Galileo's genius lay in the way he approached scientific problems: he reduced problems to simple terms on the basis of experience and common-sense logic, and resolved problems according to simple mathematical descriptions, thus opening the way for a modern mathematical physics. Galileo made the first effective use of the refracting telescope to discover important new facts about astronomy. His observations led him to support Copernicus's claim that Earth and the other planets circled the sun. This conflicted with the teachings of the Catholic Church, and brought Galileo before the judges of the Inquisition.Galileo's genius lay in the way he approached scientific problems: he reduced problems to simple terms on the basis of experience and common-sense logic, and resolved problems according to simple mathematical descriptions, thus opening the way for a modern mathematical physics. Galileo made the first effective use of the refracting telescope to discover important new facts about astronomy. His observations led him to support Copernicus's claim that Earth and the other planets circled the sun. This conflicted with the teachings of the Catholic Church, and brought Galileo before the judges of the Inquisition.