PSIgate - Physical Sciences Information Gateway Search/Browse Results oenopides of chios Born about 490 BC in Chios (now Khios), Greece Died about 420 BC Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies http://www.psigate.ac.uk/roads/cgi-bin/search_webcatalogue2.pl?limit=425&term1=b
History Of Mathematics: Greece 480411); oenopides of chios (c. 450?) Leucippus (c. 450); Hippocrates of Chios (c. 450); Meton (c. 430) *SB; Hippias of Elis (c. http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/mathhist/greece.html
History Of Mathematics: Chronology Of Mathematicians 480411) *SB *MT; oenopides of chios (c. 450?) *SB; Leucippus (c. 450) *SB *MT; Hippocrates of Chios (fl. c. 440) *SB; Meton (c. http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/mathhist/chronology.html
Extractions: Note: there are also a chronological lists of mathematical works and mathematics for China , and chronological lists of mathematicians for the Arabic sphere Europe Greece India , and Japan 1700 B.C.E. 100 B.C.E. 1 C.E. To return to this table of contents from below, just click on the years that appear in the headers. Footnotes (*MT, *MT, *RB, *W, *SB) are explained below Ahmes (c. 1650 B.C.E.) *MT Baudhayana (c. 700) Thales of Miletus (c. 630-c 550) *MT Apastamba (c. 600) Anaximander of Miletus (c. 610-c. 547) *SB Pythagoras of Samos (c. 570-c. 490) *SB *MT Anaximenes of Miletus (fl. 546) *SB Cleostratus of Tenedos (c. 520) Katyayana (c. 500) Nabu-rimanni (c. 490) Kidinu (c. 480) Anaxagoras of Clazomenae (c. 500-c. 428) *SB *MT Zeno of Elea (c. 490-c. 430) *MT Antiphon of Rhamnos (the Sophist) (c. 480-411) *SB *MT Oenopides of Chios (c. 450?) *SB Leucippus (c. 450) *SB *MT Hippocrates of Chios (fl. c. 440) *SB Meton (c. 430) *SB
Timeline Related To Greek Astronomy supposed that Pythagoras made the first discovery of the obliquity of the zodiac, but one oenopides of chios challenges to himself the invention of it. http://www.mlahanas.de/Greeks/TLAstronomy.htm
Extractions: and sore fear upon man. Poem in Greek and German translation In Honor: Asteroid or Minor Planet 5873 Archilochos 1989 SB3, discovered 1989 September 26 by E. W. Elst at La Silla. About 600 BC Pythagoras , performed astronomical measurements with a heliotropion device in the island of Syros. (Herodotus describes later that the Greeks learned to use the Gnomon and Polos from the Egyptians and also the division of the day in 12 parts.) Thales of Miletus Thales of Miletus (636-546) BC predicts a solar eclipse ( (28.5. 585 BC, Julian Calendar or 22. 5. 584 BC Gregorian Calendar Famous Eclipse
Ancient Greece Mathematics Timeline oenopides of chios (p?d ? ) probably created the first three of what became Euclid s postulates or assumptions. What is postulated guarantees http://www.mlahanas.de/Greeks/TLMathematics.htm
Extractions: the Cretan poet Epimenides (Επιμενίδης o Κρης) is attributed to have invented the linguistic paradox with his phrase "Cretans are ever liars" - the Liar's Paradox. 2500 years later, the mathematician Kurt Gödel invents an adaptation of the Liar's Paradox that reveals serious axiomatic problems at the heart of modern mathematics. Thales of Miletus About 530 BC Pythagoras no common rational measure is discoverable About 480 BC Parmenides of Elea (Παρμενίδης ο Ελεάτης) founded the Eleatic School where he taught that 'all is one,' not an aggregation of units as Pythagoras had said, and that to arrive at a true statement, logical argument is necessary. Truth "is identical with the thought that recognizes it" (Lloyd 1963:327). Change or movement and non-being, he held, are impossibilities since everything is 'full' and 'nothing' is a contradiction which, as such, cannot exist. "Parmenides is said to have been the first to assert that the Earth is spherical in shape...; there was, however, an alternative tradition stating that it was Pythagoras" (Heath 1913:64). Corollary to Parmenides' rejection of the existence of 'nothing' is the Greek number system which, like the later Roman system, refused to use the Babylonian positional number system with its marker for 'nothing.' Making no clear distinction between nature and geometry, "mathematics, instead of being a science of possible relations, was to [the Greeks] the study of situations thought to subsist in nature" (Boyer 1949:25). Moreover, "almost everything in [Greek] philosophy became subordinated to the problem of change.... All temporal changes observed by the senses were mere permutations and combinations of 'eternal principles,' [and] the historical sequence of events (which formed part of the 'flux') lost all fundamental significance" (Toulmin and Goodfield 1965:40).
