History of S&T
History of S&T
History of S&T
Antecedents
that
shape
the
course
of
Science
and
Technology
HISTORICAL
ASPECTS
OF
S&T
with
Development
of
Humans
• Early
Men
–
nomad
to
cavemen
Genus Specie Brain volume
Brain
volume
propor5onal
to
knowledge
except
for
Neanderthals
which
are
believed
to
be
giants
(Meat
eaters)
with
large
organs
as
well
as
brain.
• SeCler
(hunter-‐gatherer)
Paleolithic(Old
Stone
Age)Greek
word
“palaios”
means
ancient/old
and
“lithos”
means
stone/
rock
2.5
million
years
ago
–
8000
B.C.
• Hunter-‐Gatherers-‐
They
hunted
animals,
caught
fish,
ate
insects,
and
gathered
nuts,
berries,
fruits,
grains
and
plants.
• Nomads-‐
people
with
no
permanent
place
to
live,
draining
resources
of
each
place
they
occupy.
• Women-‐
gathered
berries,
grains
and
watched
over
children,
• Men
-‐hun5ng
animals,
protec5on.
hCps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LhNlbC3Vt7Y
The
Ice
Ages
100,000
B.C.-‐
8000
B.C.
(During
the
Paleolithic
Era)
The
social
pyramid
is
the
reason
why
knowledge
of
technology
is
limited
to
only
few
from
the
higher
class
and
is
believed
to
be
mythical
(
given
by
gods)
rather
than
natural.
Pyramids
• These
are
the
Giza
pyramids,
the
most
famous.
• Pyramids
were
tombs
for
the
kings.
• These
were
built
in
3500
B.C.E.
•
Represent
kingdom/
wealth
and
belongings
•
Align
with
the
Orions
belt
constella5on.
OBELISK
=
used
as
marking/
monuments
and
as
worship
to
egyp5ans
sun
god
Pharaohs
are
believed
to
be
descendants
of
gods
from
the
stars/
sun
with
divine
powers
and
mythical
knowledge.
Abu Simbel was built by Ramseses II
Mummies/
MummificaTon
• Egyp5ans
who
could
afford
to
do
so
would
have
themselves
mummified.
• They
believed
in
a
beCer
alerlife
if
their
body
was
preserved
• Took
out
all
organs
except
the
heart
and
put
in
canopic
jars
•
The
heart
for
them
is
the
intelligence
and
emo5on
of
a
person
• Took
out
the
brain
through
the
nose
•
Use
immerse
in
natron
(
salty
drying
agent)
to
preserve
the
body
for
40
to
50
days
before
sealed
on
the
tomb.
Egyp5an
hieroglyphics
Indus
Valley
civiliza5on
Early
Civiliza5ons
in
the
Indus
River
Valley
The
named
derives
from
one
of
the
two
discovered
ci5es
-‐
Harappa
and
Mohenjo
Daro
("Mound
of
the
Dead“)
Early
settlements
date to 7000 BC
Major
CiTes
Harappa
and
Mohenjo-‐daro
• surrounded
by
smaller
ci5es,
towns,
and
villages
one
situated
in
the
north
one
situated
in
the
south
68
Diagram
of
a
chariot
from
the
site
of
Hui-‐hsien
(Honan
province)
(5th
century
B.C.)
[Gernet
1982,
p.
68]
69
Cast-‐iron
hoes,
ploughshare,
sickles,
axe,
and
knife
from
the
fourth-‐third
centuries
B.C.
[Gernet
1982,
p.71]
70
Calipers
made
in
9
A.D.
They
are
graduated
in
ts’un
(tenth
part
of
a
ch’ih)
and
in
fen
(tenths
of
a
ts’un).
The
face
shown
on
the
right
side
bears
the
inscrip5on”
‘Made
on
kuei-‐yu
day,
on
the
new
moon
of
the
filh
month,
first
year
of
Shih-‐chien-‐
kuo’
[Gernet
1982,
p.110]
71
CalculaTon
of
Pi
π=355/113
As
wriCen
in
Sui
Shu
(History
of
the
Sui
Dynasty)
by
Zu
Qonzi
(430-‐510)
[ACTS
1983]
72
Diamond
Sutra:
The
earliest
printed
literature
in
existence.
