Science in Ancient China

by George Beshore

Science of the Past

On This Page

Description

Surveys the achievements of the ancient Chinese in science, medicine, astronomy, and cosmology, and describes such innovations as rockets, wells, the compass, water wheels, and movable type.

Tags

Recommendations

Member Reviews

3 reviews
This book has many great pictures and drawings in it, even if they are in black and white. That is why I gave it a three to five rating, while adults might appreciate black and white photographs. Most children see that color is more important and it helps them see the pictures at a deeper level. I would have gotten the undated color version of this book if it was available. I like how the font is large and how each chapter has an exciting topic. I especially enjoy the chapter on gunpowder.
This is a very informative book about the amazing discoveries from China. Although there are very few pictures, the pictures do a decent job of supporting the text. The author does a wonderful job with vocabulary in the book, allowing younger children to understand what he is saying by constantly defining words. Words that are in bold print are defined in the glossary in the back of the book. I do question the accuracy of the book, although nothing seems to be made up, no sources are referenced. There is no place reference page either, only a "For Further Reading" page in the back of the book.
½
This book is a specialized text from a series surveying the scientific history of ancient cultures. China is a particularly interesting one because they were one, so far ahead of the rest of the world, and two, isolated from western culture. China is responsible for important discoveries such as gunpowder, the compass, and the first printing among many others. This book is very informative with more advanced size print and minimal to moderate photography and illustration giving it the feel of an adult text. The book is still more concise in length and depth as well as more basic in tone in order to appeal and be compatible with probably upper middle school to lower high school students. The text is organized into chapters defined by show more categories of scientific study and influence on Chinese culture or the rest of the world. The book includes an index and a list of references. The authors note accredits the writer as having written on the topic for scientific journals and the government for more than 25 years but is now a freelance writer. I would use this book in my classroom when certain chinese advancements related to the topic being covered so that students would gain some perspective as to the origins of these technologies. show less
½

Members

Recently Added By

Lists

Author Information

Picture of author.
3 Works 202 Members

Series

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Science in Ancient China
Original publication date
1998
Important places
China
First words
When an Italian explorer named Marco Polo visited China in 1275, he was amazed by what he found.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Because China clung to old ideas long after they were outdated, it failed to benefit from the incredible scientific and technological advances of the Industrial Revolution.
Original language
English

Classifications

Genre
Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
509.51Natural sciences & mathematicsScienceHistory, geographic treatment, biographyAsiaChina and Korea
LCC
Q127 .C5 .B475ScienceScience (General)General
BISAC

Statistics

Members
141
Popularity
232,608
Reviews
3
Rating
½ (3.33)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
4