The Birth of Science

The Birth of Science

Update: 2011-07-12
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Transcript: In the year 584 B.C., on the coast of Asia Minor, two warlike tribes were engaged in a fierce battle: the Medes and the Lydains. As written by the Greek poets, these two cultures were hacking away at each other on the battlefield with burnished swords and shields, when suddenly the sky darkened. The temperature dropped five or ten degrees. Animals started acting strangely, and the warriors, seeing no explanation for the darkening of the Sun, wandered, dazed and confused, from the battlefield. They were ignorant as to the cause of what had surrounded them, but, unbeknownst to them, a man called Thales had used Egyptian eclipse records to predict this eclipse of the sun. Ancient cultures like the Babylonians and the Egyptians made careful observations of the sky. They observed patterns. They had accurate calendars. But they could never answer the fundamental questions that we would ask as scientists: how far away are the objects? What’s their fundamental nature? What are the distances and sizes of the things that you see in the night and daytime sky? They could not answer these questions. The answers first started to come from a Greek group of philosopher-scientists in the 6th century B.C. who lived in the place that is now Greece and Turkey. These philosopher-scientists were able to speculate about the true nature of astronomical objects and the physical nature of the universe for the very first time.
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The Birth of Science

The Birth of Science

2011-07-1201:42

Thales

Thales

2011-07-1201:07

Star Motions

Star Motions

2011-07-1201:16

Solar Eclipse

Solar Eclipse

2011-07-1201:02

Solar Calendar

Solar Calendar

2011-07-1201:37

Solar and Sidereal Day

Solar and Sidereal Day

2011-07-1201:04

Socrates

Socrates

2011-07-1200:54

Small Angle Equation

Small Angle Equation

2011-07-1200:58

Seasons

Seasons

2011-07-1201:09

Retrograde Motion

Retrograde Motion

2011-07-1201:19

Pythagoras

Pythagoras

2011-07-1201:30

Precession

Precession

2011-07-1201:02

Plato

Plato

2011-07-1200:53

Phases of the Moon

Phases of the Moon

2011-07-1201:06

Navigation

Navigation

2011-07-1200:46

Motions in the Sky

Motions in the Sky

2011-07-1201:22

Motion of the Moon

Motion of the Moon

2011-07-1200:48

Modern Calendar

Modern Calendar

2011-07-1202:08

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The Birth of Science

The Birth of Science

Dr. Christopher D. Impey, Professor of Astronomy, University of Arizona