Samos Chios. oenopides of chios Oenopides (Chios, 480? BC). Greek philosopher. Believed to have first calculated the angle the Earth is tipped with respect http://idcs0100.lib.iup.edu/AncGreece/samos.htm
Extractions: Home Up Ionia Aegean Islands [ N.E Aegean ] Black Sea Argos Sparta Corinth ... N. Africa THE NORTH EASTERN AEGEAN Coastal View of Samos Islands of the North Eastern Aegean Samos History of Samos and ( Samos: Historical Facts The Heraion of Samos and image Pythagoras of Samos and ( Anacreon Aristarchus of Samos and ( Chios Oenopides of Chios Oenopides (Chios, 480-? B.C.). Greek philosopher. Believed to have first calculated the angle the Earth is tipped with respect to the plane of its orbit. He found the value of 24 degrees which differs only half degree from the presently
Diodorus On The Greek Cultural Debt philosopher Plato, and that there came also Pythagoras of Samos and the mathematician Eudoxus, as well as Democritus of Abdera and oenopides of chios. http://academic.reed.edu/humanities/110Tech/Diodorus1.96-98.html
Extractions: Diodorus on the Greek Cultural Debt to Egypt (based on Oldfather's tr.) But now that we have examined these matters we must enumerate what Greeks, who have won fame for their wisdom and learning, visited Egypt in ancient times in order to become acquainted with its customs and learning. For the priests of Egypt recount from the records of their sacred books that they were visited in early times by Orpheus, Musaeus, Melampus, and Daedalus, also by the poet Homer and Lycurgus of Sparta, later by Solon of Athens and the philosopher Plato, and that there came also Pythagoras of Samos and the mathematician Eudoxus, as well as Democritus of Abdera and Oenopides of Chios. As evidence for the visits of all these men they point in some cases to their statues and in others to places or buildings which bear their names, and they offer proofs from the branch of learning which each one of these men pursued, arguing that all the things for which they were admired among the Greeks were borrowed from Egypt. (1.96) Orpheus, for instance, brought from Egypt most of his mystic ceremonies, the orgiastic rites that accompanied his wanderings, and his fabulous account of his experiences in Hades. For the rite of Osiris is the same as that of Dionysus, and that of Isis very similar to that of Demeter, the names alone having been interchanged; and the punishments in Hades of the unrighteous, the Fields of the Righteous, and the fantastic conceptions, current among the many, which are figments of the imagination Ð all these were introduced by Orpheus in imitation of Egyptian funeral customs. (1.96)
Science Timeline oenopides of chios, 440 bce. oersted, Hans Christian, 1820, 1825. Ohm, EA, 1961. Ohm, Georg Simon, 1827. Ohno, Hideo, 2000. Ohno, Susumu, 1970 http://www.sciencetimeline.net/siteindex_n-o.htm
Extractions: a b c d ... w-x-y-z Nagaoka, Hantaro, 1904 Nambu, Yoichiro, 1960, 1961, 1965 Nanney, David L., 1958 Napier, John, 1614 Narlikar, Jayant V., 1965 NASA, 1970, 1990 Nash, John Forbes, 1950 Nasse, Christian Friedrich, 1820 Naur, Peter, 1958 Needham, Joseph, early 1930s, 1954 Negus, Victor, 1949 Neidergerke, R., 1954 Nernst,1906, Walther Hermann, 1906, 1915 Neugebauer, Gerry, 1968 Neumann, Franz Ernst, 1831 Newell, Allen, 1956 Newlands, John Alexander Reina, 1864, 1869 Newton, Isaac, 1350, 1619, 1662, 1666, 1669, 1672, 1684, 1687, 1687, 1687, 1687, 1692, 1704, 1704, 1710, 1710, 1713, 1715, 1737, 1738, 1742, 1744, 1788, 1799, 1801, 1801, 1814, 1883, 1894, 1905, 1915, 1916 Nicholson, William, 1800
Science Timeline About 440 bce, oenopides of chios probably created the first three of what became Euclid s postulates or assumptions. What is postulated guarantees the 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.
