science: Scientific Progress in China and India
Scientific Progress in China and India
In the East some accomplishments in science had been made paralleling the early developments in the West. However, although many societies were quick to adopt the fruits of technology, they tended to discourage the development of science on the classical model, which is based on the unbiased interaction of theory and experiment.
In China scientific theories were largely subservient to the main schools of philosophy and theology, particularly those of Confucianism, Taoism, and, later, Buddhism. The agricultural society, which endured until modern times, encouraged the separation of theory and experiment, the former falling to the educated, scholar classes and the latter to the lower, craftsman classes. Astronomy and mathematics were used for practical purposes, such as calendar determination, and there was little interest in theory in these fields. Theories of metallurgy, alchemy, and medicine were all tied to the prevailing religious and philosophical doctrines. Nevertheless, many important practical discoveries were made. Paper was invented in the 2d cent.
In India an alphabetic script was developed, as well as a numeral system based on place value and including a zero; this latter Hindu contribution was adopted by the Arabs and combined with their numeral system. Important Hindu scientists flourished in the 6th and 7th cent.
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- Promise and Problems of Modern Science
- Modern Science and Technology
- Astronomy beyond the Visual Spectrum
- The Abstraction of Mathematics
- Biology Becomes an Interdisciplinary Science
- Advances in Chemistry
- Quantum Theory and the Theory of Relativity
- The Impact of Elementary Particles
- Revolutions in Modern Science
- Science and the Industrial Revolution
- New Ideas in Biology
- Birth of Modern Geology
- Advances in Astronomy
- Innovations in Chemistry
- The Evolution of Mathematics and Physics
- The Age of Classical Science
- The Impact of Sir Isaac Newton
- Improved Communication of Scientific Knowledge
- The Rejection of Traditional Paradigms
- The Scientific Revolution
- The Craft Tradition and Early Empiricism in Europe
- Muslim Preservation of Learning
- Scientific Progress in China and India
- Influence of the Alexandrian Schools
- Early Greek Contributions to Science
- Practical Applications in the Ancient Middle East
- The Beginnings of Science
- Branches of Specialization
- Role of Measurement and Experiment
- The Scientific Method
- Bibliography
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