48 pages : 26 cm
Mesopotamian planetary astronomy-astrology
โ Scribed by David Brown
- Publisher
- Styx Publications
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 155
- Series
- Cuneiform Monographs volume 18
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Pliny wrote of Babylon that "here the creator of the science of astronomy was". Excavations have shown this statement to be true. This book argues that the earliest attempts at the accurate prediction of celestial phenomena are indeed to be found in clay tablets dating to the 8th and 7th centuries BC from both Babylon and from Nineveh. The author carefully situates this astronomy within its cultural context, treating all available material from the relevant period, and also analysing the earlier astrological material and the later well-known ephemerides and related texts. A wholly new approach to cuneiform astral concerns emerges - one in which both celestial divination and the later astronomy are shown to be embedded in a prevailing philosophy dealing with the ideal nature of the early universe, and in which the dynamics of the celestial divination industry that surrounded the last Assyrian monarchs account for no less than the first recorded "scientific revolution". This work closely adheres to the original textual sources, and argues for the evolution on the basis of the needs of the ancient scholars and the internal logic of the divinatory and predictive systems employed. To this end, it offers, for the first time, a Mesopotamian contribution to the philosophy, and not only the history, of science.
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This book, on the other hand, offers a different perspective. It aims, in the first place, to be complete, covering the entire range of the nearly one thousand years of Islamic astronomy and astrology โ from the first translations and compositions in al-Maโmunโs House of Wisdom in mid-eighth century
<h4>Surveys the contributions of Islamic astronomers and mathematicians to the development of astronomy and astrology</h4> <p>It was the astronomers and mathematicians of the Islamic world who provided the theories and concepts that paved the way from the geocentric theories of Claudius Ptolemy in t