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Math Space Hardware Technology

New Analysis Pushes Back Possible Origin For Antikythera Mechanism 62

We've mentioned several times over the years the Antikythera Mechanism, the astounding early analog computer recovered from a Greek shipwreck in shape good enough to allow modern recreations. The device has been attributed to different Greek mathemeticians and thinkers, such as Archimedes, Hipparchus, and Posidonius, but as reader puddingebola writes, "Current research suggests its origin may be much earlier, and its working based on Babylonian arithmetical methods rather than Greek Trigonometry, which did not exist at the time. Puddingebola excerpts from the NYT article: Writing this month in the journal Archive for History of Exact Sciences, Dr. Carman and Dr. Evans took a different tack. Starting with the ways the device's eclipse patterns fit Babylonian eclipse records, the two scientists used a process of elimination to reach a conclusion that the "epoch date," or starting point, of the Antikythera Mechanism's calendar was 50 years to a century earlier than had been generally believed.
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New Analysis Pushes Back Possible Origin For Antikythera Mechanism

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  • Training set... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 28, 2014 @11:43PM (#48482943)

    That seems like a weak assumption to start from, that is, if you were trying to make a device that predicted eclipses and wanted to check that it was working wouldn't you set the device to begin calculations for some time period during which you have reasonable records, say 50-100 years in the past...

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      That seems like a weak assumption to start from, that is, if you were trying to make a device that predicted eclipses and wanted to check that it was working wouldn't you set the device to begin calculations for some time period during which you have reasonable records, say 50-100 years in the past...

      Not only that, but also 205 B.C. (this "new" date for the calendar's starting point - just seven years after Archimedes died) it was not even an "old" date for Greeks...
      (disclaimer: i am Greek!)

    • Re:Training set... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by fadethepolice ( 689344 ) on Saturday November 29, 2014 @03:14AM (#48483443) Journal
      Although I agree that the extra 100-200 years has been over emphasized I disagree with your general premise. These type of astronomical occurrences are easily predicted (past / future) by ancient mathematicians and were easily predictable at the time by civilizations worldwide from mesoamerica to china for the probable dates presented for the creation for the mechanism. The knowledge of astronomy, planetary and motion were pretty much common knowledge at 200 bc. This makes the 'revelations' of galileo rather comical in retrospect. What is remarkable about this mechanism is the degree of precision of its mechanical design which was unsurpassed at the time (as far as we know). The complexity of this device to accurately predict astronomical phenomena for centuries, mechanically, at the date of its creation belittles the acheivements of the renaissance and calls into question the belief that rome contributed significantly to mediterranean civilization.
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by mrbester ( 200927 )

        The etymology of "renaissance" answers your last snark.

      • Granted, but generally speaking epoch points are selected to be at some point in the past, for a variety of reasons. Just consider computer date epochs - virtually all of them count from years or decades before the software was developed, and many start from a point thousands of years in the past.

        The counterpoint of course is that for a simulation such as an orrery, the farther in the past the epoch is the more accurate the simulation has to be to obtain accurate results, and I don't know that the Greeks h

        • "Just consider computer date epochs - virtually all of them count from years or decades before the software was developed, and many start from a point thousands of years in the past."

          The most widely known being UNIX' epoch, which is January the first... 1970.

          • And Microsoft .NT and several others use 1/1/1. Over 2000 years in the past. Symbian and other go back even further to 1/1/0

        • generally speaking epoch points are selected to be at some point in the past, for a variety of reasons. Just consider computer date epochs - virtually all of them count from years or decades before the software was developed, and many start from a point thousands of years in the past.

          Particularly relevant to the Antikythera Mechanism is the date system that astronomers use : the Julian Date [wikipedia.org], whose zero point is at mid-day January 01 4713 BCE. This software standard was introduced in 1583, though the definit

      • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

        This makes the 'revelations' of Galileo rather comical in retrospect.

        How so? Galileo was working on the problem of the actual relationships of planets to each other, not so much sky-position prediction, which was more or less a "solved" problem at the time.

  • There were other such devices such as the tower of the winds. The Greeks did not nessasary discover log the data from the heavens, what they did work out is that the heavens followed mathematical rules and so simple equations could be used to predict the behavior of the heavens and not the whims of the Gods. Hence you could convert the equations to gear mechanisms and off you go ...
  • How many ideas and creations have been lost only to be rediscovered, like the Baghdad battery, or the antikythera mechanism.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Did you even read the link you posted? Those vases as found don't make electricity, because the bitumen used for sealing them is an insulator; moreover, even if you do alter the design, as the pseudo-archaeologist nutters did back in the day, you can't get enough charge out of a whole rack of those vases to do anything, because the design is so bad that no matter what electrolyte you use, you'll end up with problems. Real archaeologists suggest that the "battery" idea was always just wishful thinking on t

      • The process of manufacturing concrete was lost, the process of manufacturing wootz steel aka damascus steel is still lost, there are ancient Chinese tombs with stainless steel swords. In all of these cases the manufacturing method relied on some naturally occurring material which was eventually exhausted and eventually painstakingly recreated from more basic sources much, much later on.

    • by AC-x ( 735297 )

      Most archaeologists seem to have come to the conclusion that the Baghdad battery probably wasn't a battery after all [wikipedia.org]...

  • To get today's reactions, it used to be necessary to drop the name Tesla - the man, not the car.

  • Babylonian makes a whole lot more sense. By the time the Greek civilization was in full gear the deeper mysteries from pre-Egyptian civilization had already been lost. How do I know? Well, I don't KNOW first hand, but I believe the people who have been there, a-la- the old writings and edgar cayce etc. Plus there's the archaelogical records. And old structures, built for air breathing beings, that have been submerged for well over 18,000 years. And constructions of machined rock so hard that even diamond w

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