Eugene F. Milone, "Our Ancient Heritage: A Very Brief (!) History Of
Astronomy", Main Tent, Saturday 11:00 a.m.; "From Ancient Brains To Modern
Branes: Ancient To Modern Cosmology", Main Tent, Saturday 2:30 p.m.,
Professor, Dept. of Physics & Astronomy, University of Calgary, and Director
Emeritus of the Rothney Astrophysical Observatory, has developed and taught
the Archaeoastronomy course. This includes the development of the study and
use of astronomy from prehistoric times to the pre-telescopic era of Tycho
Brahe. It includes discussions of the influences of astronomy on the
development of human thought, culture, and religion. Dr. Milone is co-author
of "Exploring Ancient Skies."
The history of astronomy is a topic nearly as ancient as mankind itself,
arguably stretching from the Palaeolithic, some 20,000 years or more before
the present. As scholarship progresses, our knowledge of this field burgeons.
In this presentation, on Friday, Gene will briefly visit a few of the ancient
sites and claims for practices carried out by the "ancients," that could
qualify as "astronomy."
The places visited will include Megalithic sites from around the world,
particularly those in the British Isles, European continent, near East, and
in the new world (i.e. the "medicine wheels," that abound in the Canadian
prairies). The special evidence of written material and monuments found in
the Mediterranean and in Mesoamerica, make these regions especially rich
sources of knowledge of ancient astronomical ideas and practices. After
reprieving the astronomical discoveries of Mediterranean, Asian, and New
World cultures, we can witness the "descent of the gods," on the
monuments of Nemrud Dagh, in the ancient kingdom of Commagene.
This presentation sets the stage for Eugene's second presentation on
Saturday at 2:30 p.m. "From Ancient Brains To Modern Branes: Ancient To
Modern Cosmology."
In most cultures around the world, for much of the history of humanity, life
has been viewed and lived according to the rhythms of the Sun, Moon, planets,
and sky. The ways in which these rhythms were incorporated into cultures
differed from place to place. In China, the recognition of natural cycles and
the search for appropriate correspondences between celestial and dynastic
occurrences were likely drivers for cosmic frameworks.
In the early Christian era, the passage of the soul at both birth and death
had a cosmic dimension; in this context, Origen considered the multiplicity
of worlds and the need for Creation, Fall, and Redemption on all of them. In
the 18th Century, rationalism and its manifestation in the universe dominated
western thought, culminating in Newton's clockwork universe. Empirical
approaches to cosmological questions, well illustrated by Olber's paradox,
were adopted in subsequent centuries, but by the 20th century it was clear
that empirical laws are incomplete manifestations. In the present, a unified
cosmology, this time incorporating insights of particle physics and
astronomical observations, again appears to be imminent.