Levina
BANNED
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2013
- Messages
- 15,278
- Reaction score
- 59
- Country
- Location
yuck!Well, they had their gardens for dumping shit
talk something else.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
yuck!Well, they had their gardens for dumping shit
Sorry, but that is not how science works. It does not matter who said it - whether the statement can be supported by facts and logic is what matters. Even if Einstein said it, he would be wrong. That's the difference between science and other branches of human endeavour - science is objective. The scientific method itself was invented to make the process of enquiry objective. That is why things like peer review etc are so important. Here is a video of the legendary Pofessor Feynman making this point, calling it the "key to science" (from 40 sec onward):1) This statement was NOT made by a dilettante or uneducated religious zealot, but by an ex ISRO chief. He definitely knows a lot more than you and I do. Agree?
2) The issue with ancient technologies was that only few had access to it. Remember methods of Surgery by Sushrutha? Or let me tell you about "puma punku", those structures 're older than pyramids. The massive stones used in the construction bear no chisel marks and were finely cut to interlock with the others. A lot of the stones were cut so precisely that the builders clearly had an extremely sophisticated knowledge of stone-cutting, engineering and geometry. Now that was thousands of years ago.
This is not surprisingBrahmagupta, the ancient Indian astronomer and mathematician, held the view that the earth was spherical and that it attracts things. Al Hamdānī and Al Biruni quote Brahmagupta saying "Disregarding this, we say that the earth on all its sides is the same; all people on the earth stand upright, and all heavy things fall down to the earth by a law of nature, for it is the nature of the earth to attract and to keep things, as it is the nature of water to flow, that of fire to burn, and that of the wind to set in motion. If a thing wants to go deeper down than the earth, let it try. The earth is the only low thing, and seeds always return to it, in whatever direction you may throw them away, and never rise upwards from the earth."
History of gravitational theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ancient Indian mathematician Bhaskaracharya, in his book Siddhanta Shriromani, defined laws of gravity in the 12th century, 500 years before Newton defined them for us. The speed of light has been known to Indians since the Vedic period, centuries before it was calculated by the Western world.
Maitree, a group of professionals from Tata Consultancy Services and Bengaluru-based NGO Samskrita Bharati, have come together with a unique exhibition, Pride of India, to spread awareness about India's rich scientific heritage.
The exhibition in Pune on Friday April 16th showcased 150 posters, each explaining one Sanskrit shloka from ancient Indian scientific literature.
"The shlokas (verses) by ancient scientists and mathematicians like Bhaskaracharya, Baudhayana, Apastambha and Bhaskaracharya's daughter Leelavati have been showcased in the exhibition." said Aashish Manjaramkar, exhibition coordinator. "Our aim is to tell that zero is not the only contribution that Indians have made to science and math." he added.
Manjramkar commented, "Very few of us know that the speed of light was known to Indians in the Vedic period. A shloka says that the speed of light is 2202 yojana per half nimesha. A yojana is a unit of distance which is equal to 9.06 miles and half a nimesha is one tenth of a second. The figure is very close to the modern measurement of speed of light."
"One of the shlokas in the exhibition describes a conversation between Bhaskaracharya and his daughter Leelavati, who also was a mathematician. The conversation beautifully explains the spherical shape of the earth and the gravitational force that keeps planets revolving in space," said Manjaramkar.
Samskrita Bharati, which works in all major cities of India and also in 16 US cities, was established in 1983 and works for the promotion of Sanskrit as a spoken language. The organization regularly stages such events across India.
Indians Knew the Laws of Gravity 500 Years Before Newton
Indians Knew the Laws of Gravity 500 Years Before Newton, Video - Firstpost
Keeps getting better & better..
Although Mr Nair a South Indian didn't know Harappa etx were lie in Pak .. Punjab .. The same Pubjabis who pretty much hated "hindustanis" ... Where hinduism couldn't take much root..
Read when free..........Sorry, but that is not how science works. It does not matter who said it - whether the statement can be supported by facts and logic is what matters. Even if Einstein said it, he would be wrong. That's the difference between science and other branches of human endeavour - science is objective. The scientific method itself was invented to make the process of enquiry objective. That is why things like peer review etc are so important. Here is a video of the legendary Pofessor Feynman making this point, calling it the "key to science" (from 40 sec onward):
Knowledge of stone cutting or geometry is possible. Nobody is denying that. But the theory of gravitation was impossible to be formulated before anybody had even propounded the concept of "force". Nobody is saying that the ancients knew nothing - of course they knew a lot of geometry, architecture, masonry etc. But science is cumulative - you don't discover something big in science before knowing the small things. People who did not know electricity and magnetism, and could not build a dynamo or generator, could not understand quantum physics.
