Taken from: http://www.recoveredscience.com/const100solomonpi.htm
The political values of Solomon's wrong Pi
Most current textbooks on the  history of science assert that ancient Near Eastern mathematics were too  primitive for its practitioners to compute an accurate value for the circle  circumference-to-diameter ratio pi. They even claim that the Bible gives the rather inaccurate value of  pi = 3 for this important  mathematical constant. 
They refer to the reported  dimensions of the “sea of cast bronze” which king  Solomon placed before the Temple he built in Jerusalem, as described in 1 Kings 7:23:
“It was round in shape, the diameter from rim to rim being ten cubits; it stood five cubits high, and it took a line thirty cubits long to go around it.”
Indeed, the Rabbis who wrote  the Talmud a thousand years after Solomon asserted  this value based on those verses. They may not have been mathematicians, but  they knew how to divide thirty by ten and get three.  Accordingly, they affirmed as late as the middle of the first millennium CE:
“that which in circumference is three hands broad is one hand broad”.
Scholars of the Enlightenment  era were glad to concur with that interpretation because it allowed them to  wield this blatant falsehood in the Bible as an  irresistible battering ram against the until then unassailable inerrancy of the  religious authorities.
Their Colonial-era successors,  in turn, embraced that poor value for Solomon’s pi to belittle the mathematical achievements and abilities of the  ancient non-European civilizations, and to thereby better highlight those of their own modern  Western group. One of the most effective steps in subduing a conquered  nation is to deny or distort its historical achievements, so this poor value of pi in the ancient Near East became rich  fodder for their mockeries.
This parochial attitude received a major blow when the Columbia  University Professor of Comparative Literature Edward  Said published in 1978 his book "Orientalism"  in which he exposed the colonial roots of the then still common Western disdain for the abilities of "Orientals".  His  influential comments changed the way some open-minded  literary scholars regarded this biased legacy, but it seems that many  mathematicians and historians of mathematics never got the  memo.
In their domain, the biased  views of those colonialist writers survive to the point that this purported lack  of mathematical intelligence under the reign of a king renowned for his wisdom  is still an article of faith among mainstream  historians of science trained to read this obviously  primitive value into the text.
One of the most popular books  on "A History of Pi" even offers eight translations  of that biblical passage into seven different  languages, presumably to drive home the point with the powerful  mainstream method of proof by repetition, that in  every one of those translations the diameter remains ten cubit and the  circumference thirty1
However, all these disparagers  of Solomon’s pi omit half the evidence. The rest of  the parallel passages they cite from 1 Kings  7:23 and 2 Chronicles  4:2 shows their dogma is based on a hit-and-run calculation of a  type that would make any undergraduates flunk their exam.
It seems that none of those  experts who so compared the diameter and circumference of Solomon’s Sea of  Bronze ever bothered to read on. The next verses, 1 Kings 24 and 26, say that the circumference was measured under the rim, and that this  rim was flared:
“All round the Sea on the outside under its rim, completely surrounding the thirty cubits of its circumference, were two rows of gourds cast in one piece with the Sea itself. (...) Its rim was made like that of a cup, shaped like the calyx of a lily. When full it held two thousand baths.”
The parallel account in 2  Chronicles 4:3 and 5 leaves out the rim and reads
"Under the Sea, on every side, completely surrounding the thirty cubits of its circumference, were what looked like gourds, two rows of them, cast in one piece with the Sea itself. (...) Its rim was made like that of a cup, shaped like the calyx of a lily. When full it held three thousand baths.”
Obviously, the gourds could not have been under the Sea if they were cast as part  of its circumference on every side, and the measuring rope for the circumference  would not be stretched around the rim where it would  not stay up but only below it. The only practical way to measure such a flared  vessel is to stretch the rope around the body below that  rim. 
Moreover, only this measure directly around the body is relevant for indicating  the volume the vessel could hold, an important part  of its description for which the rim diameter is clearly  irrelevant. It seems therefore that the scribe of 2 Chronicles 4 was  simply as careless in specifying the place of the  measurement as in mis-copying the volume of the  basin. 
However, both accounts agree  that the rim was flared. The ten-cubit diameter  measured across its top from rim to rim was therefore  larger than that of the vessel’s body which “took a line thirty cubits  long to go around it”.
The circumference and diameter  reported were thus not for the same circle, and  deducing an ancient pi from these unrelated dimensions would be about as valid  as trying to deduce your birth date from your phone number.
The volume and shape of Solomon's Sea
Moreover, the measuring unit  conversions supplied by modern archaeology allow us to compute the inside volume of that vessel and to thereby  find its shape. With the stated circumference, wall thickness, and height, only  a cylinder can contain the volume of 2,000 bath given  in 1 Kings 7:26.