Bearing
the
date
of
the
9th
year
of
the
reign
of
Xian
tong
(968),
Tang
Dynasty
[ACTS
1983]
73
• First
men5on
of
gunpowder
(coal,
saltpeter
and
sulfur)
in
China
in
1044
(in
1287,
by
Roger
bacon
in
Europe).
• Daoist
alchemists
discovered
it.
• Ini5ally
used
for
‘flying
fire’.
Later
exploited
the
burst
capacity.
Propellant
in
a
guided
tube.
(Rocket)
• Iron
or
bronze
tubes
around
1280.
74
The
water-‐driven
astronomical
clock
tower
As
shown
in
the
book,
Xin
Yi
Xiang
Fu
Yao
(New
Design
for
an
Armillary
Clock),
wriCen
by
Su
Song
(1020-‐1101)
[ACTS
1983]
75
Printed
text
of
the
Sung
period
The
first
page
of
the
first
chapter
of
the
geography
of
China
and
foreign
countries
completed
in
979
A.D.
[Gernet
1982,
p.334]
76
Astronomical
chart
of
the
south-‐polar
projec5on
of
the
sky
by
Hsin-‐I-‐hsiang
Fa-‐yao
(1092,
Western
Hsia)
[Gernet
1982,
p.340]
77
Sung
and
Yitan
Mathema5cs:
Nota5on
for
equa5on
2x3+15x2+166x1-‐4460=0
as
given
by
Li
Yeh
(or
Li
Chih)
1192-‐1279
[Gernet
1982,
p.381]
78
Pascal’s
triangle
(around
1640)
as
given
in
An
algebraic
treaTse
by
Chu
Shi-‐chieh
(1303)
[Gernet
1982,
p.381]
79
Ming
Technology
(1368-‐1582)
A
Mill
(Grinder)
Illustra5on
taken
from
the
T’ien-‐kung
k’ai-‐wu
(1637)
[Gernet
1982,
p.443]
80
Ming
Technology
(1368-‐1582)
A
machine
for
reeling
off
thread,
Picture
taken
from
the
T’ien-‐kung
k’ai-‐wu
(1637)
[Gernet
1982,
p.443]
81
Copper
Age
“Chalkos”
•
weapons
were
made
of
stone
–
before
the
great
flood
of
4,000
BC
•
weapons
were
made
of
copper
–
aler
the
great
flood
of
4,000
BC
•
Copper
was
1st
made
from
its
ore
in
the
Persian
Gulf
at
the
Tigris
and
Euphrates
in
a
land
called
Ur
(Sumerian
Civ)
•
Copper
being
cast
into
shapes
occurred
~3500
BC
in
Egypt
and
India
•
can
be
extracted
from
malachite
ore
by
smel5ng
Bronze
Age
•
1,200
BC,
Bronze
was
produced
from
mixing
Copper
(Cu)
with
Tin
(Sn)
• bronze
is
much
stronger
and
harder
than
Cu.
• Annealing
=
sudden
hea5ng
and
slow
cooling
make
strong
Bronze
• Bronze
is
used
in
axes
and
swords.
• India,
and
its
surrounding
countries,
s5ll
produce
the
finest
quality
of
Bronze.
Copper dagger, central Bulgaria, Malachite
4000-3500 BC Cu 2(CO 3)(OH)2
Arsenopyrite
(FeAsS)
Chalcopyrite
(CuFeS2)
Bronze Age
Lead
• Lead,
being
malleable,
was
used
for
water
ducts
and
ea5ng
utensils
and
plates
afforded
by
the
rich.
•
Lead
poisoning
creates
mental
confusion
and
the
inability
to
make
ra5onal
decisions.
Stop
the
use
for
ea5ng
utensils.
Brass
• Brass
was
produced
from
Copper
and
Zinc
oxide.
•
Brass
with
21-‐28%
Zn
was
used
for
coins
to
be
rust
proof.
• Rome
conquered
Spain
just
to
get
control
of
its
Cu
and
Zn
mines.
Iron
Age
• Iron
replace
Bronze
by
durability.
• Iron
have
mel5ng
point
of
1500
celsius
•
Tempering
–
sudden
cooling
(quenching)
aler
forging
• Steeling
–
adding
1-‐1.7%
carbon
to
iron
•
CasTng
–
form
of
molding
steel.
• The
Romans
defeated
the
Gauls
using
stronger
iron
weapons
• The
Arabs
use
furnaces,
referred
to
as
the
Philosophers
egg
or
Vase
of
Hermes,
that
produced
higher
temperatures
and
thus
purer
metals.
