New Page 0 Aristotle autolycus of pitane Bryson Callippus Chrysippus Cleomedes Conon Cusa Democritus Dinostratus Diocles Dionysodorus http://www.edfiles.com/top/GR6B/geometryP.htm
Extractions: SCIENCE / GEOMETRY / MATH EDFILES SOCIAL STUDIES ANCIENT GREECE science math geometry index Ancient Greek mathematics greek contributions to science greek contributions to science ii ancient greek medicine ... euclids elements Ancient Greek mathematics Greek mathematics Anaxagoras Anthemius Antiphon ... Zenodorus greek contributions to science Ancient Greek Agriculture Botany Ancient Greek Astronomy Ancient Greek Earth Science Origins of Greek ScienCE ... go to index greek contributions to science ii (from the vatican) Vatican Exhibit Main Hall Greek Astronomy Greek Mathematics and Modern Heirs Mathematics Ancient Science Modern Fates ... go to index ancient greek medicine Ancient drugs BBC Medicine Asclepius (1200BC - 500AD) BBC Medicine - Greek Medicine BBC Medicine Hippocrates ... go to index on ancient medicine Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 Part 4 ... go to index on air waters and places Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 Part 4 ... go to index Articles about Greek mathematics Squaring the circle Doubling the cube Trisecting an angle Greek Astronomy ... Greek mathematics?
Science Timeline About 310 bce, autolycus of pitane defined uniform motion as being when a pointis said to be moved with equal movement when it traverses equal and similar http://www.sciencetimeline.net/prehistory.htm
Extractions: use checkboxes to select items you wish to download About 10,000 bce, wolves were probably domesticated. [added 02/01/03] By 9000 bce, sheep were probably domesticated in the Middle East. About 7000 bce, there was probably an hallucinagenic mushroom By 7000 bce, wheat was domesticated in Mesopotamia. The intoxicating effect of leaven on cereal dough and of warm places on sweet fruits and honey was noticed before men could write. By 6500 bce, goats [added 02/01/03] maces [added 02/01/03] walled communities [added 02/01/03] About 4800 bce, there is evidence of astronomical calendar stones on the Nabta plateau, near the Sudanese border in Egypt. A parade of six megaliths mark the position where Sirius About 4000 bce, horses were being ridden on the Eurasian steppe by the people of the Sredni Stog culture (Anthony et al. About 4000 bce, light wooden plows were used in Mesopotamia. Between 4000 and 3500 bce, copper smelting in minute quantities was introduced in Mesopotamia. [added 02/01/03] Between 4000 and 3500 bce, copper smelting in minute quantities was introduced in Mesopotamia.
PSIgate - Physical Sciences Information Gateway Search/Browse Results autolycus of pitane Born about 360 BC in Pitane, Aeolis, Asia Minor (now Turkey)Died about 290 BC Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index http://www.psigate.ac.uk/roads/cgi-bin/search_webcatalogue2.pl?limit=425&term1=b
Extractions: The List of ancient Greeks reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004 (provided by Fixed Reference : snapshots of Wikipedia from wikipedia.org) This an alphabetical list of ancient Greeks . These include ethnic Greeks and Greek language speakers from Greece and the Mediterranean world up to about 200 AD. A B C D ... Related articles Abaris - priest of Apollo (or Abaris the Hyperborean Acestorides - tyrant of Syracuse Achaeus - general Achaeus of Eretria - poet Achermus - sculptor Achilles Tatius - writer Acron - writer Acrotatus - King of Sparta Acusilaus - scholar Adeimantus - Corinthian general Adrianus - sophist Aedesius - philosopher Aeimnestus - Spartan soldier Aelianus Tacticus - military writer Aelius Aristides - orator and writer Aeneas Tacticus - writer Aenesidemus - Sceptic philosopher Aeropus I of Macedon - king Aeropus II of Macedon - king Aeschines Socraticus - Socratic philosopher Aeschines - Athenian orator Aeschylus - playwright Aesop - author of fables Aetion - painter Aetius - philosopher Agarista - two; wife of Megacles, mother of Pericles
Adventures In CyberSound: Euclid is a treatise on the geometry of the sphere for use in astronomy and is similarin content to the work, by autolycus of pitane, Moving Sphere. http://www.acmi.net.au/AIC/EUCLID_BIO.html
Extractions: Euclid (alt: Euklid, Eucleides) : 365 - 300 BC Euclid's The Optics is the earliest surviving work on geometrical optics, and is generally found in Greek manuscripts along with elementary works on spherical astronomy. There were a number of medieval Latin translations, which became of new importance in the fifteenth century for the theory of linear perspective. This technique is beautifully illustrated in the miniature of a street scene in this elegant manuscript from the library of the Duke of Urbino. It may once have been in the possession of Piero della Francesca, who wrote one of the principal treatises on perspective in painting.