The cubit  length which had been used in various Jerusalem buildings and tombs of  Solomon’s time was 20.67 inches2, according to the archaeological  architect Leen Ritmeyer who investigated the standards used in those structures.  Like the ancient Egyptian royal cubit of typically similar length, the sacred  cubit used in Jerusalem was also divided into seven hand  breadths of four fingers each.
The bath was a liquid measure of “approximately 22 liters”, as Harper’s Bible Dictionary  states. It was one tenth of a “kor” in the well-known  dry-measuring system which is described in Ezekiel  45:14. Its use for liquids is confirmed by eighth century BCE storage  jars, found at Tell Beit Mirsim and Lachish, that were inscribed “bath” and “royal bath”3.  A liter is 61.0237 cubic inch, so 2000 bath equal 304.04 cubic cubit.
As calculated and illustrated  in the above diagram, the 2000 bath of water from 1 Kings 7:26 fill that cylinder close to its top, to  a height of 4.511 cubit above the inside bottom.  The outside height was five  cubit, and the bottom was one seventh of a cubit thick, so the 2000 bath leave  only a shallow rim of about 0.3461 cubit above the water  level, or just over seven inches, depending on how accurate the "about 22  liter" conversion factor is.
| 
The rim flare inscribed into the computed rectangle looks  indeed like that of a cup, or like the calyx of a  lily. | 
The height and width of that  rim, computed with the actual value of pi, produce an elegant flare that matches the biblical description. The same holds true for  approximations to pi from about 3 1/8 to 3 1/6 which all produce lily-like rims  and are all closer to the proper value than the alleged but  unsupported pi = three.
These conversions also make it  clear that the copyist of the much later4 parallel history in 2  Chronicles 4:6 misread that volume when he gave it as 3,000 bath. No matter how much you fudge the math or try to  squeeze the incompressible water, this volume does not fit into a vessel with those dimensions.
Mainstream bias against  non-Western minds
Solomon’s mathematicians and  surveyors, as well as their ancient teachers and colleagues throughout the  ancient Levant, were therefore not necessarily the clumsy  clods portrayed in current history books. 
The accuracies of transmitted  lengths which Ritmeyer found in the actual dimensions those ancient builders  left us in stone show that they worked with great  care.  It strains credulity that their surveyors could have misread the  rope around that vessel by almost two and a half feet in a circumference of less  than 52 feet.
Nor is there any rational  reason to assume that the ancient number researchers were so innumerate that  they could not have computed a fairly good value of  pi, as close to the real one as that which Archimedes (about 287 to 212 BCE) obtained later, or even  closer.  They could wield the same mathematical tool, the theorem about the squares over the sides of a right-angled triangle  which is now named after the sixth-century-BCE Greek Pythagoras and which  Archimedes used in his pi-calculation many centuries after its real ancient  Babylonian and/or Egyptian authors had discovered it.  They also had perhaps  more patience and motivation than Archimedes to continue with the simple but repetitive calculations required for pointlessly  closer approximations.
However, the backwardness of ancient Near Eastern mathematics has become  a cornerstone of the prevailing prejudice against all pre- Greek  accomplishments.  Examining that cornerstone exposes the scholarly bias on which it was founded.
The reason for the current denial of ancient pi seems to be that the  calculation of pi requires analytical thinking, the  same exalted mode of thought on which all the rest of so- called Western science  is said to be based, and which must therefore be Western.
Most history books tell us that  this superb achievement and gift to all humanity had to wait for the unique genius of the glorious Greeks, and that the invention of inquisitive and logical thinking was the  decisive contribution from these purported founders of said science.
The Greeks were, in the words  of a highly respected Egyptologist born at the height of the English Empire:
“... a race of men more hungry for knowledge than any people that had till then inhabited the earth”5 .
Reflecting the same then typical attitude which referred to those other people  as “that” instead of “who”, another equally respected historian of science  quoted approvingly Plato’s partisan remark :
“... whatever Greeks acquire from foreigners is finally turned by them into something nobler”6.
The skills displayed in Hezekiah's  tunnel
This cultural bias led some of  the "scholars" afflicted by it not only to disregard obvious facts, as in the  case of Solomon’s pi, but even to fabricate the evidence they needed to support their supposed superiority. Take, for instance,  the engineering achievement of king  Hezekiah’s tunnel builders.
This biblical king needed to prepare Jerusalem for a dangerous siege because he  expected a new invasion by the Assyrians who had  conquered the area earlier and extorted from it a heavy tribute which Hezekiah planned to stop paying. To have any chance at all  against this almost irresistible superpower of his  day, he needed to protect the water supply of his city and so had a tunnel dug from inside the walls to the outside  spring.
Because this life-or-death  project was so urgent, the tunnelers started at both ends of that path to then meet about halfway underground. This unprecedented  mid-way meeting in a more than 1,700-foot-long tunnel would have counted as a considerable achievement even if their tunnel had  followed a straight line.  However, their surveying task was much harder. 
