Waubonsee Community College

Ancient Greek and Roman science, a very short introduction, Liba Taub

Label
Ancient Greek and Roman science, a very short introduction, Liba Taub
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 131-143) and index
Illustrations
mapsillustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Ancient Greek and Roman science
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1373398957
Responsibility statement
Liba Taub
Series statement
Very short introductions, 731
Sub title
a very short introduction
Summary
Questions about the physical world, human bodies and health, and even mathematical problems abounded in ancient Greece and Rome. Then, as now, scientific work was part of broader culture. The answers offered by ancient thinkers were influential for centuries and are still actively discussed today. In this Very Short Introduction, Liba Taub describes ancient scientific ideas and practices, focusing on Greece and Rome between the 8th century BCE and 6th century CE. Her account begins with the epic poets Homer and Hesiod and ends with reflections of modern physicists--back cover
Table Of Contents
Acknowledgements -- List of illustrations -- 1. Understanding the world -- 2. Expert poets -- 3. Inventing nature -- 4. Those clever Greeks -- 5. Let no one unskilled in geometry enter -- 6. A theory of everything -- 7. Old school ties -- 8. Roman nature -- 9. River deep, mountain high -- 10. Is there scientific progress? -- 11. Going by the book--or not -- 12. Beyond antiquity -- Note on dates and spelling -- References -- Further reading -- Index
Classification
Mapped to

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