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First published in 1969. The historical civilization of China is,
with the Indian and European-Semitic, one of the three greatest in
the world, yet only relatively recently has any enquiry been begun
into its achievements in science and technology. Between the first
and fifteenth centuries the Chinese were generally far in advance
of Europe and it was not until the scientific revolution of the
Renaissance that Europe drew ahead. Throughout those fifteen
centuries, and ever since, the West has been profoundly affected by
the discoveries and invention emanating from China and East Asia.
In this series of essays and lectures, Joseph Needham explores the
mystery of China's early lead and Europe's later overtaking.
First published in 1969. Contains some of Joseph Needham's most
significant essays, lectures and broadcasts on the history of
Chinese science, technology and culture. Also included are some
more personal thoughts stimulated by his own travels and
experiences in China, including a number of poems. The book
discusses the valuable social and intellectual influences which
have flowed to Europe from South as well as East Asia, and suggests
that the events of the twentieth century were a natural development
of Chinese history, not a deviation from it.
First published in 1969. Contains some of Joseph Needham's most
significant essays, lectures and broadcasts on the history of
Chinese science, technology and culture. Also included are some
more personal thoughts stimulated by his own travels and
experiences in China, including a number of poems. The book
discusses the valuable social and intellectual influences which
have flowed to Europe from South as well as East Asia, and suggests
that the events of the twentieth century were a natural development
of Chinese history, not a deviation from it.
Using modern knowledge to shed light on ancient techniques, this
text examines two of the earliest therapeutic techniques of Chinese
medicine: acupuncture and moxibustion. Acupuncture is the
implantation of very thin needles into subcutaneous connective
tissue and muscle at a great number of different points on the
body's surface; moxibustion is the burning of Artemisia tinder
(moxa) either directly on the skin or just above it. For 2500 years
the Chinese have used both techniques to relieve pain and to heal a
wide variety of illnesses and malfunctions. Providing a full
historical account of acupuncture and moxibustion in the
theoretical structure of Chinese medicine, Doctors Lu and Needham
combine it with a rationale of the two techniques in the light of
modern scientific knowledge.
First published in 1969. The historical civilization of China is,
with the Indian and European-Semitic, one of the three greatest in
the world, yet only relatively recently has any enquiry been begun
into its achievements in science and technology. Between the first
and fifteenth centuries the Chinese were generally far in advance
of Europe and it was not until the scientific revolution of the
Renaissance that Europe drew ahead. Throughout those fifteen
centuries, and ever since, the West has been profoundly affected by
the discoveries and invention emanating from China and East Asia.
In this series of essays and lectures, Joseph Needham explores the
mystery of China's early lead and Europe's later overtaking.
First published in 1936, this book contains the text of the Terry
Lectures for 1934-5, originally delivered at Yale University.
Needham discusses the nature, deployment, and hierarchical
continuity of biological order, as well as the history of
scientific investigation into animal development through
embryology, genetics and the study of mitosis. The lectures also
take the opportunity to draw implicit conclusions on the nature and
existence of God, or not, based on the 'oneness of inorganic and
organic science'. This book will be of value to anyone with an
interest in the history of science and the conjunction of science
and theology.
Originally published in 1942, this book contains the text of eleven
lectures originally delivered the previous year to commemorate the
300th anniversary of the visit of the great educator Jan Amos
Komensky (Comenius) to Cambridge in 1641. The lectures all come
from a background in education or writing, and each describes the
effect that Comenius has had on their experience of education, the
world, and social order. This book will be of value to anyone with
an interest in Comenius or the history of education.
Originally published in 1938, this book contains the text of ten
lectures arranged by the History of Science Committee at the
University of Cambridge in 1936. Each speaker covered a different
aspect of scientific endeavour, focussing mostly on advances made
in the period between 1895 and 1935 in fields such as parasitology,
radioactivity, astronomy and evolution theory. The lecturers
include such scientific notables as Lord Rutherford, Professor
George Nuttall and Sir William Dampier, chosen for the fact that
they had 'made fundamental contributions to science' in the
previous forty years. This book will be of value to anyone with an
interest in the history of science.
