal of his ultimate confrontation with Urban and the Inquisition in 1633. No detectable strife ever disturbed the affectionate relationship between Galileo and his daughter. Theirs is not a tale of abuse or rejection or intentional stifling of abilities. Rather, it is a love story, a tragedy, and a mystery. Most of Suor Maria Celeste's letters traveled in the pocket of a messenger, or in a basket laden with laundry, sweetmeats, or herbal medicines, across the short distance from the Convent of San Matteo, on a hillside just south of Florence, to Galileo in the city or at his suburban home. Following the angry papal summons to Rome in 1632, however, the letters rode on horseback some two hundred miles and were frequently delayed by quarantines imposed as the Black Plague spread death and dread across Italy. Gaps of months' duration disrupt the continuity of the reportage in places, but every page is redolent of daily life, down to the pain of toothache and the smell of vinegar. Galileo held on to his daughter's missives indiscriminately, collecting her requests for fruits or sewing supplies alongside her outbursts on ecclesiastical politics. Similarly, Suor Maria Celeste saved all of Galileo's letters, as rereading them, she often reminded him, gave her great pleasure. By the time she received the last rites, the letters she had gathered over her lifetime in the convent constituted the bulk of her earthly possessions. But then the mother abbess, who would have discovered Galileo's letters while emptying Suor Maria Celeste's cell, apparently buried or burned them out of fear. After the celebrated trial at Rome, a convent dared not harbor the writings of a "vehemently suspected" heretic. In this fashion, the correspondence between father and daughter was long ago reduced to a monologue. Standing in now for all the thoughts he once expressed to her are only those he chanced to offer others about her. "A woman of exquisite mind," Galileo described her to a colleague in another country, "singular goodness, and most tenderly attached to me." On first learning of Suor Maria Celeste's letters, people generally assume that Galileo's replies must lie concealed somewhere in the recesses of the Vatican Library, and that if only an enterprising outsider could gain access, the missing half of the dialogue would be found. But, alas, the archives have been combed, several times, by religious authorities and authorized researchers all desperate to hear the paternal tone of Galileo's voice. These seekers have come to accept the account of the mother abbess's destruction of the documents as the most reasonable explanation for their disappearance. The historical importance of any paper signed by Galileo, not to mention the prices such articles have commanded for the past two centuries, leaves few conceivable places where whole packets of his letters could hide. Although numerous commentaries, plays, poems, early lectures, and manuscripts of Galileo's have also disappeared (known only by specific mentions in more than two thousand preserved letters from his contemporary correspondents), his enormous legacy includes his five most important books, two of his original handmade telescopes, various portraits and busts he sat for during his lifetime, even parts of his body preserved after death. (The middle finger of his right hand can be seen, encased in a gilded glass egg atop an inscribed marble pedestal at the Museum of the History of Science in Florence.) Of Suor Maria Celeste, however, only her letters remain. Bound into a single volume with cardboard and leather covers, the frayed, deckle-edged pages now reside among the rare manuscripts at Florence's National Central Library. The handwriting throughout is still legible, though the once-black ink has turned brown. Some letters bear annotations in Galileo's own hand, for he occasionally jotted notes in the margins about the things she said and at other times made seemingly unrelated calculations or geometric diagrams in the blank spaces around his address on the verso. Several of the sheets are marred by tiny holes, torn, darkened by acid or mildew, smeared with spilled oil. Of those that are water-blurred, some obviously ventured through the rain, while others look more likely tear-stained, either during the writing or the reading of them. After nearly four hundred years, the red sealing wax still sticks to the folded corners of the paper. These letters, which have never been published in translation, recast Galileo's story. They recolor the personality and conflict of a mythic figure, whose seventeenth-century clash with Catholic doctrine continues to define the schism between science and religion. For although science has soared beyond his quaint instruments, it is still caught in his struggle, still burdened by an impression of Galileo as a renegade who scoffed at the Bible and drew fire from a Church blind to reason. This pervasive, divisive power of the name Galileo is what Pope John Paul II tried to tame in 1992 by reinvoking his torment so long after the fact. "A tragic mutual incomprehension," His Holiness observed of the 350-year Galileo affair, "has been interpreted as the reflection of a fundamental opposition between science and faith." Yet the Galileo of Suor Maria Celeste's letters recognized no such division during his lifetime. He remained a good Catholic who believed in the power of prayer and endeavored always to conform his duty as a scientist with the destiny of his soul. "Whatever the course of our lives," Galileo wrote, "we should receive them as the highest gift from the hand of God, in which equally reposed the power to do nothing whatever for us. Indeed, we should accept misfortune not only in thanks, but in infinite gratitude to Providence, which by such means detaches us from an excessive love for Earthly things and elevates our minds to the celestial and divine." Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Presents a biography of the scientist through the surviving letters of his illegitimate daughter Maria Celeste, who wrote him from the Florence convent where she lived from the age of thirteen.

