This is pretty much true; geocentrism is one of the old tropes whereby contemporaries unjustly devalue the thought of the past in an attempt at Whig history. The Greek rejection of heliocentrism was not completely wrong, any more than Columbus's contemporaries were universally flat-earthers.
(I've pointed out in the past something similar about Greek atomism.)
There's an excellent book on this subject, Alan Hirschfeld's "Parallax:The Race to Measure the Cosmos" which discusses this and related issues in detail. It provides a lot of good examples about how the actual history of astronomy was more complicated and messier than a lot of standard narratives.
The actual history of every subject is "more complicated and messier than a lot of standard narratives", but no one has the time and energy to study everything, hence the "standard narratives". If there was one thing I would like to add to everyone's education it would be a caution about the common weaknesses of simplified knowledge.
I disagree with the recommendation of Hirschfeld in the strongest possible terms. I have no comment on his treatment of his real subject, Renaissance astronomy, but his treatment of Greek astronomy is a fairy tale tacked on for the sake of symmetry with the Renaissance. For those who want the mainstream account, I instead recommend the article by Stahl linked in the original post. In fewer pages than Hirschfeld he gives far more detail, an honest account of the extremely limited evidence. In particular, I suggest that one go in asking the question "Did the Greeks hold a geocentric model?" and not get distracted by discussion predicated on the assumption that the answer is known.
I agree that the first third of Parallax was disappointing, but the rest of the book is vigorously told and covers some very interesting material I've never seen written up elsewhere. It's a book with a lot of redeeming merit.
Fred Hoyle spoke about Ptolemy as being too smart to accept the heliocentric view, considering all he new in his time.
Hoyle wrote this 50 years ago.
OTOH Hoyle was controversial himself. Some of his theories were very wrong, some were less wrong. I couldn't swallow his idea that the oil glued planets together. He was very against the view on oil as a biological product. Fine, but gluing the planets is too weird.
Yes, the history of science is more messy then one might think.
(Meta comment: If this post surprises you, there's a decent chance you have a broken historiographical practice and/or model of the history of natural philosophy aka science.)
Summary: The Greeks likely rejected a heliocentric theory because it would conflict with the lack of any visible stellar parallax, not for egotistical, common-sense, or aesthetic reasons.
I had always heard that the Greeks embraced a geocentric universe for common-sense, aesthetic reasons - not scientific ones. But it seems as if the real story is more complicated than that:
From Isomorphismes:
I dug a little bit deeper, and this seems to be more or less accurate. From The Greek Heliocentric Theory and its Abandonment:
And from The Ancient Greek Astronomers: A Remarkable Record of Ingenuity: