Johannes Kepler
Portrait, c. 1910, after 1620 original
Born27 December 1571
Free Imperial City of Weil der Stadt, Holy Roman Empire
Died15 November 1630 (aged 58)
Free Imperial City of Regensburg, Holy Roman Empire
EducationTübinger Stift, University of Tübingen (MA)[1] Known for
Johannes Kepler
Portrait, c. 1910, after 1620 original
Born27 December 1571
Free Imperial City of Weil der Stadt, Holy Roman Empire
Died15 November 1630 (aged 58)
Free Imperial City of Regensburg, Holy Roman Empire
EducationTübinger Stift, University of Tübingen (MA)[1] Known for
Scientific career Fields
Doctoral advisorMichael Maestlin Signature
Johannes Kepler[a] (27 December 1571 – 15 November 1630) was a German astronomer, mathematician, astrologer, natural philosopher and writer on music.[5] He is a key figure in the 17th-century Scientific Revolution, best known for his laws of planetary motion, and his books Astronomia nova, Harmonice Mundi, and Epitome Astronomiae Copernicanae. The variety and impact of his work made Kepler one of the founders and fathers of modern astronomy, the scientific method, natural science, and modern science.[6][7][8] He has been described as the "father of science fiction" for his novel Somnium.[9][10]
Kepler was a mathematics teacher at a seminary school in Graz, where he became an associate of Prince Hans Ulrich von Eggenberg. Later he became an assistant to the astronomer Tycho Brahe in Prague, and eventually the imperial mathematician to Emperor Rudolf II and his two successors Matthias and Ferdinand II. He also taught mathematics in Linz, and was an adviser to General Wallenstein.
Kepler lived in an era when there was no clear distinction between astronomy and astrology,[11] but there was a strong division between astronomy (a branch of mathematics within the liberal arts) and physics (a branch of natural philosophy).[12] Kepler also incorporated religious arguments and reasoning into his work, motivated by the religious conviction and belief that God had created the world according to an intelligible plan that is accessible through the natural light of reason.[13] Kepler described his new astronomy as "celestial physics",[14] as "an excursion into Aristotle’s Metaphysics",[15] and as "a supplement to Aristotle’s On the Heavens",[16] transforming the ancient tradition of physical cosmology by treating astronomy as part of a universal mathematical physics.[17] Additionally, he did fundamental work in the field of optics, being named the father of modern optics,[18] in particular for his Astronomiae pars optica. He also invented an improved version of the refracting telescope, the Keplerian telescope, which became the foundation of the modern refracting telescope,[19] while also improving on the telescope design by Galileo Galilei,[20] who mentioned Kepler’s discoveries in his work. He postulated the Kepler conjecture. Kepler influenced among others Isaac Newton, providing one of the foundations for his theory of universal gravitation.[21]
Childhood (1571–1590)
[edit]
Kepler’s birthplace, in Weil der Stadt, Germany
Kepler was born on 27 December 1571, in the Free Imperial City of Weil der Stadt (now part of the Stuttgart Region in the German state of Baden-Württemberg). His parents were Lutheran, but it is presumed that he was baptized a Catholic, as Protestant baptisms were not permitted in Weil at that time.[22][23] His grandfather, Sebald Kepler, had been Lord Mayor of the city. By the time Johannes was born, the Kepler family fortune was in decline. His father, Heinrich Kepler, earned a precarious living as a mercenary, and he left the family when Johannes was five years old. He was believed to have died in the Eighty Years’ War in the Netherlands where, although a Protestant, he was fighting in the Catholic Spanish army.[24] His mother, Katharina Guldenmann, an innkeeper’s daughter, was a healer and herbalist. Johannes had six siblings, of which two brothers and one sister survived to adulthood. Born prematurely, he claimed to have been weak and sickly as a child. Nevertheless, he often impressed travelers at his grandfather’s inn with his phenomenal mathematical faculty.[25]
As a child, Kepler witnessed the Great Comet of 1577, which attracted the attention of astronomers across Europe.
