Aristotle Leads the Way
Washington, DC ; Smithsonian Books : [publisher not identified], [2004]
Format: Book
Description: xiii, 282 pages : illustrations (some color), color maps ; 24 cm.
A SMITHSONIAN BOOKThe first installment of a spectacular new series by Joy Hakim, author of the bestselling A History of US, who has been called the J.K. Rowling of nonfiction.
Aristotle Leads the Way focusses on the evolution of astronomy, math, and physics and begins with the ancient Babylonians and Egyptians, who invented a calendar and tools for building and measuring, and the ancient Greeks, whose quest for knowledge drove them not only to describe the natural world but to ask why things are as they are. Hakim explores the lives and ideas of such famous people as Pythagoras, who kept his numbers secret from all but the initiated, Archimedes, who kept the Romans at bay with his war machines, and then, while taking a bath solved a major scientific problem involving pressure and volume. She writes about the remarkable city of Alexandria and its steam-powered vehicles; the Hindu and Arab mathematicians who gave us the idea of zero and our number system; Ptolemy, who mapped and classified world knowledge; and St. Augustine and St. thomas Aquinas, who tried to reconcile their faith with reason. But it is Aristotle who dominates science in this book and before the modern era. His philosophy emphasized observation over cogitation and eventually led to experimentation. Aristotle asked questions and then examined existing objects. Hakim explores his encyclopaedic interest in everything he could find in nature and his monumental achievement in constructing a grand theory that attempted to explain and classify everything known.
Aristotle Leads the Way focusses on the evolution of astronomy, math, and physics and begins with the ancient Babylonians and Egyptians, who invented a calendar and tools for building and measuring, and the ancient Greeks, whose quest for knowledge drove them not only to describe the natural world but to ask why things are as they are. Hakim explores the lives and ideas of such famous people as Pythagoras, who kept his numbers secret from all but the initiated, Archimedes, who kept the Romans at bay with his war machines, and then, while taking a bath solved a major scientific problem involving pressure and volume. She writes about the remarkable city of Alexandria and its steam-powered vehicles; the Hindu and Arab mathematicians who gave us the idea of zero and our number system; Ptolemy, who mapped and classified world knowledge; and St. Augustine and St. thomas Aquinas, who tried to reconcile their faith with reason. But it is Aristotle who dominates science in this book and before the modern era. His philosophy emphasized observation over cogitation and eventually led to experimentation. Aristotle asked questions and then examined existing objects. Hakim explores his encyclopaedic interest in everything he could find in nature and his monumental achievement in constructing a grand theory that attempted to explain and classify everything known.
Series: Hakim, Joy. Story of science.
Subjects:
Astronomy -- History.
Astronomy -- History -- Teen literature.
Mathematics -- History.
Mathematics -- History -- Teen literature.
Physics -- History.
Physics -- History -- Teen literature.
Astronomy -- History.
Astronomy -- History -- Teen literature.
Mathematics -- History.
Mathematics -- History -- Teen literature.
Physics -- History.
Physics -- History -- Teen literature.
Target Audience: 950L
ISBN:
1588341607
Availability | |||
---|---|---|---|
Call Number | Location | Shelf Location | Status |
C SCIENCE Hak | Main (Downtown) | Garden Level, Children's NonFiction | In |
C SCIENCE Hak | Main (Downtown) | Garden Level, Children's NonFiction | In |
C SCIENCE Hak | Ballentine Indoors | Children's NonFiction | Out (Due: 5/25/2024) |
C SCIENCE Hak | Blythewood | Children's NonFiction | In |
C SCIENCE Hak | Southeast | Children's NonFiction | In |
Includes bibliographical references (page 271) and index.