Heavenly Numbers
Astronomy and Authority in Early Imperial China
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 16 November 2017
- ISBN 9780198733119
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages442 pages
- Size 240x164x31 mm
- Weight 888 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
This is a book about the history of astronomy during the foundation of imperial China. As the state believed that signs in the heavens contained vital messages about the way government should be conducted, China maintained a large staff of specialists whose job was to observe, record, and attempt to predict the movements of the heavenly bodies.
MoreLong description:
This book is a history of the development of mathematical astronomy in China, from the late third century BCE, to the early 3rd century CE - a period often referred to as 'early imperial China'. It narrates the changes in ways of understanding the movements of the heavens and the heavenly bodies that took place during those four and a half centuries, and tells the stories of the institutions and individuals involved in those changes. It gives clear explanations of technical practice in observation, instrumentation, and calculation, and the steady accumulation of data over many years - but it centres on the activity of the individual human beings who observed the heavens, recorded what they saw, and made calculations to analyse and eventually make predictions about the motions of the celestial bodies.
It is these individuals, their observations, their calculations, and the words they left to us that provide the narrative thread that runs through this work.
Throughout the book, the author gives clear translations of original material that allow the reader direct access to what the people in this book said about themselves and what they tried to do.
This book is a welcome contribution to the literature on astronomy in early imperial China. Well written for the nonspecialist of history of Chinese science, the book nevertheless provides mathematical details, often in boxes, that set apart Cullen's lively historical narrative from technical aspects of mathematical astronomy in early imperial China.
Table of Contents:
The astronomical empire
Li in everyday life: dates and calendars
The Emperor's Grand Inception, and the defeat of the Grand Clerk
The Triple Concordance system & Liu Xin's 'Grand Unified Theory'
The measures and forms of heaven
Restoration and re-creation in the Eastern Han
The age of debates
Liu Hong and the conquest of the moon
Epilogue