In describing the origins of modern "science," historians often
fail to appreciate or misread how the ancients understood and used
significant expressions of "natural knowledge." Few read the story
of the cyclops, for example, as useful advice about where to travel
and settle -- and where not to. Others search for "lost Egyptian
wisdom" rather than see how the great pyramids of the Old Kingdom
could be built with the simple tools and cumbersome mathematics of
the time.
Mott T. Greene reexamines the remnants of ancient life using
conceptual tools seldom brought to bear on such material. The
result is a fresh appraisal of what the evidence will yield about
natural phenomena and modes of thought in the distant past. Greene
builds on the work of modern scholars but contributes scientific
precision and tenacity to debates in areas as diverse as
archaeology, early art history, Egyptian fractions, Indo-Iranian
religion, classical Greek verse, and Plato's "problem of
knowledge."
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