Title: Greece
1Greece
2The Origins of Scientific Thinking?
- Greece is often cited as the place where the
first inklings of modern scientific thinking took
place. - Why there and not elsewhere?
- Einsteins answer
- The astonishing thing is that these discoveries
the bases of science were made at all.
3The Origins of Ancient Greece
- What we call ancient Greece might better be
called the ancient Aegean Civilizations.
4The Aegean Civilizations
- There have been civilizations in the Aegean area
almost as long as there have been in Mesopotamia
and Egypt. - The earliest known in the area was the Minoan
Civilization on the island of Crete. - Existed from about 3000 1450 BCE.
- Had some kind of written language, never
deciphered. - Collapsed suddenly for unknown reasons.
5The Mycenaean Civilization
- On the Peloponnesus (the southern mainland)
another civilization arose and flourished from
about 1600-1200 BCE. - The Mycenaeans adapted the Minoan writing system
to their own language, Greek. But it was awkward
to use.
6Mycenaea
- The peak of the Mycenaean civilization was the
reign of Agamemnon, who took his people (the
Greeks) to war against the Trojans.
Agamemnons Palace
7The Trojan War
8The Trojan War
- Approx. 1280 1180 BCE.
- Mycenaea versus Troy.
- Won by the Greeks, but the war depleted their
fighting forces. - Mycenaea was invaded by Dorians about 1200 BCE,
and its culture destroyed.
9The Dark Age of Greece
- 1200 800 BCE
- The organized Greek civilization was destroyed by
the invading Dorians. - Knowledge of writing was lost.
- People lived in isolated villages.
- What they had in common was spoken Greek and
memories of past greatness.
10Phoenicia
- Around 1700 BCE, in the Near East, what is now
Lebanon, a civilization developed with both
Mesopotamian and Egyptian influences. - The Greeks later called the people from there
Phonecians meaning traders in purple.
11Phoenician Writing
- Phoenicians developed a style of writing that
combined Mesopotamian cuneiform and Egyptian
heiratic. - It had 22 distinct characters, each representing
a particular sound (a consonant).
12The Phoenician Alphabet
13The Phoenician Alphabetic was Phonetic
- Since each character represented a sound, rather
than a meaning, the characters could be used to
represent words in an entirely different
language. - The Greeks adapted the Phoenician script to their
own language and produced an alphabet.
14The Homeric Age
- 800 600 BCE
- The Greek verbal culture could be written down.
- The heroic stories of the Trojan War were
written by Homer. - The Iliad, The Odyssey
- Greek mythology and folk knowledge were recorded
by Hesiod. - Theogony, Works and Days
15The Greek Civilization Takes Off
- The first Olympic Games 776 BCE
- The Polis (City-State)
- Independent governments arose all across the
Greek settlements. - Experimentation in forms of government
- Monarchies, Aristocracies, Dictatorships,
Oligarchies, Democracies - Independent units, but tied together by a common
language, religion, and literature.
16Assertion Scientific Thinking Began in Ancient
Greece
- Possible explanations given
- Religion The Greek gods were too human-like.
- Language Phonetic alphabet encouraged literacy.
- Trade The Greeks became traders and travellers,
bringing home new ideas. - Democracy Democratic governments, where they
existed, encouraged independent thought. - Slavery Greeks (like many other cultures) had
slaves who did the menial work.
17The Pre-Socratics
- Thinkers living between about 600 450 BCE.
- So named because they (basically) predated
Socrates. - Known only through discussions of their thoughts
in later works. - Some fragments still exist.
18Socrates
- Lived in Athens, 470-399 BCE.
- Set the direction of Western philosophical
thinking. - The goal of philosophy to discover the truth.
- Reasoning, the supreme method.
- Pursued by asking questions, the dialectical, or
Socratic method.
19Socrates, contd.
- Socrates left no writings at all.
- He is known to us primarily through the works of
Plato. - It is hard to distinguish Socrates own thought
from Platos. - Socrates is an important figure in the
development of scientific reasoning, but - He had no interest in the natural world.
20Back to the Pre-Socratics
- Most Pre-Socratics came from the Greek colonies
on the eastern side of the Aegean Sea known as
Ionia. - This is now part of Turkey.