He was introduced to astronomy at an early age and developed a strong passion for it that would span his entire life. At age six, he observed the Great Comet of 1577, writing that he "was taken by [his] mother to a high place to look at it."[26] In 1580, at age nine, he observed another astronomical event, a lunar eclipse, recording that he remembered being "called outdoors" to see it and that the Moon "appeared quite red".[26] However, childhood smallpox left him with weak vision and crippled hands, limiting his ability in the observational aspects of astronomy.[27]
Kepler attended the Grammar School in Weil until 1577, when the family moved to Leonberg in Protestant Württemberg.[28] He attended the elementary German school in Leonberg for a year, and then the Latin Grammar School, where all lessons and books were in Latin. He was then at two monastic schools, from 1584 in Adelberg, and from 1586 at the seminary at Maulbronn.[24] In September 1589, Kepler entered the Tübinger Stift at the University of Tübingen, a seminary which served to prepare Lutheran pastors for Württemberg. There, he studied philosophy under Vitus Müller[29] and theology under Jacob Heerbrand (a student of Philipp Melanchthon at Wittenberg), who also taught Michael Maestlin while he was a student, until he became Chancellor at Tübingen in 1590. He proved himself to be a superb mathematician and earned a reputation as a skillful astrologer, casting horoscopes for fellow students. Under the instruction of Michael Maestlin, Tübingen’s professor of mathematics from 1583 to 1631,[30] he learned both the Ptolemaic system and the Copernican system of planetary motion. He became a Copernican at that time. In a student disputation, he defended heliocentrism from both a theoretical and theological perspective, maintaining that the Sun was the principal source of motive power in the universe.[31] Despite his desire to become a minister in the Lutheran church, he was denied ordination because of beliefs contrary to the Formula of Concord, the Lutheran statement of faith which had been adopted in 1577.[32] Near the end of his studies, Kepler was recommended for a position as teacher of mathematics and astronomy at the Protestant school in Graz, in Styria, Inner Austria. He accepted the position in April 1594, at the age of 22.[33]
Oil on copper portraits of Kepler and his wife, c. 1600
House of Kepler and Barbara Müller in Gössendorf, near Graz (1597–1599)
During his time in Graz (1594–1600), he issued many official calendars and prognostications that enhanced his reputation as an astrologer. Although Kepler had mixed feelings about astrology and disparaged many customary practices of astrologers, he believed deeply in a connection between the cosmos and the individual. He eventually published some of the ideas he had entertained while a student in the Mysterium Cosmographicum (1596), published a little over a year after his arrival at Graz.[34]
In December 1595, Kepler was introduced to Barbara Müller, a 23-year-old widow (twice over) with a young daughter, Regina Lorenz, and he began courting her. Müller, an heiress to the estates of her late husbands, was also the daughter of a successful mill owner. Her father Jobst initially opposed a marriage. Even though Kepler had inherited his grandfather’s nobility, Kepler’s poverty made him an unacceptable match. Jobst relented after Kepler completed work on Mysterium, but the engagement nearly fell apart while Kepler was away tending to the details of publication. However, Protestant officials—who had helped set up the match—pressured the Müllers to honor their agreement. Barbara and Johannes were married on 27 April 1597.[35]
In the first years of their marriage, the Keplers had two children (Heinrich and Susanna), both of whom died in infancy. In 1602, they had a daughter (Susanna); in 1604, a son (Friedrich); and in 1607, another son (Ludwig).[36]
Following the publication of Mysterium and with the blessing of the Graz school inspectors, Kepler began an ambitious program to extend and elaborate his work. He planned four additional books: one on the stationary aspects of the universe (the Sun and the fixed stars); one on the planets and their motions; one on the physical nature of planets and the formation of geographical features (focused especially on Earth); and one on the effects of the heavens on the Earth, to include atmospheric optics, meteorology, and astrology.[37]
He also sought the opinions of many of the astronomers to whom he had sent Mysterium, among them Reimarus Ursus (Nicolaus Reimers Bär)—the imperial mathematician to Rudolf II and a bitter rival of Tycho Brahe. Ursus did not reply directly, but republished Kepler’s flattering letter to pursue his priority dispute over (what is now called) the Tychonic system with Tycho. Despite this black mark, Tycho also began corresponding with Kepler, starting with a harsh but legitimate critique of Kepler’s system; among a host of objections, Tycho took issue with the use of inaccurate numerical data taken from Copernicus. Through their letters, Tycho and Kepler discussed a broad range of astronomical problems, dwelling on lunar phenomena and Copernican theory (particularly its theological viability). But without the significantly more accurate data of Tycho’s observatory, Kepler had no way to address many of these issues.[38]
Instead, he turned his attention to chronology and "harmony", the numerological relationships among music, mathematics and the physical world, and their astrological consequences. By assuming the Earth to possess a soul (a property he would later invoke to explain how the Sun causes the motion of planets), he established a speculative system connecting astrological aspects and astronomical distances to weather and other earthly phenomena. By 1599, however, he again felt his work limited by the inaccuracy of available data—just as growing religious tension was also threatening his continued employment in Graz.
