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The Source Code Vol I How Ancient Minds Built the Modern World 500 BC – 500 AD ANCIENT FOUNDATIONS The Mathematical, Philosophical, and Technological Breakthroughs. The Source Code, #1
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8995520603
- EAN9798995520603
- Date de parution30/03/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurA PRECISER
Résumé
What if everything you use today - your phone, your building, your medicine, your legal system - traces back to a single thousand-year window in human history?It does. Between 500 BC and 500 AD, humanity underwent its most profound intellectual transformation. Before this period, humans explained the world through myth, divine intervention, and ancestral tradition. After it, we possessed geometry, formal logic, experimental medicine, mechanical engineering, and the scientific method - tools that would eventually produce quantum mechanics, genetic engineering, and artificial intelligence.
The Source Code, Volume I: Ancient Foundations chronicles more than 100 of the breakthroughs that made the modern world possible. From Euclid's geometric proofs to Archimedes' principle of buoyancy, from the Hippocratic oath to Roman concrete, from the Pythagorean theorem to the earliest concept of zero - each entry reveals not just what was discovered, but how, why, by whom, and what it ultimately made possible.
This is not a textbook. Every discovery is presented through eight lenses: what it is, when and where it emerged, who achieved it, the problem it solved, how the breakthrough actually happened, the science behind it, its immediate impact on the ancient world, and its living legacy today. The format delivers MIT-level research in language anyone can follow and no one will want to put down. Spanning ancient Greece, Rome, China, India, and the Islamic world, this volume is honest about both the genius and the contradictions of its subjects.
Aristotle defended slavery while inventing formal logic. Greek democracy excluded women while producing Euclidean geometry. The achievements were real. So were the costs. Both deserve acknowledgment. The mathematics powering your GPS was born in Alexandria. The logic enabling your computer came from Athens. The number system on your screen originated in ancient India. The waterworks in your home employ principles Archimedes worked out 2, 200 years ago.
These ancient minds didn't just discover facts. They invented the act of discovery itself. Welcome to Volume I of The Source Code. This is where modern thinking began.
The Source Code, Volume I: Ancient Foundations chronicles more than 100 of the breakthroughs that made the modern world possible. From Euclid's geometric proofs to Archimedes' principle of buoyancy, from the Hippocratic oath to Roman concrete, from the Pythagorean theorem to the earliest concept of zero - each entry reveals not just what was discovered, but how, why, by whom, and what it ultimately made possible.
This is not a textbook. Every discovery is presented through eight lenses: what it is, when and where it emerged, who achieved it, the problem it solved, how the breakthrough actually happened, the science behind it, its immediate impact on the ancient world, and its living legacy today. The format delivers MIT-level research in language anyone can follow and no one will want to put down. Spanning ancient Greece, Rome, China, India, and the Islamic world, this volume is honest about both the genius and the contradictions of its subjects.
Aristotle defended slavery while inventing formal logic. Greek democracy excluded women while producing Euclidean geometry. The achievements were real. So were the costs. Both deserve acknowledgment. The mathematics powering your GPS was born in Alexandria. The logic enabling your computer came from Athens. The number system on your screen originated in ancient India. The waterworks in your home employ principles Archimedes worked out 2, 200 years ago.
These ancient minds didn't just discover facts. They invented the act of discovery itself. Welcome to Volume I of The Source Code. This is where modern thinking began.









