How Did People Know the Earth Rotates Before Space Travel?

You’re on a giant sphere 8,000 miles (12,700 kilometers) in diameter that spins at about 1,000 miles (1,700 kilometers) per hour as it orbits the sun at 67,000 miles (107,000 kilometers) per hour. But you can’t tell by looking. To you, it feels like you live on a flat, motionless plane where the sun and stars move overhead but you stay safe and stationary. It took us centuries of scientific research to break ourselves out of that pleasant illusion, and we did it all before the first spacecraft ever left the atmosphere. How? Human ingenuity. In the case of learning that the Earth rotates, that ingenuity came from a 32-year-old medical school dropout.

— Read on curiosity.com/topics/how-did-people-know-the-earth-rotates-before-space-travel-curiosity

Jefferson’s Philosophy | Mises Institute

[Previously unpublished online; Faith and Freedom 2, no. 7 (March 1951).]
— Read on mises.org/library/jeffersons-philosophy

Always has been one of my favorite Founding Fathers. A trip to Monticello really impressed me. While he did have slaves, their quarters were much better than most freemen. He educated each of them in a trade, so that when they were freed,they would have a means of support. Most of the were literate.

By his actions and philosophy regarding the rights of the individual over the state, he remains one of my favorites. Even his home is now managed by a private company and not by the government.