At the spring end, the stone  cutters started at an almost right angle to the shortest path towards their goal  and took instead the shortest path towards the city  wall. Maybe they wanted to bring this most vulnerable part of their dig  as quickly as possible under the protection of that wall and of the high  overburden in that area, and maybe they also wanted to take advantage of a few  existing fissures in the rock that happened to run  there for short stretches along their general direction. Then they veered back outside the wall under shallower terrain where  no enemy risked to find the tunnel but where a postulated surface team hammering on the rock above would be easier to hear for  confirmation that the diggers were not straying too far. However helpful and  encouraging these presumed signals from the surface  team may have been to the diggers below, they would have been too diffuse to determine precise locations.
On the town  end of the tunnel, the diggers started northwards but then, instead of continuing north-north-east for the shortest  path towards the other team, they went east and even south-east-east in a wide arc. 
Archaeologists call this arc  the "semicircular loop", and some of them suggest  that the diggers took this long detour, adding about 50 percent to the expense  and time for this urgent life-and-death project, to  avoid any possible disturbance to the royal graves of  King David and some of his successors who are said to have been buried in that  area of the "City of David"6A. 
The path so prescribed to the  stone cutters became therefore an irregularly curved maximum  challenge to the surveyors who had to multiply their triangulations while  keeping the accumulated errors small enough to not  miss the other team by too far in these two opposite stabs into the three-dimensional dark.
These ancient Hebrew surveyors  solved this complicated task with such skill that we still  don’t know how they did it. Some scholars have argued that they must have  followed a karstic crack underground that went all the way through. However, the  Jerusalem archaeologists Ronny Reich and Eli Shukron  pointed out that the theory of simply following a pre-existing fissure is  incompatible with the several “false” tunnels near the meeting  point7.  These indicate  some uncertainty about the path to follow until the teams actually met, and they  are more compatible with the accumulated errors in a small  spread of measuring results. 
Moreover, a recent close  examination of the tunnel walls shows that there was no such continuous fissure. To the contrary, over  long stretches most of the cracks in the rock ran rather at  right or almost right angles to the path of the tunnel8. 
That theory about the  continuous crack also ignores the famous inscription  about how elated the cutters were when they at long last heard the voices of the  other group just before they broke through, “axe against  axe”. The joy and relief expressed in that short text would be hard to  explain if the two underground teams had known  beforehand that they were just following a pre-existing path.
Even the authors of the most recent survey of this tunnel, the ones who proposed  the stone cutters might have been guided by the sounds of hammer tapping on the bedrock above the tunnel, do not  think those signals were precise enough to pinpoint the exact locations  underground. One of them admits 
"Yet, all things considered, it is quite incredible how the two teams managed to meet almost head-on, at virtually identical elevations as evidenced in the very small difference in ceiling elevation at the meeting point."9
Correctly plotting such a  complicated path underground implies calculating and  measuring skills far better than those attributed to the people whose  predecessors from just two and a half centuries earlier had allegedly misread so  grossly the cord stretched around Solomon’s Sea. It also demonstrates a precision in their trigonometry that does not fit in at all  with their tradition's supposedly so crude pi.
On the other hand, admitting  those skills among Hezekiah’s people would have toppled the  superiority of the Greeks who cut the mostly straight and longer tunnel  of Samos about 170 years later.  This tunnel was much easier to measure but  displays much more zig-zagging in the northern leg before the mid- tunnel  meeting10.
So, to prove his contention  that the Israelites worked “in a very primitive way”, vastly inferior to the “splendid accomplishment” of the Greeks, the above  Plato-buying historian of science invented from whole  cloth a series of vertical shafts he said Hezekiah’s workers had dug from  the top to keep track of their confused and  meandering path11.
This solved  the problem of keeping the Greeks up on their pedestal.  Except, of  course, that the veteran Jerusalem archaeologist Amihai  Mazar reports Hezekiah’s tunnel was cut without any such intermediate shafts12.   The one and only shaft that is open to  the surface near the southern end of the tunnel is a pre-existing natural feature and not man-made.13 
There is still no published  study that explores how Hezekiah’s surveyors could have achieved their stunning success, but the Mathematical  Association of America offers in its 2001 Annual Catalog a video and workbook  about “The Tunnel of Samos” which the Greeks dug less  than two centuries later, also simultaneously from both ends. These discuss the  methods the Greek tunnel builders might have used for “one  of the most remarkable engineering works of ancient times”. And an even  more recent article on this Greek tunnel still relies on the long debunked false assertion about the continuous carstic crack  the ancient Hebrew stone cutters allegedly followed to belittle their even more remarkable achievement:
"The tunnel of Hezekiah required no mathematics at all (it probably followed the route of an underground watercourse)."14
Without this ad-hoc invention of the "carstic crack" and/or "underground  watercourse", the mathematics required for plotting  Hezekiah's tunnel must have been rather impressive.
