
Book Details
The Calendar: The 5000 Year Struggle To Align The Clock and the Heavens, and What Happened To The Missing Ten Days
Ewing Duncan, David
Summary
Measuring the daily and yearly cycle of the cosmos has never been entirely straightforward.
Measuring the daily and yearly cycle of the cosmos has never been entirely straightforward. The year 2000 is alternatively the year 2544 (Buddhist), 6236 (Ancient Egyptian), 5761 (Jewish) or simply the Year of the Dragon (Chinese). The story of the creation of the Western calendar, which is related in this book, is a story of emperors and popes, mathematicians and monks, and the growth of scientific calculation to the point where, bizarrely, our measurement of time by atomic pulses is now more accurate than time itself: the Earth is an elderly lady and slightly eccentric - she loses half a second a century. Days have been invented (Julius Caesar needed an extra 80 days in 46BC), lost (Pope Gregory XIII ditched ten days in 1582) and moved (because Julius Caesar had 31 in his month, Augustus determined that he should have the same, so he pinched one from February).
Perfect for fans of Philosophy, Politics, Philosophy & Social Sciences, Experiments, Instruments & Measurements, Popular Maths, History of Science Books.
Highlights
- Easy to enjoy: 384 pages · Hardcover
- By Ewing Duncan, David
Details
- ISBN: 9781857027211
- Author: Ewing Duncan, David
- Format: Hardcover
- Pages: 384
- Language: English
- Publication date: 15 August 1998
- Condition: Used – Very Good
- Rating: 5.00 (1 reviews)
About the authors
Ewing Duncan, David and David Ewing Duncan · Publisher: Brecourt Academic
Reviews
Average rating: 5.00/5 · 1 review
The story of the creation of the Western calendar, which is related in this book, is a story of emperors and popes, mathematicians and monks, and the growth of scientific calculation to the point where, bizarrely, our measurement of time by ...

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