Expulsion from Graz
[edit]
Graz was a largely Protestant, mostly Lutheran, city, while the ruler of Inner Austria was a Catholic Habsburg. In 1578, Duke Charles II had granted considerable privileges to Protestants in the Pacification of Bruck. Charles died in 1590, when his son and heir Ferdinand II was 12 years old. Ferdinand was educated in the Jesuit College and University of Ingolstadt, and became full ruler of Inner Austria in 1596. He travelled to Italy in 1598, and returned with a determination to restore the true Catholic faith and eliminate heresy. Kepler wrote to a friend in June of that year expressing his foreboding for the future.[39] As Ferdinand’s biographer Robert L. Bireley wrote, his fears were justified, as the Counter-Reformation gained strength.[40]
In September 1598, Ferdinand ordered all Protestant preachers and teachers to leave the country. Kepler was exempted from the decree, but did not feel secure, and looked for alternatives. He learned that Tycho Brahe had been appointed Imperial Mathematician in Prague, and Kepler re-established contact. In December 1599, Tycho invited Kepler to visit him in Prague; on 1 January 1600 (before he even received the invitation), Kepler set off in the hopes that Tycho’s patronage could solve his philosophical problems as well as his social and financial ones.[41] On 4 February 1600, Kepler met Tycho Brahe and his assistants Franz Tengnagel and Longomontanus at Benátky nad Jizerou (35 km from Prague), the site where Tycho’s new observatory was being constructed. Over the next two months, he stayed as a guest, analyzing some of Tycho’s observations of Mars; Tycho guarded his data closely, but was impressed by Kepler’s theoretical ideas and soon allowed him more access. Kepler planned to test his theory from Mysterium Cosmographicum based on the Mars data, but he estimated that the work would take up to two years (since he was not allowed to simply copy the data for his own use). With the help of Johannes Jessenius, Kepler attempted to negotiate a more formal employment arrangement with Tycho, but negotiations broke down in an angry argument and Kepler left for Prague on 6 April. Kepler and Tycho soon reconciled and eventually reached an agreement on salary and living arrangements, and in June, Kepler returned home to Graz to collect his family.[42]
The situation in Graz made it impossible to return immediately to Brahe; in hopes of continuing his astronomical studies, Kepler sought an appointment as a mathematician to Duke Ferdinand. To that end, Kepler composed an essay—dedicated to Ferdinand—in which he proposed a force-based theory of lunar motion: "In Terra inest virtus, quae Lunam ciet" ("There is a force in the earth which causes the moon to move").[43] Though the essay did not earn him a place in Ferdinand’s court, it did detail a new method for measuring lunar eclipses, which he applied during the 10 July eclipse in Graz. These observations formed the basis of his explorations of the laws of optics that would culminate in Astronomiae Pars Optica.[44] Then on 17 July a new decree was announced, ordering all inhabitants to renounce the Protestant faith or leave the province. This time there was no exception for Kepler, and he and his wife and step-daughter left Graz for Prague on 30 September 1600.[45][46][47]
Once established in Prague, he was supported directly by Tycho, who assigned him to analyzing planetary observations and writing a tract against Tycho’s (by then deceased) rival, Ursus. In September, Tycho secured him a commission as a collaborator on the new project he had proposed to the emperor: the Rudolphine Tables that should replace the Prutenic Tables of Erasmus Reinhold. Two days after Tycho’s unexpected death on 24 October 1601, Kepler was appointed his successor as the imperial mathematician with the responsibility to complete his unfinished work. The next 11 years as imperial mathematician would be the most productive of his life.[48]
Kepler’s primary obligation as imperial mathematician was to provide astrological advice to the emperor, Rudolf II. Though Kepler took a dim view of the attempts of contemporary astrologers to precisely predict the future or divine specific events, he had been casting well-received detailed horoscopes for friends, family, and patrons since his time as a student in Tübingen. In addition to horoscopes for allies and foreign leaders, the emperor sought Kepler’s advice in times of political trouble. Rudolf was actively interested in the work of many of his court scholars (including numerous alchemists) and kept up with Kepler’s work in physical astronomy as well.[49]
