Ancient Astronomy and Celestial Divination (Dibner Institute Studies in the History of Science and Technology)

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Description

In the ancient world, the collection and study of celestial phenomena and the intepretation of their prophetic significance, especially as applied to kings and nations, were closely related sciences carried out by the same scholars. Both ancient sources and brand new research agree that astronomy and celestial divination arose in Babylon. Only in the late nineteenth century, alternatively, did scholars start to identify and decipher the original Babylonian sources, and the process of understanding those sources has been long and difficult.This volume presents up to date work on Babylonian celestial divination and on the Greek inheritors of the Babylonian tradition. Both philological and mathematical work are included. The essays shed new light on the entire known textual sources, including the omen series Enuma Anu Enlil, which accommodates omens from way back to the early second or even third millennium, and the earliest personal horoscopes, from about 400 B.C., in addition to the Astronomical Diaries, ephemerides, and other observational and mathematical texts. One essay concerns astronomical papyri that confirm the extensive transmission of Babylonian methods into Greek; a study of Ptolemy’s lunar theory suggests that Ptolemy relied more on his own observations than prior to now thought; and an analysis of Theon’s statement on Ptolemy’s Handy Tables shows that Theon explicated their meaning both conscientiously and competently.Contributors : Asger Aaboe, Alan C. Bowen, Lis Brack-Bernsen, John P. Britton, Bernard R. Goldstein, Gerd Graßhoff, Hermann Hunger, Alexander Jones, Erica Reiner, F. Rochberg, N. M. Swerdlow, Anne Tihon, C. B. F. Walker.

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