21Wondering about Nature
- The importance of the Pre-Socratics is that they
appear to be the first people we know of who
asked fundamental questions about nature, such as
What is the world made of? - And then they provided reasons to justify their
answers.
22Thales of Miletos
- 625-545 BCE
- Phoenician parents?
- Stories
- Predicted solar eclipse of May 28, 585 BCE
- Falling into a well
- Olive press
- Water is the basic stuff of the world.
23Thales and Mathematics
- Thales is said to have brought Egyptian
mathematics to Greeks. Examples - All triangles constructed on the diameter of a
circle are right triangles. - The base angles of isosceles triangles are equal.
- If two straight lines intersect, opposite angles
are equal.
24Measuring the distance of a ship from shore
- From the desired point on the shore, A, walk off
a known distance to point C, at a right angle
from the ship and place a marker there. - Continue walking the same distance again to B.
- At B, turn at a right angle away from the shore
and walk until the marker at C and the ship are
in a straight line. Call that A. - The distance from A to B is the same as the
distance from A to the ship.
25Anaximander of Miletos
- 611-547 BCE
- Student of Thales?
- Map of the known world
- Apeiron (the Boundless)
- The basic stuff of the world
26Anaximenes of Miletos
- 550-475 BCE
- Student of Anaximander?
- Air the fundamental stuff
- Cosmological view
- Crystalline sphere of the fixed stars
- Earth in centre, planets between
27Heraclitos of Ephesus
- Ephesus is 50 km N of Miletos.
- 550?-475? BCE (i.e., about the same as
Anaximenes, but uncertain) - Everything is Flux.
- Fire fundamental
- "You can't step in the same river twice."
28Elea
Elea was a Greek colony in southern Italy.
- The minor Pre-Socratic, Xenophanes, fled from
Colophon in Ionia to Elea to escape persecution.
29Parmenides of Elea
- 510-??
- Student of the exiled Xenophanes
- The goal of philosophy is to attain the truth.
- The path to truth is via reason and logic.
- Reason will distinguish appearance from reality.
- Nature is comprehensible and logical.
30Parmenides and the Law of Contradiction
- Something either is or it is not.
- The law of the excluded middle
- Therefore, nothing is that isnt!
- It is impossible to be not being
- There is no such thing as empty space.
- Space is something and empty is nothing.
31Parmenides against Heraclitos
- If there is no space that is empty, the universe
is everywhere full and occupied. - Therefore nothing actually changes.
- Therefore motion is impossible.
32The Fundamental Problem of Viewpoint
- Focus on the whole Parmenides
- Easier to grasp the unity of the world.
- Difficult to explain processes, events, changes.
- Focus on the parts Heraclitos
- Easier to explain changes as rearrangements of
the parts. - Difficult to make sense of all that is.
33The Perils of Logic
- Reasoning with logic inevitably begins with
assumed premises, which may or may not be true. - The reasoning itself may or may not be valid
though this can be checked. - The truth of conclusions depends on the truth of
the premises and the validity of the argument.
34Zeno of Elea
- 495-425 BCE
- Student of Parmenides
- Probably moved to Athens later and taught there,
making his and Parmedies views better known.
35Zenos Paradoxes
- Paradox, from the Greek meaning contrary to
opinion. - Showed that logic can lead to conclusions which
defy common sense. - Hard to say whether he was attacking common sense
beliefs (as seems probable), or demonstrating the
dangers of reasoning by logical deduction.
36The Stadium
- Consider a stadiuma running track of about 180
meters in ancient Greece.
37The Stadium
- Will the runner reach the other side of the
stadium?
38The Stadium Paradox
- Before the runner can reach the finish line, the
mid-point must be reached. - Before that, the ¼ point. Before that 1/8, 1/16,
1/32, 1/64, and an infinite number of prior
events. - The runner never can leave the starting block.
39Achilles and the Tortoise
- Achilles, the mythical speedy warrior, is to have
a footrace with a tortoise. - Achilles gives the tortoise a head start.
40Achilles and the Tortoise, 2
- Call the starting time t0.
- Before Achilles can pass the tortoise, he must
reach where the tortoise was at the start. - Call when Achilles reaches the tortoises
starting position t1 - By then, the tortoise has gone ahead.