DRAY said:Brahmagupta, the ancient Indian astronomer and mathematician, held the view that the earth was spherical and that it attracts things. Al Hamdānī and Al Biruni quote Brahmagupta saying "Disregarding this, we say that the earth on all its sides is the same; all people on the earth stand upright, and all heavy things fall down to the earth by a law of nature, for it is the nature of the earth to attract and to keep things, as it is the nature of water to flow, that of fire to burn, and that of the wind to set in motion. If a thing wants to go deeper down than the earth, let it try. The earth is the only low thing, and seeds always return to it, in whatever direction you may throw them away, and never rise upwards from the earth."
History of gravitational theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ancient Indian mathematician Bhaskaracharya, in his book Siddhanta Shriromani, defined laws of gravity in the 12th century, 500 years before Newton defined them for us. The speed of light has been known to Indians since the Vedic period, centuries before it was calculated by the Western world.
Maitree, a group of professionals from Tata Consultancy Services and Bengaluru-based NGO Samskrita Bharati, have come together with a unique exhibition, Pride of India, to spread awareness about India's rich scientific heritage.
The exhibition in Pune on Friday April 16th showcased 150 posters, each explaining one Sanskrit shloka from ancient Indian scientific literature.
"The shlokas (verses) by ancient scientists and mathematicians like Bhaskaracharya, Baudhayana, Apastambha and Bhaskaracharya's daughter Leelavati have been showcased in the exhibition." said Aashish Manjaramkar, exhibition coordinator. "Our aim is to tell that zero is not the only contribution that Indians have made to science and math." he added.
Manjramkar commented, "Very few of us know that the speed of light was known to Indians in the Vedic period. A shloka says that the speed of light is 2202 yojana per half nimesha. A yojana is a unit of distance which is equal to 9.06 miles and half a nimesha is one tenth of a second. The figure is very close to the modern measurement of speed of light."
"One of the shlokas in the exhibition describes a conversation between Bhaskaracharya and his daughter Leelavati, who also was a mathematician. The conversation beautifully explains the spherical shape of the earth and the gravitational force that keeps planets revolving in space," said Manjaramkar.
Samskrita Bharati, which works in all major cities of India and also in 16 US cities, was established in 1983 and works for the promotion of Sanskrit as a spoken language. The organization regularly stages such events across India.
Indians Knew the Laws of Gravity 500 Years Before Newton
Indians Knew the Laws of Gravity 500 Years Before Newton, Video - Firstpost
Read when free..........
Sweetie...Auntie please burn all your engineering degrees !
I agree with our Pakistani and yet-to-arrive Chinese mockers - this is getting ridiculous.
Impossible, because the concept of "force" itself was invented by Newton. Before that, nobody thought or described anything in terms of forces. That doesn't mean that nobody could describe gravitation - just that nobody would describe it in terms of "force", and therefore that "F" in the equation would have been meaningless to them.
Don't need to, I have read most of his works long back. What he is describing there is WRONG. I wouldn't blame him forr that, because he was working with very little data. What he has written there is what everybody in the ancient times believed - that everything falls towards the earth, because the earth attracts everything. Aristotle thought that the tendency of earth is to move things down, the tendency of fire is to raise things up, and something similar for wind and water. You don't need a Brahmagupta or an Aristotle to tell you that things fall down - even our prehuman ancestors knew that.Read when free..........
It wasn't Bhaskaracharya. It was Brahmagupta. Read my post above in response to levina about that.That is incorrect. Bhaskaracharya has written about gravitational "force" and how it holds the other planets in place. So its clear Newton did not invent it.
It wasn't Bhaskaracharya. It was Brahmagupta. Read my post above in response to levina about that.
Yes, he said that the earth attracts things - everybody in the ancient world believed that, because that's what they saw in their everyday experience. What Newton did was to realize that that attraction was in fact universal, between any two bodies, and not just the earth. That was the big breakthrough. Of course, he also quantified the attraction by a very ingenious set of experiments.