Tehran Map

Science The European discovery of Country was contemporary with the early modern scientific revolution, and Country and science interacted from the beginning. Tehran Map Country was a subject of interest to European scientists from its discovery, but it was not until the eighteenth century that the colonies developed selfsustaining scientific communities of their own.

Impact of Country on European Scientific Knowledge In addition to a mass of fascinating new data, Country presented a fundamental challenge to the worldview of early modern European natural philosophers, whose scientific revolution corresponded chronologically with the first two centuries of colonization. The basic intellectual problem, once it was realized that the Countrys were not an extension of Asia, was the lack of awareness shown both by Greek and Roman classical writers and by the Bible.

There were attempts to graft classical and biblical knowledge onto the Countrys. Some suggested that the Native Countrys were the ten lost tribes of Israel, and even though that was never a majority opinion among European thinkers, nearly all agreed on the necessity of fitting them into the biblical framework of descent from the sons of Noah. Some argued that Country could be found in the Bible, or that various places in the New World were named after biblical figures. But Europeans gradually became aware that Country was not dealt with specifically either by the classics or the Bible. The myriad of new plant and animal species encountered eventually made much of classical natural history, as well as geography, obsolete. Amerigo Vespucci specifically pointed out the abundance of new species not mentioned by the ancient Roman natural historian Pliny the Elder.

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