(In 2011, the above cited  archaeologists Ronnie Reich and Eli Shukron suggested that this tunnel was not  cut during Hezekiah's reign but already under one of his predecessors, perhaps  King Jehoash who reigned from 835 to 801 BCE
14A. However, advancing the date  of this feat by just over a century would not change the argument presented here  that it required mathematics more impressive than what most modern scholars  attribute to Hebrews of that early time.)
Compare those ancient tunnel-builders' skills with  those used in the design and execution of the world's currently longest  mountain-piercing tunnel, through the base of the Gotthard massif in Switzerland, and its final  breakthrough on October 15, 2010.  The meeting between the  two opposing sections in this 35.4-mile-long modern tunnel through very hard  rock joined two 31.4-foot diameter bore holes within the specified tolerances of about 4 horizontal and 2 vertical inches,  matching the ancients' claimed precision of having met "axe  against axe", but in a much longer tunnel. 
This spectacular modern  precision was made possible by literally cutting-edge and  space-age technologies developed and/or refined specifically for this  project. This sophistication is only hinted at in the title of its summary  description "The Gotthard Base Tunnel - a challenge for  geodesy and geotechnics" 
(http://www.geometh-data.ethz.ch/downloads
/eisenstadt98.pdf).
(http://www.geometh-data.ethz.ch/downloads
/eisenstadt98.pdf).
These surveyors used an unprecedented array of 28 Global Positioning Systems to  nail down the exact locations of their reference points, and the precision of  their specially developed optical surveying  instruments was such that the continuing rise of the Alps by about one millimeter per year became a factor addressed in the  results. 
In addition to all their advanced gyroscopic theodolites and opto-electronic X-Y  pickups and other fancy gear, the modern tunnel plotters used also a midway control shaft to confirm  their exact orientation and the elevation of the tunnel  floor despite local variations in gravity, whereas the ancients made do without this help. 
Moreover, unlike the ancients,  the moderns credited supernatural help for the  success of their enterprise.  Indeed, the inscription that celebrated the  breakthrough meeting of Hezekiah's teams was secular  and mostly technical. It conveys the human excitement of meeting "axe against axe", but at least the  surviving part of this document from biblical and supposedly pious ancient  Israel contains no mention of God or thanks for  having blessed the project. 
By contrast, the celebrations for the Gotthard tunnel  breakthrough in Switzerland, the now reputedly secular birth country of two major protestant reformations by Zwingli and Calvin,  included the prominent honoring of a statuette representing  the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Saint Barbara, a traditional protectress from thunder  and lightning. This job associated her later also by default with explosives,  and she thereby became the patroness of miners. Several of the official tunnel inauguration speakers also thanked that Saint for her guidance and  supervision of the project. 
Their hi-tech measuring  instruments as well as this heavenly help  may have given the modern stone cutters  some advantages over their ancient counterparts so that they could match  the claimed "axe against axe" precision even in  their much longer tunnel. 
However, the basic math for plotting their tunnels was identical for  both teams. The moderns may perhaps have applied more powerful  statistical methods for analyzing the scatter of their data points, but their timeless trigonometry and triangulation rules were  still the same as those which Hezekiah's surveyors had clearly used in  their work. 
Yet, Orientalism-inspired and  -misled scholars described Hezekiah's surveyors as allegedly innumerate dolts, and they made up imaginary  control shafts, karstic cracks, or buried brooks just to avoid admitting the measuring and computing skills plainly  displayed in the ancients' work. They presume to  judge the richness of the mathematics practiced in the ancient Near East from  only the few surviving and so far deciphered written scraps while excluding the large corpus of unwritten evidence which  demonstrates that the ancients' knowledge was not limited to those few random  tidbits.
Some Western scholars, from  Plato on to this day, needed such fictions to belittle all  pre-Greek achievements and to thereby prove their own and their fellow Europeans’ superiority over all the other and  allegedly ignorant older civilizations.  
The myth of  Solomon’s wrong pi is therefore by now so deeply entrenched in the  Western cultural fabric that most of those who write on this subject continue to  repeat it uncritically because that is what all their  reference books say, no matter how obviously wrong these are.
If you can avoid the blinders  created by this common academic prejudice, you will  see in this book how the allegedly pi-challenged designer(s) of Solomon’s Temple incorporated in the main dimensions of its  layout clear, repeated, and precise evidence that  their pi was at least as good as that of Archimedes. 
Moreover, their teachers, as  well as the ancient Egyptian inventors of their  mathematical methods, had also computed several other important mathematical  constants with remarkable precision. And they had invested these transcendental  numbers with transcendental meanings that  revealed to them the inner workings of their world.

No comments:
Post a Comment