One Unbroken Movement Comprehend that you are still living with a pre-Copernicus mindset. A clergyman in a cathedral in 1543, Copernicus published a treatise postulating that the sun does not appear to rise and set as a consequence of it revolving around the earth (the latter of which the Church presumed to be the center of the universe). To the contrary, he asserted, the earth revolves around the sun, which is stationary; and it is the earth’s axial rotation which provides the appearance of a rising and setting sun. Nearly ninety years passed before Galileo’s interest in physics and telescopes resulted in publication (in 1632) of experimental verification of Copernicus’ revelation (followed by Galileo’s trial before Rome’s inquisition the following year). Like the pre-Copernicans who were without doubt that the earth graced the hub of the universe, most people today still suppose that “cause and effect” is such a truism that it is an undeniable fact. This was disproved, now more than 40 years ago! Most people today would recognize the name of Alexander Graham Bell of the telephone, but not the name of Irish physicist John Stewart Bell. But the latter, in 1964, did for physics as much as Copernicus did for astronomy. And, as recently as 2004, Swiss physicist Nicholas Gisin established the revelation of Bell, as firmly as did Galileo that of Copernicus. In sum, to quote physicist Nick Herbert: 109