"Then, as in each and every planet there is a very fast movement and a very slow movement and in a fixed proportion... and... Saturn and Jupiter have middling eccentricities, Mars a great eccentricity, the Sun and Venus slight eccentricities, and Mercury a very great eccentricity... I also brought forward a solution... and I took my solution from the Archetype of the harmonic cosmos: whence it is established that this cosmos cannot be better... and that it is impossible that the world should not have been created at a fixed beginning in time. This attempt of mine... should have been brought forth into the light with strength of mind... the highest confidence in the visible works of God... or at the exhortation of Aristotle himself, who judged that in these questions you should not suppress or be silent about probabilities any more than... certainties."
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Epitome Astronomiae Copernicanae
' was an astronomy book on the published by Johannes Kepler in the period 1618 to 1621. The first volume (books I–III) was printed in 1618, the second (book IV) in 1620, and the third (books V–VII) in 1621. It was translated from the Latin in 1939 by .
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