• Evolved
into
Blast
Furnaces,
which
from
iron
ore
and
charred
wood
(charcoal)
eventually
produced
wrought
iron
(forged
at
high
temperatures)
and
cast
iron
(poured
into
a
mold).
Steel
Age
•
Iron
age
turned
into
the
Steel
Age
.
• Steel
is
an
Iron-‐Carbon
alloy.
•
The
first
“Steel”
is
considered
to
be
Wootz
steel
made
in
India
~500
BC.
•
Damascus
steel
involved
fusing
together
layers
of
steel
and
iron
by
hammering
to
form
a
type
of
composite,
which
was
stronger
than
other
steels
of
its
5me.
(Sword
and
other
weapons)
•
Damascus
method
was
refined
by
the
Japanese
to
a
much
higher
level
for
their
samurai
swords.
• Steel
enabled
the
Industrial
Revolu5on
in
Western
Europe.
Steel
Age
conTnued.
•
Henry
Bessemer
in
1854
applied
for
a
patent
for
“Improvements
in
the
Manufacture
of
Iron
and
Steel”,carbon
(0.1%
to
1.5%
C)
•
Maintaining
balance
of
hardness
and
malleability
adding
small
amount
of
spiegelsen
(a
type
of
pig
iron
containing
15-‐30
%
Manganese
and
4-‐7%
C)
where
Mn
helped
the
steel
become
malleable.
•
Bessemer
process
reduced
the
price
of
steel
• Steel
is
widely
used
in
large
quan55es
(rails
and
girders,
plates
for
baCleships)
•
In
1885,
the
Bri5sh
government
accepted
Bessemer
steel
for
its
guns
and
naval
shipbuilding.
Metal
Age
to
Industrial
RevoluTon
Industrial
RevoluTon=
1760-‐1840
the
use
of
coal
and
fuel
to
propel
machines.
•
Engines
are
produced
(Steam,
Petrol,
Diesel)
• Mass
produc5on
of
products
with
help
of
machines.
•
Air
Pollu5on
in
wide
scale
because
of
combus5on
of
coal
and
fuels
almost
everywhere.
• Scien5st
believe
that
this
period
is
the
big
factor
to
global
warming
which
today
having
climate
change
as
its
consequence.
• Cellulose
and
Rubber
as
first
polymer
material.
• Began
when
polymeriza5on
of
phenol
and
formaldehyde
into
a
resin
“bakelite”
(1907)
• Solu5on
to
rust
and
corrosion
of
metals,
and
mel5ng
of
rubber
materials.
• Product
is
lightweight
and
durable.
•
The
only
issue
is
heat
resistant
w/c
is
later
20th
century
was
solved.
• Gave
way
to
use
heat
resistant
plas5cs
even
in
engines.
• Further
developed
to
fiber
glass
and
carbon
fibers.
THE
CURRENT
DECADE:
THE
SEMICONDUCTORS/
INFORMATION
AGE
Other
technological
advancements
• Stone
Age:
2.5
million
years
ago
• Farming
Age/Agricultural
Revolu5on:
1000
years
ago
• PoCery
Age:
4000
B.C.
• Metal
Age:
3000
B.C.
• Industrial
Revolu5on:
1760-‐1990
• Plas5cs
Age:
late
20th
Century
to
current
5me
• Semiconductor
Age:
late
20th
to
21st
Century
to
current
5me
• Informa5on
Age/Computer
Age:
21st
Century
to
present
Resources:
hCps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polymer_science#History_of_polymer_science
hCps://www.slideshare.net/mleonoras/historical-‐development-‐of-‐science-‐and-‐technology
hCps://www.slideshare.net/dickgevans/chinese-‐science-‐and-‐technology-‐achievements
hCps://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/History_of_science_and_technology_in_China
hCps://www.slideshare.net/guest85eb01/egypt-‐tools-‐technology-‐and-‐science
hCps://www.ancient.eu/ar5cle/967/ancient-‐egyp5an-‐science-‐-‐technology/
hCp://www.iitgn.ac.in/assets/pdfs/ifdls/Scien5fic-‐and-‐Technological-‐Contrib-‐Indus.pdf
hCps://www.sjsu.edu/faculty/watkins/sumer.htm
hCps://books.google.com.ph/books/about/A_History_of_Chinese_Civiliza5on.html?id=jqb7L-‐
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