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Most Helpful Reviews

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What is and isn't

Sobel's biography of Galileo does many things. As a result, it doesn't cover any one of its aspects in tremendous depth, but does do a good job of covering each of them. This also helps make the book more enjoyable to read. A straight up, full frontal discussion of the great scientist's theories on motion would have been tough for a reader not well-versed in math and physics. By contrast, when Sobel talks about Galileo's scientific breakthroughs, it's clear what the subject is, even if some details are left out.
It also hits some new territtory in its revealing of Galileo, the person, especially his relationship with his daughter. Her correspondence with him shows a woman of ironclad (almost self-flagellating) faith, devoted love for her father (which he clearly shared) and the two of them as just ordinary folks who worry not only about the movement of earth, but also about the laundry. Galileo is also is shown to have a sense of humor; when fined for not wearing his uniform at university, he circulated a tongue-in-cheek poem asking if clothes were really necessary at all.
The book also does a nice job of illuminating Galileo's true greatest feat - changing our definition of "science". In his time, the "natural philosophers" held that the universe was unchanging, that math was useless as a tool to describe the world, and that "if Aristotle said it, it must be true." These concepts are total anathema to science today, thanks largely to Galileo, who disproved them.
With due respect, I'd also like to correct a few errors in some other reviews. Galileo's book "A Treatise on the Tides", did indeed try to use the tides to prove that the earth was not stationary in space. But he claimed that it was earth's motion which caused tides, not the Moon. (He was incorrect, as it IS the moon which causes tides. Newton was the one who discovered this.) This is just one example of science as a constantly evolving, self-editing process. Even the great minds - be they Aristotle or Galileo or Newton - could make mistakes.
Moreover, it would be wrong to characterize this book as anti-Catholic. There's no denying that the 17th century Church was often tyranic and anti-rational. "Galileo's Daughter" doesn't try to whitewash that. But the Church's persecution of Galileo is shown to not merely be a case of religion vs. science (tho that played a part) but also a personal and political struggle. Nor was the Church a monolithic entity. While Pope Urban VIII pursued Galileo with a vengeance, many churchmen continued to support him, even after his condemnation. For that matter, the book's titular character, who comes off as downright angelic, was a nun.
Overall, this is a good read for those interested in science or history.
80 people found this helpful
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Intelligent, perceptive, a story of history with a slant.

I must say right off that this is a historical memoir and though the book is written to include the thoughts and letters of Galileo's daughter, Suor Maria Celeste who chose her name in honor of her fathers celestial interests, it is very much a piece of historical fact. The author has brilliantly researched and added translations and photos of hundreds of documents and items pertaining to the period, including many of the letters written to Galileo by his cloistered daughter. These private thoughts, feelings and fears have been cleverly molded into a story that sheds light on the life of this brilliant man and his futuristic views.
A Man before his time, Galileo's belief that the Earth revolved around the sun brought great discord to the Catholic Church's hierarchy. An outstanding mathematician and scientist he was also remembered to be a profound philosopher. I am giving this book 5 stars because it is beautifully constructed and adds substance and passion to a historical figure that was merely another name in a history book. If you are simply looking for a good story you will be disappointed and find it to be dry in spots. If you are the reader who is in search of a book for more than entertainment this is the perfect choice......Kelsana 3/18/01
42 people found this helpful
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Entrancing & fabulous -- with a stunning ending!

* Of course I'm not going to give the ending away.

* However erudite I might smugly think I am about the merits of well-written non-fiction, I was simply blown away by the emotional firepower of the conclusion of this book.

* I have been to Florence many times, and have visited the Church of Santa Croce during each visit, where Galileo's tomb resides today on the same floor as the legendary Michelangelo and Machiavelli.

* If I had read something like Sobel's book 10 years ago, it would have sparked a burst of emotions heretofore missing in those visits, similar to splashing a million colors onto a blank canvas, or in the case of Galileo's tomb, injecting life onto a slab of colorless marble.

* The amazing beauty of this work is that it reads like a novel, or more to the point, it paints pictures reminiscent of the language of cinema. It is historical, factual and meticulous. Yet it is not TOO detailed.

* Unlike typical historical treatments of people whose accomplishments are regarded so magnificent that they are automatically given an entrance ticket into the pantheon of immortality, Sobel's story of Galileo and his relationship with his daughter is engrossing, spellbinding and bereft of the technical minutiae that bogs down many works of non-fiction.

