See below.  Is that really right? Using a scientific
method to infer a general law of nature by means of a
hypothesis, observation, and measurement of some event
that can be duplicated by objective repetition is
fairly new, 17C.  Empirical observations and
measurements, "applied science" has a long history, at
least from Aristotle.  Magic has a played a big role
in science.  A great book is Wonder and the Order of
Nature, by Lorraine Dalston and Katherine Park.  It
traces the development of examining nature  from
superstition to  science, 1150 to 1750.  Almost any of
Barbara Stafford's books are also good for discussions
of how science emerged from magic and superstition.


The accuracy of retrofitting human imagery as art is
probably as weak as retrofitting practical
observations as science.  It doesn't much matter what
you say, it's all nostalgia.  Both art and science are
recent divisions of the subjective-objective
conumbrum, let's say 1500-1700.

Of course we don't know what the Chinese were doing
when we weren't looking.  

WC

 After all, a
> large number of  
> knowledges from all those cultures are among that
> which we regularly  
> call science.
> 
> 
> | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
> Michael Brady
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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