| History forum Discussion about history, including anthropology, archeology and related topics. |
07-30-2008
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#1 (permalink)
| | Understanding |
Not Ranked : +0 / -0 0 score Chinese Knowledge Inspired Leonardo da Vinci and Galileo? Yes, says, Menzies. Columbus debunker sets sights on Leonardo da Vinci | U.S. | Reuters Quote:
LONDON (Reuters) - Leonardo da Vinci's drawings of machines are uncannily similar to Chinese originals and were undoubtedly derived from them, a British amateur historian says in a newly-published book.
Gavin Menzies sparked headlines across the globe in 2002 with the claim that Chinese sailors reached America 70 years before Christopher Columbus.
Now he says a Chinese fleet brought encyclopedias of technology undiscovered by the West to Italy in 1434, laying the foundation for the engineering marvels such as flying machines later drawn by Italian polymath Leonardo.
"Everything known to the Chinese by the year 1430 was brought to Venice," said Menzies, a retired Royal Navy submarine commander, in an interview at his north London home....
| To be honest, this seems like rubbish to me. I read Gavin Menzies's earlier work:
and was not impressed by his historical "evidence" or reasoning. I was wondering if anyone has any thoughts to add on this or if you have read the new book:
While I admire the consideration and appreciation of ancient China, her accomplishments, and her culture, I don't think using the "China did it first" card to try to overturn every significant "European" discovery is going to get anywhere in serious historical and archaeological scholarship. Menzies is an admirer of Zheng He, the eunuch admiral who led a famed fleet of Ming exploratory ships to several places across the globe: Zheng He - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
When Ming China stopped these explorations and destroyed the ships, it probably opened the way for the Spanish and Portuguese in the Far East, and history as we know it. It makes one wonder what if... (But I don't mean "what if" according to Menzies's version of events.)
---------------- Logic
The art of thinking and reasoning in strict accordance with the limitations and incapacities of the human misunderstanding.
--Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary
"Similarly, it would be well if people stopped troubling themselves about discovering the 'true meaning of life'--we can never know the answers to great spiritual questions, but it's all right not to understand. We have been born and are living on the earth to face directly the reality of living."
--Masanobu Fukuoka
Last edited by maikeru; 07-30-2008 at 12:53 AM..
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07-30-2008
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#2 (permalink)
| | Astounding Vision Location: South Eastern North Carolina, Cape Fear Region |
Not Ranked : +0 / -0 0 score Re: Chinese Knowledge Inspired Leonardo da Vinci and Galileo? Yes, says, Menzies. Quote:
Originally Posted by maikeru | Is this guy saying a Chinese fleet went to Italy? I think there can be no doubt that if a Chinese fleet had contacted Europe before Europe sent fleets out in the wide world history would have been changed.
---------------- Michael
Life is the poetry of the universe.
Love is the poetry of life.
Nuclear is the only real option! http://www.nuclearspace.com/Liberty_ship_menupg.aspx
Over heard from a three year old, "Daddy why do my toes get sticky when I eat strawberry jam?"
Never wrestle a troll. You both get dirty and the troll likes it
Proud graduate of Wossamotta University!  | |
07-30-2008
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#3 (permalink)
| | Understanding |
Not Ranked : +0 / -0 0 score Re: Chinese Knowledge Inspired Leonardo da Vinci and Galileo? Yes, says, Menzies. In a nutshell, yes. I find Menzies's version of world history (and Sinocentric world history) to be suspect.
---------------- Logic
The art of thinking and reasoning in strict accordance with the limitations and incapacities of the human misunderstanding.
--Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary
"Similarly, it would be well if people stopped troubling themselves about discovering the 'true meaning of life'--we can never know the answers to great spiritual questions, but it's all right not to understand. We have been born and are living on the earth to face directly the reality of living."
--Masanobu Fukuoka | |
07-31-2008
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#4 (permalink)
| | Hypographer |
Not Ranked : +0 / -0 0 score Re: Chinese Knowledge Inspired Leonardo da Vinci and Galileo? Yes, says, Menzies. I call BS. Norwegians discovered America. And there were people there already. 
