All 50 Uses of
Galileo
in
Angels & Demons
- They see us as nothing but a quaint shopping district-an odd perception if you consider the nationalities of men like Einstein, Galileo, and Newton.†
Chpt 7 *
- "His name was Galileo Galilei," Langdon said.†
Chpt 9
- Galileo?†
Chpt 9
- Galileo was an Illuminatus.†
Chpt 9
- So the church tried Galileo as a heretic, found him guilty, and put him under permanent house arrest.†
Chpt 9
- Galileo's arrest threw the Illuminati into upheaval.†
Chpt 9
- The symbol itself was created by an anonymous sixteenth-century Illuminati artist as a tribute to Galileo's love of symmetry-a kind of sacred Illuminati logo.†
Chpt 11-12
- Langdon thought of Galileo's belief of duality.†
Chpt 21-22
- They regularly petition us for retraction of Creationist theory, formal apologies for Galileo and Copernicus, repeal of our criticism against dangerous or immoral research.†
Chpt 35-36
- A little book written by a guy named Galileo.†
Chpt 45-46
- Galileo's Illuminati needed to protect themselves from the Vatican, so they founded an ultrasecret Illuminati meeting place here in Rome.†
Chpt 45-46
- Galileo's Illuminati were not the least bit satanic.†
Chpt 45-46
- Word of Galileo's brotherhood started to spread in the 1630s, and scientists from around the world made secret pilgrimages to Rome hoping to join the Illuminati …. eager for a chance to look through Galileo's telescope and hear the master's ideas.†
Chpt 45-46
- Word of Galileo's brotherhood started to spread in the 1630s, and scientists from around the world made secret pilgrimages to Rome hoping to join the Illuminati …. eager for a chance to look through Galileo's telescope and hear the master's ideas.†
Chpt 45-46
- So, Professor, what's the name of this Galileo thing we're looking for?†
Chpt 49-50
- It is accepted theory now that the clue exists and that Galileo mass distributed it to the scientific community without the Vatican ever knowing.†
Chpt 49-50
- Are you familiar with a book by Galileo called Dià logo?†
Chpt 49-50
- In the early 1630s, Galileo had wanted to publish a book endorsing the Copernican heliocentric model of the solar system, but the Vatican would not permit the book's release unless Galileo included equally persuasive evidence for the church's geocentric model-a model Galileo knew to be dead wrong.†
Chpt 49-50
- In the early 1630s, Galileo had wanted to publish a book endorsing the Copernican heliocentric model of the solar system, but the Vatican would not permit the book's release unless Galileo included equally persuasive evidence for the church's geocentric model-a model Galileo knew to be dead wrong.†
Chpt 49-50
- In the early 1630s, Galileo had wanted to publish a book endorsing the Copernican heliocentric model of the solar system, but the Vatican would not permit the book's release unless Galileo included equally persuasive evidence for the church's geocentric model-a model Galileo knew to be dead wrong.†
Chpt 49-50
- Galileo had no choice but to acquiesce to the church's demands and publish a book giving equal time to both the accurate and inaccurate models.†
Chpt 49-50
- "As you probably know," Langdon said, "despite Galileo's compromise, Dià logo was still seen as heretical, and the Vatican placed him under house arrest."†
Chpt 49-50
- And yet Galileo was persistent.†
Chpt 49-50
- "Hey," she said, "you're talking to an Italian marine physicist whose father worshiped Galileo."†
Chpt 49-50
- Langdon explained that Discorsi had not been Galileo's only work while under house arrest.†
Chpt 49-50
- Diagramma was Galileo's most secretive work-supposedly some sort of treatise on scientific facts he held to be true but was not allowed to share.†
Chpt 49-50
- Like some of Galileo's previous manuscripts, Diagramma was smuggled out of Rome by a friend and quietly published in Holland.†
Chpt 49-50
- Diagramma is how Galileo got the word out.†
Chpt 49-50
- Galileo's behest.†
Chpt 49-50
- Confiscated from the Netherlands by the Vatican shortly after Galileo's death.†
Chpt 49-50
- Look for reference tabs that have anything to do with Galileo, science, scientists.†
Chpt 49-50
- If this segno, this clue, this advertisement about the Path of Illumination was really in Galileo's Diagramma, why didn't the Vatican see it when they repossessed all the copies?†
Chpt 49-50
- Meaning Galileo hid it well.†
Chpt 49-50
- Galileo was a scientist after all, and he was writing for scientists.†
Chpt 49-50
- I suppose Galileo could have created some sort of mathematical code that went unnoticed by the clergy.†
Chpt 49-50
- Here are the scientists …. but where is Galileo?†
Chpt 49-50
- I found the right theme, but Galileo's missing.†
Chpt 49-50
- IL PROCESO GALILEANO Langdon let out a low whistle, now realizing why Galileo had his own vault.†
Chpt 49-50
- "The Galileo Affair," he marveled, peering through the glass at the dark outlines of the stacks.†
Chpt 49-50
- Apologia pro Galileo ….†
Chpt 51-52
- DIAGRAMMA DELLA VERITA Galileo Galilei, 1639 Langdon dropped to his knees, his heart pounding.†
Chpt 51-52
- Langdon could see that the top sheet was an ornate pen and ink cover sheet with the title, the date, and Galileo's name in his own hand.†
Chpt 51-52
- Looks like Galileo renouncing the geocentric model once and for all.†
Chpt 51-52
- On any other day, he would have been fascinated to read it; incredibly NASA's current model of planetary orbits, observed through high-powered telescopes, was supposedly almost identical to Galileo's original predictions.†
Chpt 51-52
- Langdon recalled that much of Galileo's legal trouble had begun when he described planetary motion as elliptical.†
Chpt 51-52
- Galileo's Illuminati, however, saw perfection in the ellipse as well, revering the mathematical duality of its twin foci.†
Chpt 51-52
- So you're saying maybe Galileo considered English la lingua pura because it was the one language the Vatican did not control?†
Chpt 53-54
- Or maybe by putting the clue in English, Galileo was subtly restricting the readership away from the Vatican.†
Chpt 53-54
- Galileo was a poet?†
Chpt 53-54
- Galileo didn't even write this.†
Chpt 53-54
Definition:
-
(Galileo as in: Galileo Galilei) Italian astronomer and mathematician who was the first to use a telescope to study the stars; demonstrated that different weights descend at the same rate; perfected the refracting telescope that enabled him to make many discoveries (1564-1642)