In the Homeric Epics, important references to specific
autonomous systems and mechanisms of very advanced technology, such
as automata and artificial intelligence, as well as to almost
modern methods of design and production are included. Even if those
features of Homeric science were just poetic concepts (which on
many occasions does not explain the astonishing details of design
and manufacture, like the ones included in the present volume),
they seem to prove that these achievements were well within human
capability. In addition, the substantial development of machine
theory during the early post-Homeric age shows that the Homeric
descriptions were a kind of prophetic conception of these machines,
and scientific research must be a quest for the fundamental
principles of knowledge available during the Late Bronze Age and
the dawn of the Iron Age.
Such investigations must of necessity be strongly
interdisciplinary and also proceed continuously in time, since, as
science progresses, new elements of knowledge are discovered in the
Homeric Epics, amenable to scientific analysis.
This book brings together papers presented at the international
symposium Science and Technology in Homeric Epics, which took place
at Ancient Olympia in 2006. It includes a total of 41
contributions, mostly original research papers, covering diverse
fields of science and technology, in the modern sense of these
words.
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