| |
4000 - 1000 B.C. |


 |
4th millennium B.C. In Sumer writing is invented.
Writing and calculating came into being at about the same time. The first pictographs carved into clay tablets were used for administrative purposes. As an instrument for the administrative bodies of early empires, which began to rely on the collection, storage, processing and transmission of data, the skill of writing was restricted to only very few. Being more or less separated tasks, writing and calculating converge in today's computers.
Letters are invented so that we might be able to converse even with the absent, says Saint Augustine. The invention of writing made it possible to transmit and store information. No longer the ear predominates; face-to-face communication becomes more and more obsolete for administration and bureaucracy. Standardization and centralization become the constituents of high culture and vast empires as Sumer and China.
3200 B.C. In Sumer the seal is invented.
About 3000 B.C. In Egypt papyrus scrolls and hieroglyphs are used.
About 1350 B.C. In Assyria the cuneiform script is invented.
1200 B.C. According to Aeschylus, the conquest of the town of Troy was transmitted via torch signals.
About 1100 B.C. Egyptians use homing pigeons to deliver military information.

|
|
Galileo Galilee
Galileo Galilee (1564-1642), the Italian Mathematician and Physicist is called the father of Enlightenment. He proofed the laws of the free fall, improved the technique for the telescope and so on. Galilee is still famous for his fights against the Catholic Church. He published his writings in Italian instead of writing in Latin. Like this, everybody could understand him, which made him popular. As he did not stop talking about the world as a ball (the Heliocentric World System) instead of a disk, the Inquisition put him on trial twice and forbid him to go on working on his experiments.
|
|
|