---------------- Your Friendly Neighborhood Administrator Want to lose the advertisements? Become a Sponsor! Join our Facebook group or follow us on Twitter Science is not only compatible with spirituality; it is a profound source of spirituality.
- Carl Sagan | |
08-04-2008
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#5 (permalink)
| | Suspended |
Not Ranked : +0 / -0 0 score Re: Chinese Knowledge Inspired Leonardo da Vinci and Galileo? Yes, says, Menzies. I think there is another way to explore this question. I came to the history thread to ask a question. Before there was a sea routes between China and Europe, there was a land route, and cultured mover from east to west, not the west to the east. Europe was primitive compared to the older civilizations.
Baghdad was the gateway between the east and west since early times, with trade occuring before the European countries we know today were established. That is well before Leonardo's time. The following is from Wikipedia: Quote:
The route enabled people to transport trade goods, especially luxuries such as silk, satins, musk, rubies, diamonds, pearls and rhubarb[2] from different parts of the country in China, India, and Asia Minor to the Mediterranean, extending over 8,000 km (5,000 miles). Trade on the Silk Road was a significant factor in the development of the great civilizations of China, Egypt, Persia, Arabia, India, Rome, and Byzantium and helped to lay the foundations for the modern world in several respects. Although the term, the Silk Road, implies a continuous journey, very few travelers traveled the route from end to end. For the most part, goods were transported by a series of agents on varying routes and trade took place in the bustling mercantile markets of the oasis towns.[2]
The Central Asian part of the trade route was initiated around 114 BC by the Han Dynasty[3] largely through the missions and explorations of Zhang Qian[4] although earlier trade across the continents had already existed. In the late Middle Ages, use of the Silk Road declined as sea trade increased.[5]
-Silk Road |
Last edited by modest; 08-05-2008 at 06:56 PM..
Reason: added source
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08-04-2008
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#6 (permalink)
| | Suspended |
Not Ranked : +0 / -0 0 score Re: Chinese Knowledge Inspired Leonardo da Vinci and Galileo? Yes, says, Menzies. May be we should expand our view of the world a little? The Muslims had preserved what ancient civilizations had achieved and expanded upon it. Because the east and west did have contact, I don't know if we can be sure what came from China and what did not? Quote:
Muslim horologists had constructed precise time-keeping devices, that were fully auotmatic and weight-driven. Designs and illustrations of epi-cyclic and segmented gears were provided. Ibn-e-Farnas of Spain was a skilled inventer in this regard.
Galileo's pendulum? Did Galileo invent the pendulum as he was standing under a swinging chendelier in a church? No, in fact it was Ibn Yunus Al-Misri who had invented the device in the 10th century and Muslims later on, used it in their clocks.
Paper was a Chinese invention. Muslims mediated this Chinese skill to Europe. With the advent of paper-making in Islam, dawned a new revolution worldwide. Muslim had learnt this art from Chinese prisoners of war in 751 A.D.. From Samarkand, the craftsmanship spread to Baghdad, Damascus, Tiberias, Tripoli and Fez. There were floating paper mills in Jativa near Valencia, Spain. The first factory of this sort was established in Europe in Fabriano (Italy) in 1261 A.D.. After its instatement, Europe had to wait for another century before Nuremberg (Germany) could boast of another paper manufacturing center. Moreover, Muslims were the first time, used cotton to make paper, whereas China had been using silk throughout. This enabled Europe to use cotton and advance themselves by leaps and bounds, because silk was very rarely found outside China and India.
Newton and Haitham Without undermining Newton’s unparalleled contributions to human knowledge, many of his ideas were not the first of their kind and they had their precedents in the Muslim world. Ibn-alHaitham showed how the eye works (although one of his own eyes was bulged out by the Egyptian ruler, Al-Hakim). He showed that sight is possible because of light rays being reflected from the object, rather than rays emanating from the eye, as Greek science would have believed. Haitham also worked on the Fermat’s principle of least distance of propagation of light. Moreover, he had anticipated inertia, about 600 years before Netwon. It is unjust to rule out his name in the history of civilisation. Haitham also investigated the theory of diffraction and explained how rainbows ere formed, although Newton, first explained the coloration of rainbows. It is an open question, if Newton studied haitham.s monumental "Kitab-al-Manazir". As early as the 11th century, Haitham, had proposed to Al-Hakim the construction of a dam on the River Nile. Today, the magnificent Aswan, stands not quite far from the site he had proposed. Muslim Contribution to Human Civilisation |
Last edited by nutronjon; 08-04-2008 at 04:09 PM..
