The songs, art and lyrics of this album tell the story of the rise of the heliocentric world view - the idea that the Earth revolves around the Sun, and that the Sun is stationary and at the center of the Solar System.
Nicolaus Copernicus and
Galileo Galilei were the first popular ambassadors of this idea, although ancient Greek astronomers like
Aristarchus had already posited this theory centuries before. The journey starts with the creation of the
firmament in
Genesis 1:6-20 ("Firmament") and ancient explanations of the movement of celestial bodies in
1 Enoch 72:2-5 ("The First Commandment of the Luminaries"). It continues with Copernicus and Galileo, the first propagators of heliocentrism who were not yet in conflict with the
Church ("
Ptolemy Was Wrong") and
Giordano Bruno, who was burnt at the stake of the
Roman Inquisition for being a heretic ("Catharsis of a Heretic").
Arthur Rimbaud's criticism of moral law in his essay
Reasons Not to Believe in God and
Nietzsche's rejection of fundamental Christian values has inspired the lyrics to "Metaphysics of the Hangman". The album concludes with the greatest achievement in the history of modern science,
Darwin's theory of evolution ("
The Origin of Species") and ideas inspired by evolution biologist and passionate atheist
Richard Dawkins ("The Origin of God", "Epiphany"). Its companion album,
Anthropocentric, challenges the views of creationists and other modern fundamentalists who believe that the Earth is at the center of the universe. ==Music==