First published in 1959 as the second edition of a 1934 original,
this book describes the Western history of embryology from
prehistoric concepts of foetal growth through Graeco-Roman
antiquity to the close of the eighteenth century. The text is
illustrated with plates and diagrams showing the development of
scientific understanding over time, first through artistic
representations of gestation and later through scientific drawings
and sketches. This book will be of value to anyone with an interest
in the history of medicine.
Dr Joseph Needham's account of the Chinese achievement in science
and technology will stand as one of the great works of our time. It
has been acclaimed by specialists in both East and West and also by
readers with wider and more general interests. The text, based on
research of a high critical quality, is supported by many hundreds
of illustrations and is imbued with a warm appreciation of China.
Volume I is an introductory volume, in which Dr Needham prepares
his readers for the study of a whole human culture. He begins by
examining the structure of the Chinese language; he reviews the
geography of China and the long history of its people, and
discusses the scientific contacts which have occurred throughout
the centuries, between Europe and East Asia.
This unique book ranges across the physical, biological and social
sciences in the development of its primary theme, that there are
nine major 'integrative levels' which can be recognised. The term
integrative levels was first used by Joseph Needham in 1937 and has
two key features. The first is that members of a given integrative
level are unified entities and the second is that a member of one
level is commonly composed of parts which are members of the next
lower level. Thus fundamental particles form Level 1 while Level 9
is that of sovereign states. This theme has been developed by Max
Pettersson in a book which explores the many links between the
physical, biological and social sciences, reaching wide-ranging and
sometimes unexpected conclusions.
A reissue with a foreword and supplement, of a modern classic
published in 1960. The invention of the mechanical clock was one of
the most important turning points in the history of science and
technology. This study revealed six centuries of mechanical
clockwork preceding the first mechanical escapement clocks of the
West of about AD 1300. Detailed and fully illustrated accounts of
elaborate Chinese clocks are accompanied by a discussion of the
social context of the Chinese inventions and an assessment of their
possible transmission to medieval Europe. For this revised edition,
Dr Joseph Needham has contributed a new foreword on recent research
and perceptions. In a supplement John H. Combridge details a modern
reconstruction of Su Sung's timekeeping device, which together with
textual studies modifies our understanding of this important early
technology.
This assembly of lectures, each on a major aspect of the
development of biochemistry, should appeal to anyone with an
interest in the history of science and the nature of living things.
Seven of the eight lectures are by eminent biochemists and describe
the development of their own subject from the inside; the eighth is
a more general one by a professional historian of science. They
contain a good deal of information not readily available elsewhere
and do not require a special knowledge of biochemistry. The
lectures were originally given as a series, over a period of
several years, under the auspices of the department of the History
and Philosophy of Science in the University of Cambridge.
Between the fourteenth and the eighteenth centuries, there was
created under the Yi Dynasty in Korea a remarkable series of
astronomical instruments, star-charts and clocks. The present
volume is the result of close collaboration between four
distinguished historians of Asian science to demonstrate the
context, purpose, nature and specific workings of these early
scientific instruments. Specially commissioned drawings and other
illustrations demonstrate their complexities of design and
operation. A brief introduction is given to the Chinese background
of Korean astronomy and astronomical instrument-making and to the
renaissance of Korean astronomy in the early fifteenth century. In
a detailed examination of the instruments made under the
supervision of King Sejong in the 1430s, there is documentation of
the re-equipping of the Royal Observatory, with identification of
the individual instruments involved. A survey of the succeeding two
centuries gives the background to Song Iyong's instrument,
identified as a demonstrational armillary sphere in the Koryo
University Museum.
This unique book ranges across the physical, biological and social
sciences in the development of its primary theme, that there are
nine major 'integrative levels' which can be recognised. The term
integrative levels was first used by Joseph Needham in 1937 and has
two key features. The first is that members of a given integrative
level are unified entities and the second is that a member of one
level is commonly composed of parts which are members of the next
lower level. Thus fundamental particles form Level 1 while Level 9
is that of sovereign states. This theme has been developed by Max
Pettersson in a book which explores the many links between the
physical, biological and social sciences, reaching wide-ranging and
sometimes unexpected conclusions.