Officially, the only acceptable religious doctrines in Prague were Catholic and Utraquist, but Kepler’s position in the imperial court allowed him to practice his Lutheran faith unhindered. The emperor nominally provided an ample income for his family, but the difficulties of the over-extended imperial treasury meant that actually getting hold of enough money to meet financial obligations was a continual struggle. Partly because of financial troubles, his life at home with Barbara was unpleasant, marred with bickering and bouts of sickness. Court life, however, brought Kepler into contact with other prominent scholars (Johannes Matthäus Wackher von Wackhenfels, Jost Bürgi, David Fabricius, Martin Bachazek, and Johannes Brengger, among others) and astronomical work proceeded rapidly.[50]
Remnant of Kepler’s Supernova SN 1604
In October 1604, a bright new evening star (SN 1604) appeared, but Kepler did not believe the rumors until he saw it himself.[51] Kepler began systematically observing the supernova. Astrologically, the end of 1603 marked the beginning of a fiery trigon, the start of the about 800-year cycle of great conjunctions; astrologers associated the two previous such periods with the rise of Charlemagne (c. 800 years earlier) and the birth of Christ (c. 1600 years earlier), and thus expected events of great portent, especially regarding the emperor.[52]
It was in this context, as the imperial mathematician and astrologer to the emperor, that Kepler described the new star two years later in his De Stella Nova. In it, Kepler addressed the star’s astronomical properties while taking a skeptical approach to the many astrological interpretations then circulating. He noted its fading luminosity, speculated about its origin, and used the lack of observed parallax to argue that it was beyond the planetary orbits, and thus in the sphere of fixed stars, further undermining the doctrine of the immutability of the heavens (the idea accepted since Aristotle that the celestial spheres were perfect and unchanging). The birth of a new star implied the variability of the heavens. Kepler also attached an appendix where he discussed the recent chronology work of the Polish historian Laurentius Suslyga; he calculated that, if Suslyga was correct that accepted timelines were four years behind, then the Star of Bethlehem—analogous to the present new star—would have coincided with the first great conjunction of the earlier 800-year cycle.[53]
Over the following years, Kepler attempted (unsuccessfully) to begin a collaboration with Italian astronomer Giovanni Antonio Magini, and dealt with chronology, especially the dating of events in the life of Jesus. Around 1611, Kepler circulated a manuscript of what would eventually be published (posthumously) as Somnium [The Dream]. Part of the purpose of Somnium was to describe what practicing astronomy would be like from the perspective of another planet, to show the feasibility of a non-geocentric system. The manuscript, which disappeared after changing hands several times, described a fantastic trip to the Moon; it was part allegory, part autobiography, and part treatise on interplanetary travel (and is sometimes described as the first work of science fiction). Years later, a distorted version of the story may have instigated the witchcraft trial against his mother, as the mother of the narrator consults a demon to learn the means of space travel. Following her eventual acquittal, Kepler composed 223 footnotes to the story—several times longer than the actual text—which explained the allegorical aspects as well as the considerable scientific content (particularly regarding lunar geography) hidden within the text.[54]
Karlova street in Old Town, Prague – the house where Kepler lived, now a museum
During Kepler’s time in Prague, religious and political tensions were building up in the Empire, both between Protestants and Catholics, and within the Habsburg dynasty over the isssue of succession. The situation in Prague, a cosmopolitan city, became increasingly difficult, and Kepler considered a move to Württemberg, which he considered his homeland. In 1609 he wrote to the Duke, Johann Frederick, requesting a position in the University of Tübingen. The Duke turned down the request, but sent a present as a token of goodwill. Kepler replied, and in his letter summarised his position on the doctrinal issues that had caused problems in the past. The Duke did not repond to this. Two years later, he tried again, but this time the request was referred to the theological consistory in Stuttgart, who rejected Kepler’s request on 25 April 1611, denouncing his Calvinist leanings both in his reservations about the Formula of Concord, and his insistence that Calvinists should, despite disagreements, be considered "brothers in Christ".[55][56][57]
