"EVERYTHING GOOD WAS INVENTED BY GREEKS"
A very funny movie came out a few years back, "My Big Fat Greek Wedding." In it, the Greek dad is obsessed with proving to everyone that everything good on earth originated with the Greeks...Now he's got THE COMPUTER!! lol:
Updated:2006-11-29 13:18:18
Ancient Calculator Was Ahead of Its Time
By Patricia Reaney
Reuters
LONDON (Nov. 29) - An ancient astronomical calculator made at the end of the 2nd century BC was amazingly accurate and more complex than any instrument for the next 1,000 years, scientists said on Wednesday.
The Antikythera Mechanism is the earliest known device to contain an intricate set of gear wheels. It was retrieved from a shipwreck off the Greek island of Antikythera in 1901 but until now what it was used for has been a mystery.
Although the remains are fragmented in 82 brass pieces, scientists from Britain, Greece and the United States have reconstructed a model of it using high-resolution X-ray tomography. They believe their findings could force a rethink of the technological potential of the ancient Greeks.
"It could be described as the first known calculator," said Professor Mike Edmunds, a professor of astrophysics at Cardiff University in Wales.
"Our recent work has applied very modern techniques that we believe have now revealed what its actual functions were."
Staggeringly Sophisticated
The calculator could add, multiply, divide and subtract. It was also able to align the number of lunar months with years and display where the sun and the moon were in the zodiac.
Edmunds and his colleagues discovered it had a dial that predicted when there was a likely to be a lunar or solar eclipse. It also took into account the elliptical orbit of the moon.
"The actual astronomy is perfect for the period," Edmunds told Reuters.
"What is extraordinary about the thing is that they were able to make such a sophisticated technological device and to be able to put that into metal," he added.
The model of the calculator shows 37 gear wheels housed in a wooden case with inscriptions on the cover that related to the planetary movements.
Francois Charette, of the Ludwig-Maximilians University in Munich, Germany, said the findings, reported in the journal Nature, provide a wealth of data for future research.
"Newly deciphered inscriptions that relate to the planetary movements make it plausible that the mechanism originally also had gearings to predict the motion of the planets," he said in a commentary.
Edmunds described the instrument as unique, saying there is nothing like it in the history of astronomy. Similar complicated mechanisms were not been seen until the appearance of medieval cathedral clocks much later.
"What was not quite so apparent before was quite how beautifully designed this was," he said. "That beauty of design in this mechanical thing forces you to say 'Well gosh, if they can do that what else could they do?"'
http://news.aol.com/topnews/articles/_a/ancient-calculator-was-ahead-of-its-time/n20061129130109990033
3 comments:
Not really pertinent to this post, but yes, I am here - Moishe3rd... Vis a vis your message to me...
Yet I cannot figure out how to either email you or find your comment on my (somewhat sporadic and mostly unused) blog.
So, I leave my trace here.
I generally converse over at LibertyNewsForum where I also have blogged (still sporadic, but at least more than one entry) and I read and occaisionally post at Little Green Footballs. I enjoy somewhat rational arguments with a certain give and take, so I seldom post at Meic...
I do read several other interesting (to me anyhoo) blogs if your interested...
Be well.
hmmm.... Doc V?
Moishe, I went to YOUR blog, and posted there...it "awaits your approval."
I hope you won't be a stranger here, either!
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