It is only known that as a 23-year-old he matriculated at the Kraków Academy (now Jagiellonian University), where he remained through nearly all his life, teaching there for two decades.
He served as the academy's dean, as procurator (administrator of its property), and as head of the Bursa Hungarorum ("Hungarians' Dormitory").
At the Kraków Academy he impressed students by his extraordinary knowledge of literature, and taught mathematics and astronomy.
A major accomplishment of Albert's was his modernization of the teaching of astronomy by introducing the most up-to-date texts.
Albert was well versed in Georg von Peuerbach's Theory of the Planets and Regiomontanus' Astronomical Tables.
Besides Copernicus, Albert's students included the mathematician Bernard Wapowski and the German poet and Renaissance humanist, Conrad Celtis, who in Kraków established the first Central European literary society, Sodalitas Litterana Vistulana.
He served the Grand Duke as a diplomat; one of his most important missions involved negotiations with Muscovy's Tsar Ivan the Terrible.
The major dispute was the figuring out the number of celestial orbs or spheres that lay in the heavens.
The first meaning could be the whole entire heavens was designated into a single object which was the orb or sphere.
The second meaning he paralleled it to the sphere or orb from George Peurbach's Theoricae novae planetarum although it was unconventional, it still existed in the heavens.
The fourth claim was that a single sphere or orb could not be moved by several motions because it was a simple body.
[7] To finally disprove Averroes, Albert Brudzewski mentions the three recognizable motions of the sphere of fixed stars.
He claimed that no mortal knows whether eccentrics truly exist in the spheres of the planets, but spirits could give humans revelations about the true planetary motion of the heavens through mathematicians.
Albert Brudzewski made the claim for the fundamental principle of astrology that the heavens exert causal influences on the earth.
This could be an alternative way that Copernicus generated his idea of linear motion for the Tusi couple.
Although it seems that Copernicus used Albert's ideas, he highly relied on Islamic sources for the Tusi couple.