A Portable Cosmos : Revealing the Antikythera Mechanism, Scientific Wonder of the Ancient World

by Alexander Jones

2020-05-07 14:31:40

From the Dead Sea Scrolls to the Terracotta Army, ancient artifacts have long fascinated the modern world. However, the importance of some discoveries is not always immediately understood. This was the case in 1901 when sponge divers retrieved a lump... Read more
From the Dead Sea Scrolls to the Terracotta Army, ancient artifacts have long fascinated the modern world. However, the importance of some discoveries is not always immediately understood. This was the case in 1901 when sponge divers retrieved a lump of corroded bronze from a shipwreck at thebottom of the Mediterranean Sea near the Greek island of Antikythera. Little did the divers know they had found the oldest known analog computer in the world, an astonishing device that once simulated the motions of the stars and planets as they were understood by ancient Greek astronomers. Itsremains now consist of 82 fragments, many of them containing gears and plates engraved with Greek words, that scientists and scholars have pieced back together through painstaking inspection and deduction, aided by radiographic tools and surface imaging. More than a century after its discovery, manyof the secrets locked in this mysterious device can now be revealed.In addition to chronicling the unlikely discovery of the Antikythera Mechanism, author Alexander Jones takes readers through a discussion of how the device worked, how and for what purpose it was created, and why it was on a ship that wrecked off the Greek coast around 60 BC. What the Mechanism hasuncovered about Greco-Roman astronomy and scientific technology, and their place in Greek society, is truly amazing. The mechanical know-how that it embodied was more advanced than anything the Greeks were previously thought capable of, but the most recent research has revealed that its displayswere designed so that an educated layman could understand the behavior of astronomical phenomena, and how intertwined they were with one''s natural and social environment. It was at once a masterpiece of machinery as well as one of the first portable teaching devices. Written by a world-renownedexpert on the Mechanism, A Portable Cosmos will fascinate all readers interested in ancient history, archaeology, and the history of science. Less

Book Details

File size9.3x6.6x0.9inches
Print pages312
PublisherOxford University Press, USA
Publication date February 1, 2017
LanguageEnglish
ISBN9780199739349
Alexander Jones is Professor of the History of the Exact Sciences in Antiquity at New York University's Institute for the Study of the Ancient World....

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