World of Patterns

JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9781421443447

A Global History of Knowledge

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By Rens Bod, Translated by Leston Buell
Imprint:
JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:
800 g
Pages:
400

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Description

A comprehensive account of the methods of knowledge production throughout human history and across the globe.





The idea that the world can be understood through patterns and the principles that govern them is one of the most important human insights—it may also be our greatest survival strategy. Our search for patterns and principles began 40,000 years ago, when striped patterns were engraved on mammoths bones to keep track of the moons phases. What routes did human knowledge take to grow from these humble beginnings through many detours and dead ends into modern understandings of nature and culture? In this work of unprecedented scope, Rens Bod removes the Western natural sciences from their often-central role to bring us the first global history of human knowledge.



Having sketched the history of the humanities in his ground-breaking A New History of the Humanities, Bod now adopts a broader perspective, stepping beyond classical antiquity back to the Stone Age to answer the question: Where did our knowledge of the world today begin and how did it develop? Drawing on developments from all five continents of the inhabited world, World of Patterns offers startling connections. Focusing on a dozen fields—ranging from astronomy, philology, medicine, law, and mathematics to history, botany, and musicology—Bod examines to what degree their progressions can be considered interwoven and to what degree we can speak of global trends.



In this pioneering work, Bod aims to fulfill what he sees as the historians responsibility: to grant access to historys goldmine of ideas. Bod discusses how inoculation was invented in China rather than Europe; how many of the fundamental aspects of modern mathematics and astronomy were first discovered by the Indian Kerala school; and how the study of law provided fundamental models for astronomy and linguistics from Roman to Ottoman times. The book flies across continents and eras. The result is an enlightening symphony, a stirring chorus of human inquisitiveness extending through the ages.


Rens Bod is a professor of digital humanities at the University of Amsterdam and the president of the Society for the History of the Humanities. He is the author of A New History of the Humanities: The Search for Principles and Patterns from Antiquity to the Present.


Preface: The Wonder of Knowledge

Introduction. Understanding the World through Patterns and Principles

Chapter 1. The Awareness of Patterns: Prehistory

Chapter 2. The Explosion of Patterns and the Awareness of Principles: Early Antiquity

Chapter 3. The Explosion of Principles and the Awareness of Deduction: Classical Antiquity

Chapter 4. The Reduction of Principles: Postclassical Period

Chapter 5. The Discovery of Patterns in Deductions: The Modern Era

Conclusion. The Origin, Growth, and Future of Knowledge

Acknowledgments

Notes

Bibliography

Index


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