List Of Scientists By Field Translate this page oenopides of chios. oenopides of chios. Oersted, Hans Christian. Ohm, Georg Simon. Oken, Lorenz. Oken, Lorenz. Oken, Lorenz. Olaus Magnus. Olaus Magnus http://www.indiana.edu/~newdsb/o.html
Extractions: Obruchev, Vladimir Afanasievich Obruchev, Vladimir Afanasievich Ocagne, Philbert Maurice d' Ocagne, Philbert Maurice d' Ochsenius, Carl Ockham, William of Ockham, William of Oddi, Ruggero Odierna, Gioanbatista Odierna, Gioanbatista Odling, William Oenopides of Chios Oenopides of Chios Oersted, Hans Christian Ohm, Georg Simon Oken, Lorenz Oken, Lorenz Oken, Lorenz Olaus Magnus Olaus Magnus Olaus Magnus Olbers, Heinrich Wilhelm Matthias Olbers, Heinrich Wilhelm Matthias Oldenburg, Henry Oldham, Richard Dixon Oldham, Thomas Oliver, George Olympiodorus Olympiodorus Omalius d'Halloy, Jean Baptiste Julien d' Omori, Fusakichi Onsager, Lars Onsager, Lars Oparin, Aleksandr Ivanovich Oparin, Aleksandr Ivanovich Oppel, Albert Oppel, Albert Oppenheim, Samuel Oppenheimer, J. Robert Oppolzer, Theodor Ritter von Oppolzer, Theodor Ritter von Orbeli, Leon Abgarovich Orbigny, Alcide Charles Victor Dessalines d' Orcel, Jean Oresme, Nicole Oresme, Nicole Oribasius Orlov, Aleksandr Yakovlevich Orlov, Aleksandr Yakovlevich Orlov, Aleksandr Yakovlevich Orlov, Sergey Vladimirovich Orlov, Sergey Vladimirovich
New Dictionary Of Scientific Biography oenopides of chios Olbers, Heinrich Wilhelm Matthias Olufsen, Christian Friis Rottbøll Oppenheim, Samuel Oppolzer, Theodor Ritter von http://www.indiana.edu/~newdsb/astor.html
Hippocrates Of Chios -- Encyclopædia Britannica oenopides of chios University of St.Andrews Brief introduction to the life and works of this mathematician born in Greece known for his contributions to http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?tocId=9040541
History Of Astronomy: Persons (O) oenopides of chios (c. 490 BC c. 420 BC). Short biography and references (MacTutor Hist. Math.) Very short biography (Eric Weisstein s Treasure Trove) http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/persons/pers_o.html
Extractions: Odierna [Hodierna; Adierna], Gioanbatista [Giovan/Giovanni Battista] (1597-1660) Oenopides of Chios (c. 490 BC - c. 420 BC) Yngve Oja, Tarmo (20th c.) Oken, Lorenz (1779-1851) Olbers, Heinrich Wilhelm Short biography and links (in German) Short biography (infoplease.com) Very short biography Olbers' Paradox Das Olberssche Paradoxon , von Peter H. Richter (in German) Warum wird es nachts dunkel? Wissenschaftstheoretische Lehren aus dem Olbersschen Paradoxon
History Of Astronomy: What's New At This Site On August 30, 1999 oenopides of chios (c. 490 BC c. 420 BC). Short biography and references R. Rankine, William John Macquorn (1820-1872). Short biography and references http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/new/new990830.html
New Page 0 oenopides of chios Pappus Perseus Philon of Byzantium Plato Porphyry Posidonius Proclus Ptolemy Pythagoras Serenus Simplicius 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?
Resume and Plato the philosopher, Pythagoras of Samos and the mathematician Eudoxos, as well as Democritus of Abdera and oenopides of chios, also came there. http://www.asante.net/citypress0704.html
Extractions: BY MOLEFI KETE ASANTE (FIRST PUBLISHED IN CITY PRESS , JULY, 2004) There is a common belief among whites that philosophy originates with the Greeks. The idea is so common that almost all of the books on philosophy start with the Greeks as if the Greeks pre-dated all other people when it came to discussion of concepts of beauty, art, numbers, sculpture, medicine of social organization. In fact, this dogma occupies the principal position in the academies of the Western world, including the universities and academies of Africa. It goes something like this: Philosophy is the highest discipline. Therefore, whites are the creators of philosophy. In the view of this dogma, other people and cultures may contribute thoughts, like the Chinese, Confucius, but thoughts are not philosophy; only the Greeks can contribute philosophy. The African people may have religion and myths, but not philosophy, according to this reasoning. Thus, this notion privileges the Greeks as the originators of philosophy, the highest of the sciences. There is a serious problem with this line of reasoning. The information is false. As far as scholarship can reveal the origin of the word philosophy is not in the Greek language, although it comes into English from the Greek. According to dictionaries on Greek etymology the origin of the word is unknown. But that is if you are looking for the origin in Europe. Most Europeans who write books on etymology do not consider Zulu, Xhosa, Yoruba, or Amharic, when coming to a conclusion about what is known or unknown. They never think that a term used by a European language may have come from Africa.