The fifth volume of Dr Needham's immense undertaking, like the
fourth, is subdivided into parts for ease of presentation and
assimilation, each part bound and published separately. The volume
as a whole covers the subjects of alchemy, early chemistry, and
chemical technology (which includes military invention, especially
gunpowder; paper and printing; textiles; mining and metallurgy; the
salt industry; and ceramics).
This second part of the sixth volume of Joseph Needham's great enterprise is the first to be written by a collaborator. Francesca Bray, working closely with Dr Needham, has produced the most comprehensive study of Chinese agriculture to be published in the West. From a huge mass of source material, often confusing and obscure, , and from first-hand study in China, she brings order and illumination to a crucial area of Chinese technological development. Miss Bray sees agriculture as a system of technology holding a balance between nature and society: it represents an interplay between what is allowed by the natural environment and what is hindered by the state of society. She thus begins her book with an account of the ecological background to China's agricultural history and with a thorough survey of the source material. The main body of the book is an account, organised broadly along the lines of the great medieval Chinese treatises, of the technological history of agriculture, with major sections devoted to field systems, implements and techniques (sowing, harvesting, storing) and crop systems (what has grown and where and how crops rotated). The crops studies in detail are those without which no Chinese could survive: cereals, legumes, oil crops, tubers, fibre crops, vegetables and fruit - the crops, in other words, of self sufficiency in times of hardship and of commercial enterprise in times of prosperity. The concluding section contrasts Europe's Agricultural Revolution with agrarian change in North China in the Han and with the 'Green Revolution' in South China in the Sung. Important distinctions between dry-grain and wet-rice agriculture are noted with the consequent variations in the development of Chinese society. In the theoretical analysis which concludes this section we find a vital contribution to the elucidation of the main question posed by Dr Needham's work: why did the Scientific Revolution which transformed the world take place in Europe and not in China?
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Science and Civilisation in China: Volume 5, Chemistry and Chemical Technology, Part 4, Spagyrical Discovery and Invention: Apparatus, Theories and Gifts (Hardcover, Volume 5, Chemistry and Chemical Technology)
Joseph Needham, Ho Ping-Yu, Lu Gwei-Djen, Nathan Sivin
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R8,296
Discovery Miles 82 960
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The fifth volume of Dr Needham’s immense undertaking, like the fourth, is subdivided into parts for ease of assimilation and presentation, each part bound and published separately. The volume as a whole covers the subjects of alchemy, early chemistry, and chemical technology (which includes military invention, especially gunpowder and rockets; paper and printing; textiles; mining and metallurgy; the salt industry; and ceramics).
The latest volume in Joseph Needham's magisterial revelation of China's premodern scientific and technological traditions introduces medicine. Five essays are included by Joseph Needham and Lu Gwei-djen, edited and expanded upon by the editor, Nathan Sivin. The essays offer broad and readable accounts of medicine in culture, including hygiene and preventive medicine, forensic medicine and immunology. Professor Sivin's extensive introduction discusses these essays, placing them in their historical and medical context, and surveys recent medical discoveries from China, Japan, Europe and the United States.
The fifth volume of Dr Needham’s immense undertaking, like the fourth, is subdivided into parts for ease of assimilation and presentation, each part bound and published separately. The volume as a whole covers the subjects of alchemy, early chemistry, and chemical technology (which includes military invention, especially gunpowder and rockets; paper and printing; textiles; mining and metallurgy; the salt industry; and ceramics).
Dr Needham's fourth volume traces the development of physics and
physical technology in ancient and medieval China. It is
conveniently divided into three separate parts, the present volume,
IV:1, dealing with physics as such, IV:2 with mechanical
engineering and IV:3 with civil engineering and nautics.
As Dr Needham’s immense undertaking gathers momentum it has been found necessary to subdivide volumes into parts, each bound and published separately. The first two parts of Volume IV deal respectively with the physical sciences and with the diverse applications of physics in the many branches of mechanical engineering. The third deals with civil and hydraulic engineering and with nautical technology.
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