In 1611, Emperor Rudolf’s health was failing, and he was forced to abdicate as King of Bohemia by his brother Matthias. Both sides sought Kepler’s astrological advice, an opportunity he used to deliver conciliatory political advice (with little reference to the stars, except in general statements to discourage drastic action). However, it was clear that Kepler’s future prospects in the court of Matthias were bleak.[58]
Also in that year, Kepler’s wife Barbara contracted Hungarian spotted fever and began having seizures. While she was recovering, all three of their children fell sick with smallpox; six-year-old Friedrich died. As well as his approach to Württemberg, Kepler was in contact with Padua. The University of Padua — on the recommendation of the departing Galileo — sought Kepler to fill the mathematics professorship, but Kepler, preferring to keep his family in German territory, instead travelled to Austria to arrange a position as teacher and district mathematician in Linz. However, Barbara relapsed into illness and died shortly after Kepler’s return.[59]
Postponing the move to Linz, Kepler remained in Prague until Rudolf’s death in early 1612, though political upheaval, religious tension, and family tragedy (along with the legal dispute over his wife’s estate) prevented him from doing any research. Instead, he pieced together a chronology manuscript, Eclogae Chronicae, from correspondence and earlier work. Upon his succession as Holy Roman Emperor, Matthias re-affirmed Kepler’s position (and salary) as imperial mathematician but allowed him to move to Linz.[60]
A statue of Kepler in Linz
In Linz, Kepler was appointed District Mathematician and teacher in the district school, as well as retaining his position as court mathematician to the Emperor. His first charge was completing the Rudolphine tables, but many other activities claimed his attention before these were completed.[61] The tables were not published until 1627.[62]
In Linz, Kepler’s difficulties with Lutheran orthodoxy re-surfaced. The Counter-Reformation had not yet had a major impact on Upper Austria. While the ruler was Catholic, the majority of the population were Lutheran and were able to practice their faith. But the pastor of the Lutheran congregation, Daniel Hitzler, refused communion to Kepler on account of his unwillingness to fully endorse the Formula of Concord. The main issue was Kepler’s views on the doctrine of ubiquity or Sacramental union, the belief in the real presence of Christ’s body and blood in the Eucharist, which Kepler could not accept. Kepler appealed to the Stuttgart Consistory against his exclusion, and this led to a long correspondence.[63] This involved various theologians including Matthias Hafenreffer. Hafenreffer had been a friend, but on this issue sided with the theological authorities. In 1619 his excommunication was finally and unequivocally declared.[64]
Marriage to Susanna Reuttinger
[edit]
In July 1612, Kepler met Matthias Bernegger, the humanist scholar and astronomer. Bernegger knew Kepler by reputation, and had sought him out. The two men became friends, and had extensive correspondence for nearly twenty years, although they never met again. Max Caspar described him as "the best and most faithful friend that he ever found".[65] In an early letter to Bernegger, in October 1613, Kepler tells his friend of his forthcoming marriage, and announces the date as "the day of the eclipse of the moon, when the astronomical spirit is in hiding, as I want to rejoice in the festival day".[66]
The day was 30 October 1613, and Kepler’s second wife was Susanna Reuttinger from nearby Eferding. Following the death of his first wife Barbara, Kepler had considered 11 different matches over two years (a decision process formalized later as the marriage problem).[67] He eventually returned to Reuttinger (the fifth match) who, he wrote, "won me over with love, humble loyalty, economy of household, diligence, and the love she gave the stepchildren".[68] Kepler was now able to bring his children to Linz from Wels, where they had been staying with a relative. The first three children of his marriage to Susanna (Margareta Regina, Katharina, and Sebald) died in childhood. Three more survived into adulthood: Cordula (born 1621); Fridmar (born 1623); and Hildebert (born 1625). According to Kepler’s biographers, this was a much happier marriage than his first.[69]
Trial of Kepler’s mother for witchcraft
[edit]
