SCIETECHNO
SCIETECHNO
TECHNOLOGY
SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
General Concepts and Historical Development
STONE AGE
• Weapons made of stone, wood, bone or some other materials for hunting.
• Neanderthals and Denisovans human species
1. Paleolithic Period – Old Stone Age (2.5 MYA to 10,000 B.C.)
People are mainly hunters and gatherers of food
Living nomadically in caves
Used basic stone tools for hunting
Controlled fire
2. Mesolithic Period – Middle Stone Age (10,000 B.C. to 8,000 B.C.)
People are still hunters and gatherers of food
Living as permanent settlers in villages (near rivers)
Used small stone tools for hunting polished, pointed spears/arrows
Learned fishing and introduced agriculture
3. Neolithic Period – New Stone Age (8,000 B.C. to 3,000 B.C.)
People are using agriculture and domesticate animals for food
Living as permanent settlers in villages (near rivers)
Used stone tools in agriculture
Polished hand axes
Advanced farming, home construction, and art
PRE-SOCRATIC PHILOSOPHERS
Thales - Assumed Earth to be floating in water
Anaximander - Formulated a theory of the origin and evolution of life.
Anaximenes - Suggests that air is the primary substance
Heraclitus - “change is the essence of all being” and fire plays a crucial role in the
process.
Leucippus - Introduces the first idea of the atom, an indivisible unit of matter.
Democritus - thought that atoms are solid, indestructible particles that are
separated by empty space
Pythagoras - Recognizes that Earth is sphere
Pythagoreans - viewed the universe as form and number.
Hippocrates - Recognized as Father of Medicine
Hippocratic Oath - encourages separation of medicine from religion
SOCRATIC PHILOSOPHERS
Socrates - Contribute knowledge through dialogues using the Socratic Method
Plato - Coined the term element and established the Academy Used abstract
geometry models rather than empirical observations
Aristotle - Elements undergo changes when they combine and have qualities that
are based on observations using our senses.
-Proposed the fifth element as aether, Established the Lyceum, Considered as
Father of Biology, Introduced the inductive method
Aristarchus – originally proposed Sun-centered universe (Heliocentrism).
Claudius Ptolemy - calculated size of Earth and its distance to the Moon
-Earth-centered model (Geocentrism) and became the most common cosmological
view until Middle Ages.
Herophilus – Father of Anatomy
Erasistratus – founder of Physiology
Euclid – Father of Modern Geometry
Archimedes – Father of Mathematics
MIDDLE AGES (476 – 1450 A.D.)
Also known as Medieval Period
European history between the fall of Roman Empire and beginning of Renaissance
Birth of ideas - many scientific discoveries and technological advancement.
EARLY/DARK MIDDLE AGES DISCOVERIES (476-1000 A.D.)
Slow progress of Science in Europe, rise of Catholic Church and suppressing natural
scientists’ discoveries
Islamic Empire became the most advanced civilization
Agricultural and Transportation discoveries: Heavy plough, Horse collar
Science in China: Gun powder, Paper, Mechanical clock, Compass - a magnetized
needle placed on a straw floating on water for reliable navigation
SCIENCE AND MATHEMATICS IN INDIA
-Recognition of zero in mathematics
-Introduction of decimal system
ARAB SCIENCE
Many of the works of the ancients have been preserved (including Ptolemy’s
Astronomy) because they were translated into Arabic.
Toledan Tables (by al-Zarkali), a collection of mathematical tables used to predict
the movements of the Sun, Moon and planets relative to the fixed stars.
Discovery of borax
Firstly to synthesize sal-ammoniac (ammonium chloride)
Science of anatomy did not progress because dissection of corpses is not allowed by
Islamic law.
HIGH MIDDLE (1000-1450 A.D.)
Rebirth of Science in Europe
St. Thomas Aquinas – founder of Scholastic Schools
Scholastic – Christian philosophers that set out to absorb the newly gained
knowledge of the ancients (Plato and Aristotle) and reconcile it with teachings of
the church
Roger Bacon – use experimentation to gain new knowledge
Many scientists started to question Aristotelian teachings (Theory of Motion and
Earth’s fixity)
Water Wheel - most important source of mechanical power throughout northern
Europe for many centuries.
Black Death - 2nd Bubonic Plague Pandemic caused by the plague bacterium
(Yersinia pestis) carried by fleas living on the black rats
MODERN AGE (1453 - 1659 AD)
RENAISSANCE PERIOD - scientists began to perform many experiments
Scientific Method – scientific process based on observation and experimentation,
popularized by Francis Bacon.