41Achilles and the Tortoise, 3
- Now at time t1, Achilles still must reach where
the tortoise is before he can pass it. - Every time Achilles reaches where the tortoise
had been, the tortoise is further ahead. - The tortoise must win the race.
42Achilles and the Tortoise, 4
- An animated demonstration of the paradox.
43Achilles and the Tortoise, 4
- An animated demonstration of the paradox.
44Achilles and the Tortoise, 4
- An animated demonstration of the paradox.
45The Flying Arrow
- Imagine an arrow in flight. Is it moving?
- Motion means moving from place to place.
- At any single moment, the arrow is in a single
place, therefore, not moving.
46The Flying Arrow, 2
- At every moment of its flight, the arrow is not
moving. If it were, it would occupy more space
that it does, which is impossible. - There is no such thing as motion.
47Pythagoras of Samos
- Born between 580 and 569. Died about 500 BCE.
- Lived in Samos, an island off the coast of Ionia.
48Pythagoras and the Pythagoreans
- Pythagoras himself lived earlier than many of the
other Pre-Socratics and had some influence on
them - E.g., Heraclitos, Parmenides, and Zeno
- Very little is known about what Pythagoras
himself taught, but he founded a cult that
promoted and extended his views. Most of what we
know is from his followers.
49The Pythagorean Cult
- The followers of Pythagoras were a close-knit
group like a religious cult. - Vows of poverty.
- Secrecy.
- Special dress, went barefoot.
- Strict diet
- Vegetarian
- Ate no beans.
50Everything is Number
- The Pythagoreans viewed number as the underlying
structure of everything in the universe. - Compare to Thales view of water, Anaximanders
apeiron, Anaximenes air, Heraclitos, change. - Pythagorean numbers take up space.
- Like little hard spheres.
51Numbers and Music
- One of the discoveries attributed to Pythagoras
himself. - Musical scale
- 12 octave
- 23 perfect fifth
- 34 perfect fourth
52Numbers and Music, contd.
- Relative string lengths for notes of the scale
from lowest note (bottom) to highest. - The octave higher is half the length of the
former. The fourth is ¾, the fifth is 2/3.
53Geometric Harmony
- The numbers 12, 8, 6 represent the lengths of a
ground note, the fifth above, and the octave
above the ground note. - Hence these numbers form a harmonic
progression. - A cube has 12 edges, 8 corners, and 6 faces.
- Fantastic! A cube is in geometric harmony.
54Figurate Numbers
- Numbers that can be arranged to form a regular
figure (triangle, square, hexagon, etc.) are
called figurate numbers.
55The Tetractys
- Special significance was given to the number 10,
which can be arranged as a triangle with 4 on
each side. - Called the tetrad or tetractys.
56The significance of the Tetractys
- The number 10, the tetractys, was considered
sacred. - It was more than just the base of the number
system and the number of fingers. - The Pythagorean oath
- By him that gave to our generation the
Tetractys, which contains the fount and root of
eternal nature.
57Pythagorean Cosmology
- Unlike almost every other ancient thinker, the
Pythagoreans did not place the Earth at the
centre of the universe. - The Earth was too imperfect for such a noble
position. - Instead the centre was the Central Fire or, the
watchtower of Zeus.
58The Pythagorean cosmos-- with 9 heavenly bodies
59The Pythagorean Cosmos and the Tetractys
- To match the tetractys, another heavenly body was
needed. - Hence, the counter earth, or antichthon, always
on the other side of the central fire, and
invisible to human eyes.
60The Pythagorean Theorem
61The Pythagorean Theorem, contd.
- Legend has it that Pythagoras himself discovered
the truth of the theorem that bears his name - That if squares are built upon the sides of any
right triangle, the sum of the areas of the two
smaller squares is equal to the area of the
largest square.
62Well-known Special Cases
- Records from both Egypt and Babylonia as well as
oriental civilizations show that special cases of
the theorem were well known and used in surveying
and building. - The best known special cases are
- The 3-4-5 triangle 324252 or 91625
- The 5-12-13 triangle 52122132 or 25144169
63Commensurability
- Essential to the Pythagorean view that everything
is ultimately number is the notion that the same
scale of measurement can be used for everything. - E.g., for length, the same ruler, perhaps divided
into smaller and smaller units, will ultimately
measure every possible length exactly. - This is called commensurability.
