please help.. There is no answer to this question because there is no quote of antioch epiphines. In fact, the actual name of the person is Antiochus Epiphanes who was a Greek ruler over the Jews during the time between 175-164 BC. He tried to force the Jews to worship the Greek God Zeus and destroyed many of their temples and religious writings. The only thing that Antiochus Epiphanes and Nicholas Copernicus have in common is Hellenism. Nicholas Copernicus did not follow Hellenism, he was a Catholic who lived in in the 1500's. He did, however, discover that the Earth revolves around the Sun and he spent a lot of time studying the stars which is where the Hellenism comes in because it is related to astology, or an early form of Astrology. Nicholas Copernicus did have a famous quote that people might recognize. It is: "To know that we know what we know, and to know that we do not know what we don not know, that is true knowledge."
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There is no record of Antioch Epiphanius having a famous quote directed at Nicholas Copernicus. Antioch Epiphanius was a Greek philosopher and mathematician who lived centuries before Copernicus proposed his heliocentric model of the universe.
Nicholas Copernicus is famous for his heliocentric theory of the solar system, which proposed that the Earth and other planets revolve around the Sun. This theory revolutionized the understanding of the universe and challenged the prevailing geocentric model. Copernicus's work laid the foundation for modern astronomy and had a profound impact on scientific thought.
Copernicium is named after astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus. Copernicus is known for formulating the heliocentric model of the universe, which places the Sun at the center of the solar system, a significant departure from the prevailing geocentric model at the time.
His mathematics. He was the first person since the Greeks who put the sun at the center of the solar system instead of the Earth.
Some of the most famous scientists in the 18th century include Isaac Newton, who made significant contributions to physics and mathematics, Carl Linnaeus, known for his work in taxonomy and biological classification, and Antoine Lavoisier, credited as the father of modern chemistry for his pioneering work on the conservation of mass.
Nicolaus Copernicus was the Polish scholar who published a heliocentric theory in his treatise 'On the Revolution of the Heavenly Spheres' in 1543. This theory proposed that the Sun, rather than the Earth, was the center of the universe, leading to significant changes in our understanding of the cosmos.