Notas del episodio
On February 17, 1600, the Roman Inquisition burned a former Dominican friar alive in Rome's Campo de' Fiori, silencing a tongue he had used to challenge the fundamental order of the universe. In this episode, we explore the turbulent life of Giordano Bruno, an itinerant philosopher, poet, and mathematician whose ideas were centuries ahead of his time.
Join us as we trace Bruno’s journey from his early years in Nola to his wandering exile across Europe, where he dazzled courts with his "Art of Memory" and debated the scholars of Oxford. We dive deep into his radical cosmology, which extended the Copernican model to propose an infinite universe containing countless suns and inhabited planets.
Was Bruno truly a "martyr for science," or was his execution the result of dangerous theological heresies regarding the Trinity and the soul? We e ...