Rethinking the heavens: a bold challenge to accepted astronomical theory and a call for real observation.
This work argues that long‑held ideas about the sun and planetary motion rest on imagined, not observed, facts. It invites readers to consider a science grounded in what can be seen from Earth and tested through careful, international collaboration.
Through a historical lens, the book questions the Copernican system and its reliance on fixed centers and closed orbits. It advocates moving beyond abstract dogma toward a practical astronomy built on direct observation of the sky, including new proposals for equatorial measurements and global cooperation to strengthen the discipline.
- Exposes tensions between theory and observation in astronomy’s past and present.
- Explains why motion and rest are debated ideas in a dynamic celestial view.
- Outlines a practical path: international collaboration, new observatories, and systematic observations.
- Offers a framework for thinking about how science advances when theory and data disagree.
Ideal for readers curious about the foundations of astronomy, how scientific ideas evolve, and the role of observation in shaping our understanding of the universe.