WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
The Copernicus of Antiquity (Aristarchus of Samos) cover

The Copernicus of Antiquity (Aristarchus of Samos)

Chapter 22: CHRONOLOGY.
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

A concise study surveys the evolution of Greek astronomy from observational and mythic beginnings through the development of geometric methods that made scientific modeling possible, culminating in Aristarchus of Samos’s heliocentric proposal. It outlines contributions of earlier thinkers who refined observational practice and theory, explains the mathematical approaches used to estimate the apparent sizes and distances of sun and moon, and examines arguments about the year and cyclical time. The volume situates these ideas within contemporary advances in Greek geometry, notes subsequent corrections to Aristarchus’s numerical results, and supplies bibliography and chronological material for further research.

CHRONOLOGY.

(Approximate where precise dates are not known.)

B.C.
624–547 Thales.
610–546 Anaximander.
585–526 Anaximenes.
572–497 Pythagoras.
born 516 or 514
(possibly 540).
Parmenides.
500–428 Anaxagoras.
494–434 Empedocles.
5th century { Œnopides of Chios.
{ Philolaus.
427–347 Plato.
408–355 Eudoxus.
388–315 Heraclides of Pontus.
384–322 Aristotle.
370–300 Callippus.
310–230 Aristarchus of Samos.
287–212 Archimedes.
284–203 Eratosthenes.
265–190 Apollonius of Perga.
3rd century Aratus.
fl. 150 Hipparchus.
135–51 Posidonius.
A.D.
50–125 Plutarch.
100–178 Ptolemy.

ABERDEEN: THE UNIVERSITY PRESS