* Too often, authors attempting to bring life to the thoughts and actions of great figures, go so overboard with tiny details that they undercut their own efforts. They disrupt the narrative momentum so critical to good old fashioned story-telling. There's nothing worse than to read half way down a page and then realize that you missed everything crammed so badly into two paragraphs that you're forced to read them again.

* "Galileo's Daughter" is a work of non-fiction and an easy read, despite its potentially forbidding subject. While much verbiage is expended about the master's fight to prove Copernicus' theory of a sun-centered galaxy, in the face of recriminations and potential persecutions from the Catholic Church, the author's method of tackling this issue is unlike anything you will ever find in a boring textbook. The result is pure entertainment, like watching a drama about a clash of ideas and egos, the stuff movies are made of.

* After a while, you are lulled into thinking that the title of Sobel's book is merely a subtext to what is really Galileo's story. His daughter's letters simply humanize the "legend" of Galileo, transforming him into a domestic, a real person, a parent with the normal concerns for his children. For all of his cranial powers, Galileo is not so self-absorbed that he abrogates his responsibilities as a father. He comes off as a concerned parent who endeavors to provide the best for his children.

* But then the twist! You think you know where this story is going because after all, this is a work of non-fiction! But you're wrong!

* By the end of "Galileo's Daughter," author Sobel finds an ingenious way to circle back to what is inferred by the title of his book, despite the preponderance of words expended on Galileo himself.

* The result is a stunner.

* If you buy this book, and I recommend you do, DON'T cheat and go to its last few pages. If you do, you'll deprive yourself of the emotional impact of a revelation that may be common knowledge to some, but in reality is obscure to the greater body of people who think they know history.

* "Galileo's Daughter" is a marvelous achievement. If all non-fiction works were written this way, I'd stop going to the movies.
40 people found this helpful
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Wonderful! Kept me totally enthralled...

I have been enthralled by this book over the past few days, despite the fact that it is not a "historical novel", as the person from Bermuda, who does not have the courage to identify his/herself, says this book should have been. I have a degree in European History from UCBerkeley, and have been living in Florence, Italy for 17 years now. I perhaps for these reasons find absolutely fascinating "Galileo's laundrey lists". What can be more interesting than to get into the everyday life of a genious such as Galileo (who had his faults, as do most of us humans...) Without this book, there are so many things about Galileo, about Italy in that period, about the university system, about the feudal/city-state system, about the Roman Catholic Church etc etc etc that I would never have known or imagined, despite the fact that I consider myself quite well versed in these matters. Even my husband, who is a university professor of medicine in Ferrara is interested in the facts about those times which, since I haven't passed over my copy of the book to him yet, I quote to him over coffee or during car trips here and there in Tuscany and the neighboring regions. I agree that it is unfortunate that Galileo's letters did not survive the Roman Catholic Church, but hey, that's life. Sobel did a wonderful job with the information obtainable. A message to anyone who criticizes a work of such intellectual measure: 1) identify yourself and 2) why don't you write something? It would be a real pleasure to read your opera, if you can surpass this one. Cheers! Mary Kristel Lokken Florence, Italy
26 people found this helpful
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Puts into perspective how truly amazing Galileo was

In some point in time during school, a student learns of Galileo's scientific and mathematical achievement gifts to the world. However, this book shows the reader the loving and giving aspects of Galileo. Galileo's eldest daughter, Suor Maria Celeste (Virginia Galilei), paints a vivid picture on how much unconditional love and happiness Galileo's daughter brought to him. Whether it be a request by Suor Maria Celeste for money, cloth or food, Galileo always came though with his help. Suor Maria Celeste's letters also show that there were no limits to what she would do for her father.
Dava Sobel touches on Galileo's scientific achievements which is fascinating. This book carries the reader into perhaps one of the saddest event of Galileo's life which was to be "suspected of heresy, namely of having held and believed the doctrine which is false and contrary to the Sacred and Diving Scriptures, that the Sun is the center of the world and does not move from east to west and that the Earth moves and is not the center of the world..."
As Suor Maria Celeste was Galileo's constant companion in life, she remains with him in death at Santa Croce. Galileo's Daughter walks the reader through the world of Galileo as a father, scientist, mathematician and philosopher. What a wonderful book to capture all the essence.
22 people found this helpful
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I devoured this book, laundry lists and all

