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ANCIENT GREECE

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Title: ANCIENT GREECE


1
ANCIENT GREECE
  • Written history begins c.900BC
  • Greece built on the knowledge of earlier
    civilizations, but carried ideas and science to
    entirely new levels
  • Ancient Greece serves as a model for later
    civilizations in a way that other early
    civilizations dont not only in
    science/engineering, but also philosophy and
    politics.
  • Not a country but rather a collection of polis
    (city-states) with a common language, history,
    and dislike/distrust of one another. Polis exist
    in state of more-or-less continuous warfare.

2
Map of ANCIENT GREECE
3
ANCIENT GREECE cont
  • Greek merchants from various polis establish
    colonies in surrounding countries Italy, Egypt,
    France, South Russia, India, etc. (c.750BC)
  • Colonies bring materials/knowledge to Greece, and
    also spread Greek culture to rest of world
    through establishment of gymnasiums, etc.
  • In some cases (e.g. Athens), the colonies become
    mini-empires
  • Knowledge application disparagement of
    labour/application meant that knowledge (while
    applied to a certain extent) was not applied on
    the scale of the Egyptians, Chinese, or Romans.

4
ANCIENT GREECE KNOWLEDGE/TECHNOLOGY cont
  • First use of letters (rather than pictograms)
  • Extensive creation of libraries
  • Major contributions to knowledgephilosophy
    (e.g. Socrates), political thought (e.g.
    Pericles), literature (e.g. Sophocles), art (e.g.
    Polykleitos), science (e.g. Democritus),
    engineering (e.g. Thales), and mathematics (e.g.
    Pythagoras)
  • Practical engineering includesartificial
    harbours, tunnels, mines, ships, roads,
    weaponry/fortifications, and large buildings such
    as the Parthenon (which used iron beams)

5
THE PARTHENON(built 447BC?423BC)
6
ANCIENT GREECE cont2
  • Disunity among the polis made them vulnerable to
    attack by other (more organized) countries
  • 338BC Conquest/unification of Greece by
    Alexander the Great (Greek educated Macedonian)
    who forms an empire which includes Greece,
    Persia, Egypt, etc. to the borders of India.
  • Foundation of Alexandria which become a highly
    cosmopolitan enclave for Greeks (and Jews) in
    Egypt and the centre of learning, science, and
    engineering. The Library (Research Institute) of
    Alexandria became the repository for all Greek
    knowledge.

7
ANCIENT GREECE cont3
  • The Alexandrian Period (323BC-31BC) includes
  • Archimedes of Syracuse screw, buoyancy, pumps,
    war mirror, theory of levers, force
    parallelograms, calculation of p.
  • Ctesibius of Alexandria force pump, hydraulic
    organ/keyboard, metal springs, water clock.
  • Hero mathematics, surveying, siphons,
    pneumatics, aerophile.
  • Philon of Byzantium automata, waterwheels,
    catapult design, psychological warfare
  • Euclid of Alexandria geometry

8
ANCIENT GREECE cont4
Left Force pump, Right Archimedes screw
9
ANCIENT GREECE cont5
  • Decline of Athens (as described by Alexandrian
    historian) the rich citizens were obliged to
    bind together to meet the crushing charges that
    taxation imposed. The poorer classes expected
    the state to provide for them, and the level of
    public morality declined.
  • Greece conquered and becomes a Roman province
    146BC

10
ANTIKYTHERA MECHANISM
  • c. 87BC
  • Analogue computer to calculate the astronomical
    position of the sun and moon for any given date
  • Ultimate ancestor to all clocks

11
REVIEW OF KEY POINTS
  • Following the Paleolithic period, the Neolithic
    period ushered in a revolution in
    engineering/technology that led to the foundation
    of the first cities/civilizations.
  • Engineering/Technology in early bronze iron age
    civilizations allowed a population explosion
    which led to the development of written scripts,
    mathematics, and libraries
  • Engineering/Technology also led to war murder
    on a previously unimaginable level, and
    widespread devastation of the environment
    (particularly in terms of desertification)
  • Ancient Greece was an important forerunner of
    modern Western Civilization in terms of
    philosophy, political thought, literature, art,
    science, engineering, and mathematics
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