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Eclipses have long been seen as important celestial phenomena,
whether as omens affecting the future of kingdoms, or as useful
astronomical events to help in deriving essential parameters for
theories of the motion of the moon and sun. This is the first book
to collect together all presently known records of timed eclipse
observations and predictions from antiquity to the time of the
invention of the telescope. In addition to cataloguing and
assessing the accuracy of the various records, which come from
regions as diverse as Ancient Mesopotamia, China, and Europe, the
sources in which they are found are described in detail. Related
questions such as what type of clocks were used to time the
observations, how the eclipse predictions were made, and how these
prediction schemes were derived from the available observations are
also considered. The results of this investigation have important
consequences for how we understand the relationship between
observation and theory in early science and the role of astronomy
in early cultures, and will be of interest to historians of
science, astronomers, and ancient and medieval historians.
Eclipses have long been seen as important celestial phenomena,
whether as omens affecting the future of kingdoms, or as useful
astronomical events to help in deriving essential parameters for
theories of the motion of the moon and sun. This is the first book
to collect together all presently known records of timed eclipse
observations and predictions from antiquity to the time of the
invention of the telescope. In addition to cataloguing and
assessing the accuracy of the various records, which come from
regions as diverse as Ancient Mesopotamia, China, and Europe, the
sources in which they are found are described in detail. Related
questions such as what type of clocks were used to time the
observations, how the eclipse predictions were made, and how these
prediction schemes were derived from the available observations are
also considered. The results of this investigation have important
consequences for how we understand the relationship between
observation and theory in early science and the role of astronomy
in early cultures, and will be of interest to historians of
science, astronomers, and ancient and medieval historians.
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