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The
physical universe was anthropocentric to primitive man. At a subsequent
stage of intellectual progress it was centered in a restricted area on
the surface of the earth. Still later, Ptolemy and his school, the universe
was geocentric; but since the time of Copernicus the Sun, as the dominating
body of the solar system, has been considered to be at or near the center
of the stellar realm. With the origin of each of these successive conceptions,
the system of stars has ever appeared larger than was thought before.
Thus the significance of man and the earth in the sidereal scheme has
dwindled with advancing knowledge of the physical world, and our conception
of the dimensions of the discernible stellar universe has progressively
changed.
Shapley
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