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Loading... The Calendarby David Ewing Duncan
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. This was a fascinating book about the development of calendars, with a great deal of early medieval history. It revivied my interest in issues such as the equinox, the ecliptic, and the sidereal versus equatorial year. finished about midSept, 1998. I think I read this before, discovered while shelving books in the library years ago. It's a wonderful, readable history of something we all take for granted everyday. Also a good reflection on what time really means to people, given how many different ways we have tried to mark it and remember it. Even today with atomic clocks, we live in a slightly imperfect year, which given my own fuzzy sense of time is just fine. Calendar This was a well written account of the long struggle to create an accurate ongoing calendar of days. This task was much more difficult than I ever imagined. consider: do you use the moon as your base? The Sun? All the obvious ways of calculating the number of days in a year are inaccurate. A great irony is that the latest nuclear clocks are actually too precise because they fail to take into account the declining speed of the earth's rotation. no reviews | add a review
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The book is organized in chronological order and focuses mainly on the centuries leading up to the adoption of the Gregorian calendar (our modern calendar) by the Catholic Church in 1582. Along the way, Duncan describes the ancient calendars of many cultures all over the globe, from India to Egypt to the Mayan empire. During the Middle Ages, Christian churches discouraged scientific inquiry on the theory that it was wrong to question the nature of God's creation. This severely hampered the refinement of the calendar and the advancement of many academic pursuits. By the 16th century, Europe's calendars were 11 days out of sync with the solar year, which meant Easter was being celebrated on the wrong day. An infusion of knowledge from India and the Middle East helped Europeans get back on track. Duncan profiles the many mathematicians, philosophers, and monks who made organizing time their life's work. This book honors the efforts of those scholars and examines the way politics and religion influenced societal perceptions of time through the ages. --Jill Marquis
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:16 -0400)
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Entertaining and enjoyable. (