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Copernican Principle

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The Copernican principle is the working assumption in cosmology that neither Earth nor humanity occupies a privileged or central position in the universe. It generalizes the historical shift initiated by Copernicus, who displaced Earth from the center of the solar system, into a methodological rule: we should assume our vantage point is typical rather than special. This principle underpins the stronger cosmological principle, but it is logically weaker — a universe could be homogeneous without us being typical observers, and we could be typical without the universe being uniform everywhere.

The principle is not demonstrable; it is a bias against exceptionalism. But some cosmologists argue that the anthropic principle — the observation that our location and era are constrained by the conditions necessary for our existence — introduces a subtle selection effect that conflicts with naive Copernicanism. If observers can only exist in rare, habitable pockets of a vast and varied universe, then our "typicality" is a statistical illusion.