In December 1615 Kepler received a letter from hs family in Württemberg informing him that his mother Katharina, had been accused of witchcraft earlier that year. Katharina lived in the Protestant town of Leonberg. The initial accusation was made by Ursula Reinbold, who claimed that Katharina had given her a drink that made her ill. As the case became known, more rumours and accusations circulated, and Katharina’s family raised an action for slander against the accusers. Kepler vowed to defend his mother, which he did both by despatches sent to the authorities in Leonberg, and by visiting in person. The case dragged in for several years, with Katharina held in prison from 1620-1621. The final stage was held in Tübingen, uunder the authority of the Duke, where it was determined that she should be questioned under the threat of torture. She refused to confess, saying she trusted to God to bring the truth to light. She was then absolved and discharged, being released on 4 October, 1621. She dies about six months later.[70] The process against Kepler’s mother, starting soon after his initial excommunication, has been seen as part of an attack by the Lutheran authorites against Kepler himself.[71]
Kepler had other difficulties at this time. In 1618 the conflict that would become the Thirty Years’ War began with the Bohemian Revolt against Habsburg rule. Ferdinand II, who became Emperor in August 1619, secured the support of Maximilian, Duke of Bavaria against the Bohemians. In July 1620, the Bavarian army entered Linz on the way to Bohemia. This posed a threat to the Protestants of Linz generally, as well as to Kepler, whose sympathies were with the Bohemians, now led by the Protestant Frederick, who had been declared King of Bohemia. Kepler had openly expressed his admiration for Fredericks’s father-in-law, James VI and I King of England and Scotland, who he considered an important peacekeeper. He left Linz for Württemberg in September 1620 to defend his mother, taking his family with him as he did not know if he would be able to return.[72] In November of that year the Bohemian forces were defeated at the Battle of White Mountain, and Frederick (the "Winter King") fled into exile. In November 1621, after his mother’s release, Kepler did return to Linz. In December, Emperor Ferdinand confirmed him in his position as court mathematician. In 1622 Protestant preachers and schoolmasters were banished from Upper Austria, but Kepler was exempted as he was in Imperial service. He would remain in Linz for another four years, and complete the Rudolphine Tables.[73]
During his time in Linz, Kepler published a number of works. The first was a treatise on the year of the year of the birth of Jesus. This was first published in German in 1613; an expanded Latin version was published the follwing year as De vero anno. In 1613 he was involved with another chronological issue when the Emporer summoned him to Regensburg to take part in deliberations on the calendar. The Gregorian calendar, the one in general us today, had been introduced by authority of Pope Gregory XIII in 1582, and adopted in much of Catholic Europe. The main changes from the Julian calendar which it superseded were to remove three leap tears in every four centuries, to bring the calendar year in close alignment to the solar year, and to insert 10 days to correct the "drift" that had occurred since the Julian calendar was introduced, so that Thursday 4 October 1582 was followed by Friday 15 October 1582. The new calendar was denounced by Protestant authorities as at best an attempt to re-assert Papal authority in Protestant lands, and at worst as the work of the Devil.[74] Kepler supported the new calendar on practical and astronomical grounds, but the reform was not accepted - it would be 1700 before the new calendar was adopted throughout Germany.[75]
Kepler’s next work was on measurement. Kepler, buying wine for his household in 1613, observed at first hand the standard method of determining the volume of a barrel, by inserting a measuring rod diagonally from the opening to the bottomm of the cask. This led him to an analysis of the volumes of various shaped containers. Finding that no printer in Augsburg was willing to publish a book in Latin, he brought the printer Johannes Plank from Erfurt to Linz. Plank printed Nova stereometria doliorum vinariorum in 1615, the first book to be printed in Linz, at Kepler’s own expense. A shortened German version was published the following year. Kepler’s next work was his Epitome Astronomia Copernicae, a summary of Copernican theory, published in two volumes in 1618.[76] In the following year, Kepler’s work on Comets, De cometis libelli tres, was published in Augsburg. This book included much observational data and calculation, as well as astrological interpretation.[77]
Also in 1619 Kepler’s Harmonice Mundi was published. This work, aligning heavenly harmonies with musical ones, had a long gestation. Kepler had first drafted an outline in 1599. In 1618, his little daughter Katharina died, and the grieving father put aside the tables, which required peace, and turned to thinking about harmony. In that same year, he discovered what is now referred to as Kepler’s Third Law, relating the orbital period of a planet to its distance from the sun. This finding was first stated in the Harmonice.[78]
