Tag Archives: tech-history

More on Agora and Hypatia

The movie Agora mentioned in the previous post got me interested in the actual Hypatia, so I picked up “Hypatia of Alexandria, Mathematician and Martyr” by Michael B. Deakin (2007). It discusses the little that is actually known about her, … Continue reading

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The Population of Space

The SF writer Charlie Stross recently wrote on his blog about the absurdity of self-sufficient space colonies (“Insufficient Data”).  He noted that it takes an extraordinary number of people to maintain a technological civilization, because even the most common artifacts … Continue reading

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The Dangerous Isaac Newton

Here’s an image – the world’s greatest scientist is in a grubby London dive, talking to lowlifes.   Candles flicker on the table between them, and the air is close and foul.  He’s interrogating them closely, sometimes smiling and handing over … Continue reading

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A Failed High-Tech Gamble

Ten miles north of Boston is the National Historic Site of  the Saugus Iron Works, site of the first heavy industry in the country.   It’s a pretty spot, and a great place for a picnic, which my family took advantage … Continue reading

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