This is a beautiful book about two beautiful people - Galileo and his daughter Maria Celeste. It is also the story of one of the landmark events in the development of humankind from savagery to something resembling civilization. Alas, there are elements of both in this tale.
A good case could be made that Galileo was the most important person who ever lived, because he was one of the first to stop speculating and starting testing. He turned the telescope into a useful instrument, turned it on the stars and discovered the moons of Jupiter, and spots on the sun. From this he correctly reasoned that Copernicus was right - the Earth is not the center of the universe. He refuted Aristotle's speculations about motion (they hardly qualified as theories) and laid the foundation for the new science of physics. As the Founding Father of the Scientific Method he pointed the way for an explosion in human knowledge, health, and comfort. Nearly every moment of our lives is in some way touched by his life and work, though we hardly know it or stop to consider it or be grateful.
The book is full of interesting factoids. For instance . . .
Galileo was the son of a musician. His father helped give birth to opera and set a good example for his son by conducting experiments to challenge musical theories handed down from Pythagoras.
Galileo did not finish his own university education but nevertheless became a university instructor of the first rank. He was also an inventor, a businessman, and an excellent writer.
But the book is only partly an exposition of the life and works of a great man. It is also a non-fiction novel that takes us into the passionate relationship between Galileo and his daughter, Maria Celeste. Much of the story is told in the form of letters she wrote to him from the confines of her convent, where she lived from her early teens until her death. Her letters are like a time machine - they take us back to a world and mode of thought that are very alien to our own, but the letters still resonate with us because of the timeless human concerns they also express.
Needless to say, a major portion of the book is given over to Galileo's run-in with the Catholic Church. The author seems sympathetic to the church, Galileo himself was very devout, and many Catholic figures were among his staunchest supporters, but I still found it impossible to quell an angry response at the self-deception, arrogance, hypocrisy, and double-dealing of the church in this affair.
First the church leaders hail Galileo and his work. Then they instruct him that he can only speak of his discoveries as though they are hypotheses, and not facts. He does as they instruct, inserting double-talk to blunt the force of his well-reasoned arguments. He then submits his work to the Inquisitors and they grant him permission to publish. Galileo does so, but then suddenly the Inquisitors are shocked, simply shocked that Galileo has in fact written what they knew he would write, what they told him he could write, and published what they told him he could publish.
Of course, the church leaders can spout all sorts of mumbo-jumbo to rationalize their own behavior, but it doesn't wash. Leaving aside that Galileo should have had the right to publish whatever he pleased, there is simply no excuse for what the church did to him, given their own complicity in the affair. Common sense cannot help but view the kind of hair-splitting religious thinking the church leaders employed in this case as being tantamount to a rape of the intellect. But that's an old story that sadly, continues even today, both in religion and politics.
Galileo's life was ruined, but he persevered and even managed to do the best work of his life under dire circumstances. Sadly, his beloved daughter died while he was confined. One is left feeling sad that this man's good deeds for humanity did not receive the reward they so richly deserved, but were instead punished by men of uncommon indecency, who had the nerve to proclaim themselves the guardians of virtue. It is altogether fitting that Pope Urban's self-erected statue was torn down within hours of his death, if for the wrong reasons.
How does the story end? It ends in the grave, but to find out what I mean you will have to read the book. It is highly recommended.
19 people found this helpful
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The title got it wrong-it should be:

Galileo AND His Daughter. This book is not a biography about Sister Maria Celeste. Which is fine really--truthfully, I'm more interested in Galileo himself; I just take issue with the title. We do learn a bit about his daughter and her fawning adoration for her father, but missing are Galileo's letters to her. Instead, weaved into a biography of her father, are many of the letters she sent.
If you're reading this review, I'm assuming you know a bit about Galileo--a man who studied math, matter, gravity, and of course, the heavens. He improved the telescope, and introduced his daughter to the stars in their garden when she was young. Much of his life was devoted to studies of the sun and planets--and to rejecting Aristotle's philosophies (adopted by the Roman Catholic church), in favor of Copernicus's theories. Although his belief's didn't distance him from all theists (he remained a theist to the end), he made some powerful enemies. One was a scientist--a scientist who happened to be a member of the Dominican Order, which staffed the Office of the Inquisition.
Sobell characterizes the problems Galileo experienced as differences of opinion based on astronomy rather than differences based on science and religion. Although Galileo was found guilty by the Inquisition, he remained a respected scientist. The Archbishop of Siena still publicly supported him, and with that support, he continued to produce great work.
Galileo's relationship with his oldest daughter is also explored, of course. We realize the extent of their love for each other through the surviving letters--all of which came from Maria. As another reviewer mentioned, we also learn of Galileo's financial support to the convent in which he placed his illegitimate daughters.
The book is written clearly, and unveils more than just the science in a great scientist's life. We become aware of a man rather than just a name, with emotional ties that run deep. It's a great story--and I'm glad Sobel was the one to tell it.
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The inquisition in all it's glory

I can't help but think of the Mel Brooke's parody of the Spanish Inquisition ("Hey Torquemada, what do you say? I said I just got back from the auto de fe...) while reading of Galileo's troubles with defending the Copernican system in 17th century Italy. This book provides a vivid portrait of Galileo's personal life coupled with his brilliant scientific theories and experiments. If you like historical ficiton, you'll love this book for its portrait and background of Florence, Venice, The Medici's, Pope Urban, and the rest of cast of characters in Galileo's life. Though the book title makes you think it's about his daughter, that's not the case -- it's about Galileo as seen through the letters preserved from his daughter. Except for her devotion and sweetness, we learn much more about him than her in this book which is just as well since his life was more interesting. Among other high level science and astromony lessons you'll learn, you'll be thankful that we don't have to deal with the Bubonic plague or many other common ailments -- Galileo (like Beethoven) suffered his whole life with many serious ailments. Who knows what else he might have discovered if he hadn't been bedridden for much of the time. A quick moving and engaging historical account of Galileo and his accomplishments.
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Extremely tedious!

If I ever have to read one more flowery, overblown letter from Suor Maria Celeste I think I'll hurl! It took me more than six months to plow through this stultifying morass of repetitive expressions of love from a woman to her father (further slowed down by ridiculous, trivial details of daily life in the prison of her nunnery), desperately hoping it would get better, but it never did.

I admire Galileo and realize his favorite daughter could have also been a scientist in her own right but for the backward, church-oppressed society in which they lived. This is a story of a wasted life thanks to to the poison of religion which actually makes faith (belief without evidence) into a virtue (because to the church faith=obedience of course), and it was depressing to keep reading about it. I don't think there's much historical relevance to knowing about the dull details of life in a nunnery from any age, let alone this one. I was actually looking for "Longitude" when this one by the same author showed up instead, and I made the mistake of buying it.

Whenever the author took a break from the daughter's blathering and returned to Galileo things got much better, but it never lasted long enough. You won't learn much about Galileo the man's life here.

"Longitude" was the exact opposite: compelling and fast-paced, describing the 'race' (which lasted decades) to find a reliable means of determining the position of ships at sea, with only the barest personal details of the participants even mentioned, as it should be in a book about scientific discovery.

"Galileo's Daughter" should have come with a big red label saying "WARNING! CHICK BOOK!" That would have helped.
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Galileo's ideas and how they changed

The author of this highly readable biography of Galileo can be forgiven for making us think her book was about Maria Celeste, the scientist's daughter. While she quotes several charming letters which move us with Maria Celeste's devotion to her father, the book is almost entirely about Galileo's scientific odyssey. The use of his daughter's perspective allows light to shine on the pioneering scientist from a fresh and sympathetic perspective that makes Galileo come to life for modern readers.
From Galileo's early education and relation with a high church official who later became the pope, to his trouble with an influential dowager, Dava Sobel provides us a wealth of detail that serves as background for his showdown with the semi-autonomous body better known as the Inquisition.
Galileo, a devout Catholic, was the first scientist in history, in the sense of a being a researcher whose desire to know what is true about the universe was stronger than his allegiance to any institution or philosophy. His entire professional life is an example to four centuries of pioneers who followed him, even those in other fields such as Pasteur in medicine. Sobel shows how the telescope, which Dutch opticians had invented 10 years earlier, was first pointed at the heavens by Galileo. We see an actual page of Galileo's diagrams of the moons of Jupiter, which no one in recorded history had ever seen before!
A clever politician as well as a ground-breaking astronomical theorist, Galileo got the church to give him official exoneration of charges of impiety when accused falsely by a rich female admirer of a priest who adhered to some of Aristotle's outdated ideas. This was a foreshadowing of Galileo's showdown with the Inquistion, which required a dangerous journey to Rome during a time of plague and quarantine.
Galileo was never convicted of heresy, despite what one editorial reviewer wrote. Sobel shows in page after page of detail how Galileo negotiated the rocky road of compromise between the demands of his church opponents and the irrepressible urges of his scientific curiosity. He made the necessary public statements and achieved the medieval version of an out-of-court settlement while continuing to circulate his true manuscripts abroad.
This is the best biography of a scientist I've ever read, one which brings to life the thoughts and feelings of a great but often misunderstood man who gave birth to modern science. I recommend it to anyone who loves science, religion, or his daughter!
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