An Objection To The Theory Of Concentric Circles I confine myself to one fact which is actually evident to the eye; this fact noone before autolycus of pitane even tried to explain by means of hypotheses, http://vms.cc.wmich.edu/~mcgrew/simp.htm
Other Writings (from Euclid) -- Encyclopædia Britannica Those works are part of a corpus known as “The Little Astronomy” thatalso includes the Moving Sphere by autolycus of pitane. http://encyclopaediabritannica.com/eb/article?tocId=2176
A Index I (1907) Aryabhata II (427) Askey, Richard (884*) Atiyah, Michael (885*) Atwood,George (186*) Auslander, Maurice (1180*) autolycus of pitane (810) Avicenna http://www.gap-system.org/~history/Indexes/A.html
Extractions: Posted by Just a visitor on January 16, 2003 at 10:21:21: In Reply to: Re: Isidoros and Anthemios - Great Buildings Online posted by Kevin Matthews on November 23, 1999 at 00:22:59: Dear Mr. Matthews, I would like to support what Mrs. Grigoris said about the unfortunate way in which Anthemios And Isidoros are presented. One gets a very strong impression, that those architects were of Turkish origin, after reading the biography of them presented in http://www.greatbuildings.com/architects/Isidoros_and_Anthemios.html I would like to provide you with a few references that should help you correct this:
Greek Math c. 350330) Eudemus of Rhodes (the Peripatetic) (c. 335) autolycus of pitane(c. 300) Euclid (c. 29 Word count = 2652 Pages = 11. http://www.radessays.com/link.php?site=re&aff=r2c2&dest=viewpaper.php?request=17
Euclid Those works are part of a corpus known as “The Little Astronomy” that also includesthe Moving Sphere by autolycus of pitane. Two treatises on music, http://www.omhros.gr/Kat/History/Greek/Tc/Euclid.htm
Extractions: flourished c. 300 BC , Alexandria, Egypt Greek Eukleides the most prominent mathematician of Greco-Roman antiquity, best known for his treatise on geometry, the Elements Life Of Euclid's life nothing is known except what the Greek philosopher Proclus (c. AD BC Elements BC Sources and contents of the Elements Euclid compiled his Elements from a number of works of earlier men. Among these are Hippocrates of Chios (fl. c. 460 BC BC BC ). The older elements were at once superseded by Euclid's and then forgotten. For his subject matter Euclid doubtless drew upon all his predecessors, but it is clear that the whole design of his work was his own, culminating in the construction of the five regular solids, now known as the Platonic solids. A brief survey of the Elements BC ). While Book V can be read independently of the rest of the Elements arithmos antanaresis (now known as the Euclidean algorithm), for finding the greatest common divisor of two or more numbers; Book VIII examines numbers in continued proportions, now known as geometric sequences (such as a x a x a x a x ); and Book IX proves that there are an infinite number of primes.