64Commensurable Numbers
- Numbers, for the Pythagoreans, mean the natural,
counting numbers. - All natural numbers are commensurable because the
can all be measured by the same unit, namely 1.
- The number 25 is measured by 1 laid off 25 times.
- The number 36 is measured by 1 laid off 36 times.
65Commensurable Magnitudes
- A magnitude is a measurable quantity, for
example, length. - Two magnitudes are commensurable if a common unit
can be laid off to measure each one exactly. - E.g., two lengths of 36.2 cm and 171.3 cm are
commensurable because each is an exact multiple
of the unit of measure 0.1 cm. - 36.2 cm is exactly 362 units and 171.3 cm is
exactly 1713 units.
66Commensurability is essential for the Pythagorean
view.
- If everything that exists in the world ultimately
has a numerical structure, and numbers mean some
tiny spherical balls that occupy space, then
everything in the world is ultimately
commensurable with everything else. - It may be difficult to find the common measure,
but it just must exist.
67Incommensurability
- The (inconceivable) opposite to commensurability
is incommensurability, the situation where no
common measure between two quantities exists. - To prove that two quantities are commensurable,
one need only find a single common measure. - To prove that quantities are incommensurable, it
would be necessary to prove that no common
measures could possibly exist.
68The Diagonal of the Square
- The downfall of the Pythagorean world view came
out of their greatest triumph the Pythagorean
theorem. - Consider the simplest case, the right triangles
formed by the diagonal of a square.
69Proving Incommensurability
- If the diagonal and the side of the square are
commensurable, then they can each be measured by
some common unit. - Suppose we choose the largest common unit of
length that goes exactly into both.
70Proving Incommensurability, 2
- Call the number of times the measuring unit fits
on the diagonal h and the number of time it fits
on the side of the square a. - It cannot be that a and h are both even numbers,
because if they were, a larger unit (twice the
size) would have fit exactly into both the
diagonal and the side.
71Proving Incommensurability, 3
- By the Pythagorean theorem, a2 a2 h2
- If 2a2 h2 then h2 must be even.
- If h2 is even, so is h.
- Therefore a must be odd. (Since they cannot both
be even.)
72Proving Incommensurability, 4
- Since h is even, it is equal to 2 times some
number, j. So h 2j. Substitute 2j for h in the
formula given by the Pythagorean theorem - 2a2 h2 (2j)2 4j2.
- If 2a2 4j2., then a2 2j2
- Therefore a2 is even, and so is a.
- But we have already shown that a is odd.
73Proof by Contradiction
- This proof is typical of the use of logic, as
championed by Parmenides, to sort what is true
and what is false into separate categories. - It is the cornerstone of Greek mathematical
reasoning, and also is used throughout ancient
reasoning about nature.
74The Method of Proof by Contradiction
- 1. Assume the opposite of what you wish to prove
- Assume that the diagonal and the side are
commensurable, meaning that at least one unit of
length exists that exactly measures each.
75The Method of Proof by Contradiction
- 2. Show that valid reasoning from that premise
leads to a logical contradiction. - That the length of the side of the square must be
both an odd number of units and an even number of
units. - Since a number cannot be both odd and even,
something must be wrong in the argument. - The only thing that could be wrong is the
assumption that the lengths are commensurable.
76The Method of Proof by Contradiction
- 3. Therefore the opposite of the assumption must
be true. - If the only assumption was that the two lengths
are commensurable and that is false, then it must
be the case that the lengths are incommensurable. - Note that the conclusion logically follows even
though at no point were any of the possible units
of measure specified.
77The Flaw of Pythagoreanism
- The Pythagorean world view that everything that
exists is ultimately a numerical structure (and
that numbers mean just counting
numbersintegers). - In their greatest triumph, the magical
Pythagorean theorem, lay a case that cannot fit
this world view.
78The Decline of the Pythagoreans
- The incommensurability of the diagonal and side
of a square sowed a seed of doubt in the minds of
Pythagoreans. - They became more defensive, more secretive, and
less influential. - But they never quite died out.