Why did Ancient Greece seem to produce so much science?

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I mean, Eratosthenes accurately measuring the size of the Earth, advances in geometry and math, etc. I just read that Thales of Miletus might have predicted an eclipse in 500 BCE. Making discoveries about the natural world that Europe didn’t get back to for like 2,000 years.

I know Greece wasn’t the *only* region that had mathematicians, but it was “just” a bunch of cities, almost a backwater, while Persia was a whole empire and Mesopotamia and Egypt were massive centers of civilization. I’d *think* that the biggest, richest cities that had stable empires protecting them would be the most likely to support scientific and technological discoveries.

Does Greece get so much attention just because we Westerners have decided to pay tons of attention to it? Have we forgotten centuries of great minds because they didn’t happen to live in Greece at the time? Or was there really something special about ancient Greece?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

It’s also not so much that they were the only ones producing it, but they’re the ones who we have surviving writing from. And that written legacy is a huge part of our perception of them.

If we didn’t have those Greek writings (mostly from copies that survived in Islamic libraries) we wouldn’t realize that the work of the Renaissance was a continuation of the Greeks. That work jump started the modern era.

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