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Babylonian Mathematical Astronomy: Planetary Tables [Kõva köide]

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This book presents new editions and investigations of 114 Babylonian planetary tables: cuneiform tablets inscribed with computed dates, positions, and other data for the planets Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. The tablets originate from Babylon and Uruk, two main centers of Babylonian astronomy. They were written in the period 400-50 BCE. Along with lunar tables and procedure texts they belong to a corpus of texts known as Babylonian mathematical astronomy. They contain the earliest known form of mathematical astronomy in the ancient world. All computations are based on the uniform zodiac with twelve signs of thirty degrees and the 60-based number system known as sexagesimal place value notation.



The book begins with a general overview of the planetary tables, covering the history of research, a comparative analysis of various archaeological, archival, material, and notational aspects, a discussion of regional variations, scribal errors, the production process of the tables, mathematical and astronomical aspects, an overview of the tables arranged by planet and algorithm, and a study of dependencies and offsets between the tables. This is followed by editions of the tablets, including previously unpublished ones. Each commentary includes a full account of the material, archival, paleographic, orthographic, and other features of the tablet, a summary of previous research, and reconstructions of the underlying algorithms, in some cases with significant new insights about the Babylonian methods.
1 Planetary tables.- 2 Editions.- A Extended table for Jupiter system
B.- B Photographs of the cuneiform tablets. Bibliography.- Index of tablets
and fragments.- Concordance with ACT and other editions.
Mathieu Ossendrijver is a historian of ancient science based at the Institute for the History of Knowledge in the Ancient World at Freie Universität Berlin. He is trained as an Assyriologist (PhD Univ. of Tübingen) and astrophysicist (PhD Univ. of Utrecht). His research focuses on Babylonian astral science (astronomy, astrology) and mathematics, institutional and other contextual aspects of Babylonian scholarship, and cross-cultural transformations of knowledge between Babylonia, Egypt and the Greco-Roman world.