Printing Press – introduced by Johannes Gutenberg using movable type printing
Bible – world’s most printed book.
Philippus Aureolus Paracelsus – discovered Laudanum, tincture of opium as
painkiller
Tartaglia (Nicolo Fontana) – discovered Pascal’s triangle and elevation of 45o for
maximum distance shot of a canon
Leonardo da Vinci – known for his engineering of canal locks, cathedrals, and
engines of war. He was also known for of physical concepts such as inertia, and
sketches for working parachutes and helicopters.
SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTION
Nicolas Copernicus – successfully proposed the Heliocentric Theory, published in
his book De revolutionibus orbium caelestium (The Revolution of Celestial Bodies)
Johannes Kepler – Kepler’s Law of Planetary Motion:
- describe a planet’s orbit as elliptical, the speed at which it travels
- time it needs to complete one revolution around the Sun
Galileo Galilei – first scientist of Scientific Revolution
- Law of Motion (force causes acceleration)
- Discovered pendulum and thermometer
- Dialogue on Two New Sciences, last published work
- Validated Copernican system using his own telescope and observations
craters and mountains of the moon, moons of Jupiter, phases of Venus, stars
of Milky Way and sunspots.
Tycho Brahe – first to describe 1572 Supernova and published the positions of 777
stars
-determined the distance of 1577 comet from Earth using parallax
- Believes that Sun and Moon revolved around Earth and other planets (Geo-
heliocentric)
John Ray – first to use species as the fundamental unit of classification
Carolus Linnaeus – Father of Modern Taxonomy
- Modern system of classification of living organisms
- Binomial System of Nomenclature
Andreas Vesalius – Father of Modern Anatomy
- De humani corporis fabrica (Structure of the Human Body), the first
accurate illustrations of internal human anatomy.
William Harvey - the first to recognize the full circulation of the blood in the
human body
Marcello Malpighi discovered capillaries
Blaise Pascal – discovered Pascaline, first mechanical calculator that used gears
Evangelista Torricelli – invented first barometer using mercury, leading to
production of first vacuum known to science
ENLIGHTENMENT (1735-1819)
Isaac Newton – formulated the laws of motion and universal gravitation
- Nature of white light
- Introduced calculus together with Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz
César-François Cassini – first national geographic survey, resulting in the first map
produced according to modern principles.
James Watt – steam engines
Jean Baptiste de Lamarck – first to propose Theory of Evolution he called
Transformation, acquired characteristics gained during an organism’s life and can
be inherited by the organism’s offspring
Charles Darwin – Father of Evolution, demonstrated that all living things evolved
from earlier forms of life by the process of natural selection and published Origin
of species
Sigmund Freud – Founder of Psychoanalysis
- importance of childhood experiences and sex in the development of affective
disorder (Psychosexual Stages of Development)
- structured model of ego psychology (id, ego, super-ego)
Alan Turing – developed Turing Machine, basis for the first computer
- Turing Test - a computer in one room that can communicate with humans in
another room must be able to convince the humans that it is intelligent
To direct the use of biofuels, establishing for this purpose the biofuel
program, appropriating funds therefore, and for other purposes.
Pres. Benigno Aquino III-Recognized scientific researchers
Gavino C. Trono – seaweed species
Angel Alcala – marine biology research
Ramon Barba – induction of flowering of mango
Edgardo Gomez – national conservation of coral reefs
Abelardo Aguilar – discovered erythromycin
Gregorio Zara – invented videophone
Fabian Dayrit – research on herbal medicine
Diosdado Banatao – invented single-chip graphical use interface (for internet)
Daniel Dingel – water-powered car
Gregory Ligot Tangonan – research in the field of Communications Technology
Fe Del Mundo – invented incubator
Lourdes Cruz – research on sea snail venom
S&T IN NATION BUILDING
S&T DEFINED
Science is the systematic process of obtaining knowledge of the physical and
natural world through observation and experiment.
Technology is the application of scientific knowledge for practical purposes.
Importance of S&T in Importance of S&T Impact of Technology
National Development • Better life on Society
• Wealth creation • Information • Communication
• Improvement in the • Comfort • Information
quality of life • Education • Transportation
• Society transformation • Save time and money • Education
• Economic growth
Lord Jesus, You know that I am very anxious about the tests and exams that I have to face very soon, and ask that you
would calm my anxious, clouded thoughts. Please calm these nerves that I have, and let me rest in you always.