The Advent of the Ancient Egyptian Clepsydra (Water Clock)

The Clepsydra (pronounced “clep-see-drah”), more commonly referred to as the “water clock”, was among the earliest technological devices engineered for measuring time, predating mechanical clocks by over a millennia. The earliest known example of a clepsydra is from Ancient Egypt, constructed close to 1400 B.C., and attributed to an Egyptian court official named “Amenemhet” (pronounced “ah-men-ehm-het”). Clepsydra clocks operated using 1 of 2 primary designs; which includes both outflow and inflow setups. In an outflow clepsydra, water exited the chamber container through a small hole at the bottom, and the measurement of time was tracked by the continually lowered water level which was measured against internal markings. Inflow clepsydras reversed this design setup with water entering a marked container vessel, and the continually rising water level indicating the amount of time which had elapsed. The main challenge of the inflow and outflow designs was maintaining a consistent flow rate of water because as water drained, pressure dropped which slowed the drip rate and skewed the clocks accuracy. Ancient Greek engineer Ctesibius (pronounced “teh-sib-ee-us”) addressed this problem by introducing an overflow tank with a fixed water level, ensuring constant pressure and uniform water flow at all times. Ctesibius also added a float regulated valve system, an early feedback mechanism designed to stabilize inflow of water and prevent overflow, much the same as the float controlled fill valve (e.g. ballcock, float cup valve, diaphragm type inlet valve etc.) installed within toilets during the modern day. Subsequent future cepsydra designs implemented gears and escape mechanisms to convert water movement into mechanical energy/motion. Chinese engineers expanded further upon the concept of the clepsydra by introducing polyvascular systems, in which water flowed through multiple containment vessels in an effort to better regulate timing intervals. These innovations permitted water clocks to function independently of sunlight unlike sundials, the prevailing time keeping technology throughout history, and laid the foundation for regulated mechanical timekeeping which proceeded it. Despite limitations (e.g. temperature dependent viscosity, leakage and evaporation, the need for constant manual maintenance by human beings etc.), clepsydras remained in use for centuries and were the first controlled, replicable timekeeping systems in history only falling out of fashion during the late Middle Ages due to the ascendency of mechanical, pendulum and gear based clocks

The Meaning of Comets and Asteroids Throughout History and the Fallacy of Patterns

Comets and asteroids meant different things to different cultures throughout history. To the Masai of East Africa they meant famine, to the Zulu of South Africa they meant war, to the Ighat* of West Africa they meant disease, to the Jaga of Sier* they meant smallpox, and to their neighbors the Luba, they foretold the death of a leader. The Chinese tracked and cataloged comets and asteroids starting in 1400 B.C. In Chinese mythology, a 3 tailed comet or asteroid meant calamity for the state, and a 4 tailed comet or asteroid signaled an epidemic was coming. The human being ability to recognize patterns can be a double edged sword as it can lead us to believe a pattern exists when really there is no correlation between the before scenario and after event. This phenomena is referred to as “post hoc ergo propter hoc” which is Latin for “after this, therefore because of this”. Post hoc ergo propter hoc explains a logical fallacy which states “since event Y followed event X, event Y must have been caused by event X.” This theory of thought is often shortened to simply “post hoc fallacy”. An example of this incorrect theory of thought would be “the rooster crows immediately before sunrise; therefore the rooster causes the sun to rise”. Oddly enough, the reason roosters crow at sunrise is because they actually believe they are prompting the sun to rise into the sky due to their limited brain capacity and ability to utilize logic and/or reason

*spelling may be slightly inaccurate for the indigenous people listed