In 1617, while working on the Tables, Kepler first read Naper’s work on logarithms, which had been published in 1714. He realised the value of the method for simplifying the many calculations required in the Tables, but was disatisfied that Napier presented only the method and not the derivation. So he developed the idea from arithmetic principles, and derived his own table from them. These tables had the advantage that they could be used directly on whole numbers and not just on trigomometric functions.[79][80] This was published as Chilias logarithmorum ad totidem numeros rotundos in 1624. In the same year he completed work on the Rudolphine Tables. There were negotiations with the Brahe family before the work was ready for printing, and then issues with funding and choice of printer, a choice of printer. Kepler favoured Ulm, because the technical requireements of the work could be most readily met there, but the Emeror insisted it be printed in Austria, which in practice meant Linz, so Kepler set about obtaining suitable equipment, type, paper and workmen, travelling to Vienna and Nuremburg. But before work was fully underway, the city of Linz was besieged from June to August 1626 during the Peasant War. Kepler was unharmed, but the house and printing works, which were on the outskirts of the city, were destroyed by fire. As it was now impossible to complete printing in Linz, Kepler asked the Emperor for permission to move to Ulm. This was granted, and he left for Ulm in November, leaving his wife and family in Regensberg.[81]
Ulm and Sagan 1626-1630
[edit]
Kepler had already identified a suitable printer in Ulm, his manuscript had not been damaged in the fire, and printing of the Tablessoon got under way, and was completed in September 1627.[82] Kepler was now looking for a stable position. The war had been going well for the Empire. The Peasant Uprising had been suppresssed, and the Imperial commanders Wallenstein and Tilly had defeated Protestant forces including the Danish army under King Christian IV, who had come into the war on the Protestant side. Kepler travelled to Prague to present his Tables to the Emperor. He was nervous about his reception, as the rise in Catholic power might make his position difficult. But he received a warm welcome from the Emperor who was very interested in the Tables.[83]
Wallenstein was also in Prague at this time, and had recently been granted the Dukedom of Sagan in Silesia. The two men had been in touch before, when Kepler provided a horoscaope through an intermediary, but had not met. Wallenstein negotiated with the Emperor, and invited Kepler to take up residence in Sagan. Kepler travelled to Linz to wind up his affairs there, then travelled with his family to Sagan, where he arrived on 20 July 1628. Kepler felt isolated in this North German city with its unfamiliar dialect.[84] He wrote to Bernegger in March 1629:
It is loneliness whick makes me oppressed here, far way from the large cities, and letters come and go only slowly, and are causing great expense.[85]
In December 1629 Kepler was able to establish a printing press, which published his Ephemerides for the years 1621-1639.[86]
Regensburg, church Peterskirchlein, memorial plate for the tomb of Johannes Kepler
The move to Sagan had not solved Kepler’s financial problems. He got little assistance from Wallenstein apart from his salary, and the Ephemerides were printed at hsi own expense. He was still owed considerable sums from the Imperial treasury for work he had done previously, so on 8 October 1630, he set out for Regensburg, hoping to collect at least some of this. However, a few days after reaching Regensburg, he became sick and progressively worsened. Kepler died on 15 November 1630, just over a month after his arrival. He was buried in a Protestant churchyard in Regensburg, which was later completely destroyed during the war.[87]
Kepler’s belief that God created the cosmos in an orderly fashion caused him to attempt to determine and comprehend the laws that govern the natural world, most profoundly in astronomy.[88][89] The phrase "I am merely thinking God’s thoughts after Him" has been attributed to him, although this is probably a capsulized version of a writing from his hand:
Those laws [of nature] are within the grasp of the human mind; God wanted us to recognize them by creating us after his own image so that we could share in his own thoughts.[90]
Kepler advocated for tolerance among Christian denominations, for example arguing that Catholics and Lutherans should be able to take communion together. He wrote, "Christ the Lord neither was nor is Lut