Autolycus http//www.thefreedictionary.com. Autolycus. autolycus of pitane Born about 360BC in Pitane, Aeolis, Asia Minor (now Turkey) Died about 290 BC. http://www.netvillage.co.uk/searchnv.pl?qry=autolycus
ASPECTS OF MATHEMATICS INTEREST in 1995). INTERVIEW FROM PROF. SIR GEOFFREY LLOYD ABOUT THE ANCIENT GREEK SCIENCEin Greek, (publ. in 1998); autolycus of pitane in Greek, (December 2002 ). http://users.auth.gr/~nioka/aspects_of_mathematics_interest.htm
Extractions: ASPECTS OF MATHEMATICS INTEREST OBITUARIES PARASKEYAS M. MAROUSAKIS (1913-1990) [in Greek], (publ. in 1990). STELIOS PECHORIDIS (1940-1992) [in Greek], (publ. in 1992). MYRTO LEYKOPOULOU (1957-1992) [in Greek], (publ. in 1994). WILBUR RICHARD KNORR [in Greek], (publ. in 1997). MATHEMATICS PROBLEMS THE TRACING OF A STAIGHT WHICH JOINS A GIVEN POINT M WITH THE POINT OF THE CUT OF TWO GIVEN COPLANED STRAIGHTS THAT INTERSECT OUTSIDE THE PLANE OF DRAWING [in Greek], (publ. in 1997). GIVEN THE OUTLINE OF AN ELLIPSE. HOW CAN WE DETERMINE THE FOCUS? [in Greek], (publ. in 1999). MATHEMATICS AND POLITICAL SENSITIVITIE (with Ch. Vafiadis and G. Tsaklidis) A MATHEMATICS PUBLICATION, THE KOSOVE REGION AND THE CHAMERIA REGION [in Greek], (publ. in 1999). A RESENT PUBLICATION IN THE JOURNAL HISTORIA MATHEMATCA CHALLENGES A SENSITIVITIVE POLITICAL QUESTION [in Greek], (publ. in 1999). VARIOUS ASCERTAINMENTS AND INFILTRATIONS IN THE PROSCENIUM OF OUR MATHEMATICS EDUCATION (INTERVIEW) [in Greek], ( publ. in 1990). (with A. Kostoula) HISTORY OF SCIENCES AND DIDACTICS [in Greek], (publ. in 1991).
Holiday Watchdog - Aeolis Holiday Websites Aeolis Sponsored Links. aeolis Web Results Autolycus autolycus of pitane Born about360 BC in Pitane, Aeolis, Asia Minor (now Turkey) Died about 290 BC. http://www.holidaywatchdog.com/review-aeolis.html
Extractions: Web Results The White Boat. An extract from Child of the River, The First Book of Confluence. The Constable of Aeolis was a shrewd, pragmatic man who did not believe in miracles. In his opinion, everything must have an explanation, and simple explanations were best of all. "The sharpest knife cuts cleanest ... http://www.omegacom.demon.co.uk/child.htm
Anagram Genius : Link To This Anagram Page a href= http//www.anagramgenius.com/archive/autoly.html autolycus of pitane anagrams /a . Return to autolycus of pitane - anagrams page. http://www.anagramgenius.com/linkhere.php?filename=autoly&text=Autolycus of Pita
Quantitative Observation In Greek Astronomy In IrbyMassie and Keyser, skim the introduction to the chapter on astronomy (pp47-50), and read closely the selections from autolycus of pitane ( 3.1, http://shot.holycross.edu/projects/sciS05/assignments/quantitative1
Extractions: This site is accessible to any browser, but will look much better in a browser that supports web standards like cascading style sheets: you can choose from several options Ancient science: home class schedule course resources Be sure you know approximate dates for each author, and the broader subject of the written treatises these extracts are taken from. Compare Autolycus and Aristarchus. Consider the following questions: Ancient science Spring '05 (site last updated Apr. 6, 2005)