
audiobook
by Derek J. de Solla (Derek John de Solla) Price
Transcriber's note:
Delving into the tangled roots of humanity’s first time‑keepers, this study retraces a two‑millennium journey across three continents to uncover the true ancestors of the mechanical clock. It moves beyond the familiar sundial narrative, revealing how ancient astronomical machines and early gearing systems set the stage for weight‑driven escapements that would later define the medieval era.
The author weaves together clues from Chinese water‑wheel clocks, Arabic treatises on perpetual motion, and Western medieval manuscripts, exposing how ideas migrated, transformed, and sometimes vanished only to reappear centuries later. By confronting long‑standing misconceptions, the book offers a clearer picture of how the magnetic compass entered the West and how early attempts at endless motion foreshadowed modern thermodynamics.
Written for both scholars and curious listeners, the work balances rigorous research with vivid storytelling, making the complex evolution of these pivotal inventions accessible and compelling. It invites you to reconsider how the quest for measuring time and direction shaped the technological world we inherit today.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (98K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Chris Curnow, Turgut Dincer, Joseph Cooper and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net.
Release date
2009-09-16
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1922–1983
A pioneer in the study of science itself, he helped show how knowledge grows, spreads, and changes over time. He is also remembered for his work on the Antikythera mechanism, the ancient device often described as an early mechanical computer.
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