Food For Thought: Biographies oenopides of chios (Greek astronomer, mathematician), c.490c.420 BC. Oertel (or Ortell), Abraham (Flemish cartographer), 1527-1598 http://www.junkfoodforthought.com/bio/bio_O.htm
Extractions: Oakeley, Frederick (English ecclesiastic) Oakley, Annie (orig. Phoebe Anne Oakley Moses) (Am. markswoman) Oastler, Richard (English reformer) Oates, Joyce Carol (American writer, playwright, essayist) b.1938 Oates, Lawrence Edward Grace (English antarctic explorer) Oates, Titus (English impostor; fabricated Popish Plot) Obando, Jose Maria (Colombian politician) Oberholtzer, John H. (American Mennonite religious leader) Oberlin, Johann Friedrich (Alsatian pastor, philanthropist) Oberth, Hermann (German rocket scientist) O'Boyle, Patrick Aloysius (American cardinal) Obradovic, Dositej (Serbian writer) Obrecht, Jacob (Dutch conductor, composer, contrapuntist) c.1450-1505 Obregon, Alvaro (Mexican soldier, politician) O'Brien, Conor Cruise (Irish historian, critic, diplomat) b.1917 O'Brien, Edna (Irish writer, playwright, screenwriter) b.1932 O'Brien, Fitz-James (Irish-born American writer, journalist) c.1828-1862 O'Brian, Patrick (orig. Richard Patrick Russ) (Eng. novelist) O'Brien, Edward Joseph Harrington (Am. author, editor, anthol.) O'Brien, Fitz-James (Irish-born American writer)
Table Of Contents oenopides of chios. Zeno of Elea. Democritus of Abdera. CHAPTER III. THE SCHOOLS OF ATHENS AND CYZICUS. Authorities. Mathematical teachers at Athens prior http://web.doverpublications.com/cgi-bin/toc.pl/0486206300
Extractions: American History, American...... American Indians Anthropology, Folklore, My...... Antiques Architecture Art Bridge and Other Card Game...... Business and Economics Chess Children Clip Art and Design on CD-...... Coloring Books Cookbooks, Nutrition Crafts Detective, Ghost , Superna...... Dover Patriot Shop Ethnic Interest Features Gift Certificates Gift Ideas History, Political Science...... Holidays Humor Languages and Linguistics Literature Magic, Legerdemain Military History, Weapons ...... Music Nature Performing Arts, Drama, Fi...... Philosophy and Religion Photography Posters Psychology, Education Puzzles, Amusement, Recrea...... Science and Mathematics Shakespeare Shop Sociology, Anthropology, M...... Sports, Out-of-Door Activi...... Stationery, Gift Sets Stationery, Seasonal Books...... Summer Fun Shop Summer Reading Shop Teacher's Store Travel and Adventure Women's Studies Clearance Center A Short Account of the History of Mathematics
Presocratic Philosophy: Pythagorean Esotericism The Great Year (the period of these phenomena) had been the subject of scholarly conjectures, and oenopides of chios (who was probably not a Pythagorean, http://www.pasteur.fr/recherche/unites/REG/causeries/Pythagoreans.html
Extractions: Antoine Danchin, translation Alison Quayle) French version In the 6th Century BCE, Greater Greece stretched west all they way to Sicily and southern Italy. At this time its western colonies were suddenly reinvigorated by an influx of refugees chased out of Ionia by the conquering Persians. Pythagoras , who was born on the island of Samos some time before 550 BCE, at a time when the whole of eastern Greece was becoming unsafe, settled at Croton in Sicily, probably before 520 BCE. A great many legends soon sprang up around this mysterious figure. By the end of the 5th Century BCE there was no longer any reliable source of information on the life and works of Pythagoras or his immediate successors. What is clear is the reason behind this mystery: it lies in the doctrine itself and the teaching methods of the man who was called the Master. Nothing Pythagoras taught was to be written down or divulged to the uninitiated, and even the disciples were divided into two classes, the