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.
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: