His enemies sought to steal from him the honor of his discoveries. Some claimed to have made the discoveries before Galileo did. Others claimed that his discoveries were false, that their only use was to gratify Galileo's vanity and thirst for gold. In these trying times the friendship of the great astronomer Kepler warded off some of the most exasperating attacks.
Galileo's fame spread throughout Europe. Students came in great numbers, so that he had little leisure left for his own studies. He therefore decided to leave Padua, and secured an appointment as mathematician and philosopher to the Grand Duke of Tuscany. This appointment took him to Florence. It was here that an incident occurred that marked the beginning of a persecution which continued to the end of his life.
As we read the story of this conflict let us remember that it was not primarily a conflict between the Roman Catholic Church and Galileo. It was a conflict of principles. On the one side were arrayed those who said that men should always believe as the ancient writers did; on the other, those who said men should think for themselves. In the first party were most of the university professors and others who dreaded the introduction of new beliefs, whether in religion or science. In the second party were Galileo and a small band of devoted followers.
At a dinner at the table of the Grand Duke in Pisa the conversation turned on the moons of Jupiter. Some praised Galileo. Others condemned him, saying that the Holy Scriptures were opposed to his theory of the motion of the earth. A friend reported the incident to Galileo, and he replied to the arguments of his opponents in a letter which was made public. No doubt the sting of his sarcasm made his enemies more bitter. He admitted that the Scriptures cannot lie or err, but this, he said, does not hold good of those who attempt to explain the Scriptures. In another letter, he quoted with approval a saying of Cardinal Baronius, "The Holy Spirit intended to teach us in the Bible how to go to Heaven, not how the heavens go."
The first shot had been fired. The battle was on, and the Church, because it possessed the most powerful weapons of attack, was used by the combined forces to break the power of Galileo's reasoning. He went to Rome to make his defence, but was commanded by the Holy Office not to hold or teach that the sun is immovable, and that the earth moves about the sun.
During another visit to Rome there was shown to Galileo an instrument which, it was said, would show a flea as large as a cricket. Galileo recalled that some years before he had so arranged a telescope that he had seen flies which he said looked as big as a lamb, and were covered all over with hair. This was the first microscope. Galileo quickly improved the instrument, and soon his microscopes were in great demand.
In violation of the decree of the Church, to which he had submitted, he published his most famous work in which he defended the theory that the earth moves about the sun. The book was the outcome of his life-work, but the Church believed it dangerous. He was summoned to Rome. Confined to a sick-bed, he pleaded for delay, which was granted. Before he recovered, however, the summons was made imperative. He must go to Rome, or be carried in irons. He went in a litter, carried by servants of the Grand Duke. In Rome he was to appear before the Inquisition. There he was treated with a consideration never before accorded to a prisoner of the Inquisition. Nor was he subjected to torture, as has been stated by some. He was found guilty of teaching the doctrine that the sun does not move, and that the earth moves about the sun. He was compelled to recant, and sentenced to the prison of the Holy Office and, by way of penance, to repeat once a week for three years the seven penitential Psalms.
He yielded without reserve to the decree of the Inquisition, renounced his "errors and heresies," and, with his hand on the Bible, took oath never again to teach the forbidden doctrine.
And now, though a shattered old man of seventy-four, enjoined to silence on the chief results of his life-work, nothing could quench his devotion to science. In these last years, he published a new book which, with his earlier work, entitles him to be regarded as the founder of the science of mechanics.
In his study of machines Galileo found that no machine will do work of itself. Whenever a machine is at work, a man or a horse, or some other power, is at work upon the machine. In no case will a machine do work without receiving an equal amount of work.