Historians and scholars Pope Urban VIII had been a patron to Galileo and had given him permission to publish on the Copernican theory as long as he treated it as a hypothesis, but after the publication in 1632, the patronage broke due to Galileo placing Urban's arguments for God's omnipotence, which Galileo had been required to include, in the mouth of a simpleton character named "Simplicio" in the book; this caused great offense to the Pope.
Dava Sobel argues that during this time, Urban had fallen under the influence of court intrigue and problems of state. His friendship with Galileo began to take second place to his feelings of persecution and fear for his own life. The problem of Galileo was presented to the pope by court insiders and enemies of Galileo, following claims by a Spanish cardinal that Urban was a poor defender of the church. This situation did not bode well for Galileo's defense of his book. In his 1998 book,
Scientific Blunders, Robert Youngson indicates that Galileo struggled for two years against the ecclesiastical censor to publish a book promoting heliocentrism. He claims the book passed only as a result of possible idleness or carelessness on the part of the censor, who was eventually dismissed. On the other hand, Jerome K. Langford and
Raymond J. Seeger contend that Pope Urban and the Inquisition gave formal permission to publish the book,
Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems, Ptolemaic & Copernican. They claim Urban personally asked Galileo to give arguments for and against heliocentrism in the book, to include Urban's own arguments, and for Galileo not to advocate heliocentrism. According to Finocchiaro, defenders of the Catholic church's position have sometimes attempted to argue, unsuccessfully, that Galileo was right on the facts but that his scientific arguments were weak or unsupported by evidence of the day; Finocchiaro rejects this view, saying that some of Galileo's key epistemological arguments are accepted fact today. Direct evidence ultimately confirmed the motion of the Earth, with the emergence of
Newtonian mechanics in the late 17th century, the observation of the
stellar aberration of light by
James Bradley in the 18th century, the analysis of orbital motions of binary stars by
William Herschel in the 19th century, and the accurate measurement of the
stellar parallax in the 19th century. According to Christopher Graney, an Adjunct Scholar at the Vatican Observatory, one of Galileo's observations did not support the Copernican heliocentric view, but was more consistent with
Tycho Brahe's hybrid model where the Earth did not move, and everything else circled around it and the Sun.
Redondi's theory According to a controversial alternative theory proposed by Pietro Redondi in 1983, the main reason for Galileo's condemnation in 1633 was his attack on the
Aristotelian doctrine of
matter rather than his defence of Copernicanism. An anonymous denunciation, labeled "G3", discovered by Redondi in the Vatican archives, had argued that the
atomism espoused by Galileo in his previous work of 1623,
The Assayer, was incompatible with the doctrine of
transubstantiation of the
Eucharist. At the time, investigation of this complaint was apparently entrusted to a Father Giovanni di Guevara, who was well-disposed towards Galileo, and who cleared
The Assayer of any taint of unorthodoxy. A similar attack against
The Assayer on doctrinal grounds was penned by Jesuit
Orazio Grassi in 1626 under the pseudonym "Sarsi". According to Redondi: • The Jesuits, who had already linked
The Assayer to allegedly heretical atomist ideas, regarded the ideas about matter expressed by Galileo in
The Dialogue as further evidence that his atomism was heretically inconsistent with the doctrine of the Eucharist, and protested against it on these grounds. •
Pope Urban VIII, who had been under attack by Spanish cardinals for being too tolerant of heretics, and who had also encouraged Galileo to publish
The Dialogue, would have been compromised had his enemies among the Cardinal Inquisitors been given an opening to comment on his support of a publication containing Eucharistic heresies. • Urban, after banning the book's sale, established a commission to examine
The Dialogue, However, it has been supported recently, as of 2007, by novelist and science writer
Michael White.
Modern Catholic Church views In 1758 the Catholic Church dropped the general prohibition of books advocating heliocentrism from the
Index of Forbidden Books. It did not, however, explicitly rescind the decisions issued by the Inquisition in its judgement of 1633 against Galileo, or lift the prohibition of uncensored versions of Copernicus's
De Revolutionibus or Galileo's
Dialogue. Settele appealed to pope
Pius VII. After the matter had been reconsidered by the Congregation of the Index and the Holy Office, Anfossi's decision was overturned. In 1979,
Pope John Paul II expressed the hope that "theologians, scholars and historians, animated by a spirit of sincere collaboration, will study the Galileo case more deeply and in loyal recognition of wrongs, from whatever side they come". However, the Pontifical Interdisciplinary Study Commission constituted in 1981 to study the case did not reach any definitive result. Because of this, the Pope's 1992 speech that closed the project was vague, and did not fulfill his intentions expressed in 1979. On February 15, 1990, in a speech delivered at
La Sapienza University in Rome, Cardinal Ratzinger (later
Pope Benedict XVI) cited some current views on the Galileo affair as forming what he called "a symptomatic case that illustrates the extent to which modernity's doubts about itself have grown today in science and technology". As evidence, he presented the views of a few prominent philosophers including
Ernst Bloch and
Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker, as well as
Paul Feyerabend, whom he quoted as saying: Ratzinger did not directly say whether he agreed or disagreed with Feyerabend's assertions, but did say in this same context that "It would be foolish to construct an impulsive apologetic on the basis of such views." {{Blockquote| Thanks to his intuition as a brilliant physicist and by relying on different arguments, Galileo, who practically invented the experimental method, understood why only the sun could function as the centre of the world, as it was then known, that is to say, as a planetary system. The error of the theologians of the time, when they maintained the centrality of the Earth, was to think that our understanding of the physical world's structure was, in some way, imposed by the literal sense of Sacred Scripture... In January 2008, students and professors protested the planned visit of
Pope Benedict XVI to
La Sapienza University, stating in a letter that the pope's expressed views on Galileo "offend and humiliate us as scientists who are loyal to reason and as teachers who have dedicated our lives to the advance and dissemination of knowledge". In response the pope canceled his visit. The full text of the speech that would have been given was made available a few days following Pope Benedict's cancelled appearance at the university. La Sapienza's
rector, Renato Guarini, and former Italian Prime Minister
Romano Prodi opposed the protest and supported the pope's right to speak. Also notable were public counter-statements by La Sapienza professors Giorgio Israel and Bruno Dalla Piccola. == List of artistic treatments ==