Ancien temps

  • Period: 3000 BCE to 500

    Ancient time

  • 581 BCE

    Pyhtagore 2/2

    . Indeed some pieces of his demonstration were already wrote in some books fros different cultures. Beside during history many different other proofs and extensions had been invented. This lead today to the first theorem that any kids had learned and maybe one of the most important tool for mathematicians. Sources:
    https://www.britannica.com/science/Pythagorean-theorem
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythagoras
  • 580 BCE

    Pythagore 1/2

    Pythagoras was born around 580 BCE. Some years later he was introduced to mathematics by Anaximander. After he has been captured during Cambyses II of Persia he was sent to Babylon.
    Moreover, he proved all the mathematical result that we currently know when he joined a Croton school. The fact that a young mathematician had been the first to prove the theorem that bears his name created doubts in his entourage.
  • 527 BCE

    History of medicine 3/3

    Archaeologists have found a number of written records that describe ancient Egyptian medical practice, including the Ebers papyrus, this document contains over 700 remedies and magical formulas and spractical, wroremediesns aimed at repelling demons that cause disease. The authors probably wrote them around 1500 B.C.E., but the document may contain copies of material dating back to 3400 B.C.E. They are among the oldest preserved medical documents in existence.
    Aucune source donnée
  • 526 BCE

    History of medicine 2/3

    It was a structured society with tools such as written language “the hieroglyphic language” and mathematics, which enabled them to record and develop ideas, and it meant that others could learn from them.The fact that ancient Egyptians had systems of letters and numbers meant they were able to record and develop ideas and make calculations. Documented ancient Egyptian medical literature is among the oldest in existence today.
  • 525 BCE

    History of medicine 1/3

    Ancient Egypt was a civilization that lasted from 3300 to 525 B.C.E. This is probably where the concept of health started. Some of the earliest records of medical care come from ancient Egypt.
    The ancient Egyptians believed in prayer as a solution to health problems, but they also had natural, or practical, remedies, such as herbs.
  • 384 BCE

    Origins of mechanics ( aristote)

    The physics of Aristotle (-384, -322) agreed with the astronomy of Eudoxus of Cnide and his
    successor Callippus of Cyzicus, mathematicians and astronomers of the 4th.It no longer agreed with the astronomy of Claudius Ptolemy, the 2nd
    century astronomer. Aristotle's theory of motion has many difficulties of which the Stagirite was
    well aware.
    Until the 19th century, the notion of mechanics encompassed both the scientific study of moving
    bodies and the theory of machines.
  • 301 BCE

    Hippocrate 2/2

    Hippocrates invented the medical techniques of the time and chose certain instruments used in surgery. he also demonstrated the existence of a link between the disease and the patient's environment, lifestyle and diet. during the fourth century BC Hippocrates paved the way for dietetics because better eating is better treatment Aucune information pour ses sources
  • 300 BCE

    Hippocrate 1/2

    During ancient history in 300 BC there were many personalities like Hippocrates named the father of medicine. he founded the medical school in ancient Greece which allowed the teaching of the human body and diseases, he also initiated clinical observation.
  • 246 BCE

    Archimedes' principle

    Archimede is a physician that developped a principle. It states that a body immersed in a fluid is subject to an upward force equal to the weight of the displaced fluid.He stated this principle long before concepts of force were well established.
    A body floating receive two forces, one is gravity that pulled the object down and the other is This upward force that equals gravity's force .
    formula : P = density * Grav * depth.
    https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/engineering/archimedes-principle