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01-06-2009
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#7 (permalink)
| | Creating Location: North of Sydney Australia |
Not Ranked : +0 / -0 0 score Re: Chinese Knowledge Inspired Leonardo da Vinci and Galileo? Yes, says, Menzies. So did China invent almost everything?
Gunpowder, moveable type, compass, plant grafting, paper the wheel barrow (my favourite)even perfumed toilet paper The astonishing Dr Joseph Needham - Part 1 of 3 I just listened to this? or something similar- but can't find the audio which was tacked on the end of the Boyer Lectures part 1.
transcript is here http://www.abc.net.au/rn/scienceshow...09/2456578.htm Quote:
In the case of Europe, the effects of Chinese inventions and artefacts were often far more profound than they were in China itself.
Ironically it was these same technologies, transformed by the scientific and industrial revolution, that were to rebound on China during the nineteenth century when the guns and cultural values of European imperialism were to bring an end to the cultural sovereignty of the Chinese empire, an empire that had maintained itself for over 2,000 years.
| Quote: These days everybody knows that the Chinese invented practically everything hundreds of years ago.
What people don't realise is that this understanding is so new; in the early 1950s, nobody, not even those in China were aware of this amazing fact.
Then Dr Joseph Needham of Cambridge embarked on an exploration of China and the beginning of his massive work Science and Civilisation in China and in 2008 Simon Winchester's book Bomb, Book and Compass reminded the world of this achievement. Today in part 1 we talk to Simon Winchester but also hear once more the programs made in the 1970s with Needham himself.
| The astonishing Dr Joseph Needham - Part 1 of 3 - Science Show - 3 January 2008 The Man Who Loved China (Bomb, Book and Compass) - Simon Winchester Bomb, Book and Compass book review Quote:
Weapons in Ancient China
Saturday 22 November 2003
Summary
On a visit to China, Branwen Morgan visited the terracotta warriors and was intrigued to find that some of the ancient weapons appeared to be chrome plated.
| The Science Show: 22 November* 2003* - Weapons in Ancient China
Last edited by Michaelangelica; 01-06-2009 at 10:44 PM..
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01-06-2009
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#8 (permalink)
| | Explaining |
Not Ranked : +0 / -0 0 score Re: Chinese Knowledge Inspired Leonardo da Vinci and Galileo? Yes, says, Menzies. wasn't in leonardos time a huge return of phylosophy books like socrates an plato and stuff that were burned throughout europe in the crusades
and in the mid 1400's people from china brought them back since they had copies from the great library of alexandria
---------------- lets start a vote, all those in favor of my posts being more stuctured, say I, all opposed say nay, you can pm me
"foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds"
Ralph Waldo Emmerson :essays | |
01-07-2009
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#9 (permalink)
| | Creating |
Not Ranked : +0 / -0 0 score Re: Chinese Knowledge Inspired Leonardo da Vinci and Galileo? Yes, says, Menzies. I have no clue but I love history... It makes me want to go back and see the events of those days..!!! | |
01-07-2009
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#10 (permalink)
| | Creating Location: North of Sydney Australia |
Not Ranked : +0 / -0 0 score Re: Chinese Knowledge Inspired Leonardo da Vinci and Galileo? Yes, says, Menzies. Quote:
Originally Posted by arkain101 I have no clue but I love history... It makes me want to go back and see the events of those days..!!! | Yes, I don't want a TARDIS I need a TARDIS.
What we pass off as history is filtered though hundreds of years and our own 20th century world view. I doubt if we can really understand the past in the same way as someone living at that time and place could.
Then again if you are a mud poor peasant with a 30 year life span you may not notice what the kings and queens were doing.
We are also feed so much Bull Shite by governments. It is criminal that some WW2 documents are still classified. | | |
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