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Pré-Publication, Document De Travail Année : 2014

What good's a text? Textuality, orality, and mathematical astronomy in early imperial China

Résumé

This paper examines a 226 CE court debate on li 曆 mathematical astronomy at the Cao-Wei (226–265) as a case study in the role of orality and person-to-person exchange in the transmission of astronomical knowledge in early imperial China. The li- and mathematics-related manuscripts to have come down to us from the early imperial period often suffer from textual corruption, the form that this corruption takes being rooted in a culture of manuscript transmission by visual copying. Where numbers are involved, such corruption can significantly affect a text’s readability, reliability, and utility, and it is hardly a surprise, I argue, that actors speak of learning li by any way but reading. In 226 CE, two men showed up to a debate with different versions of Liu Hong’s 劉洪 (fl. 167–206 CE) Supernal Icon li (Qianxiang li 乾象曆), the one—an assistant to the astronomer royale—trying to best it, and the other—Liu Hong’s disciple—trying to defend it. Reconstructing the tortuous route by which Liu Hong’s astronomy made it into each man’s hands via a transmission network spanning the Three Kingdoms, I argue that this particular debacle, and its conclusion, are to be expected from the particular mode of oral and written transmission particular to astronomy in this age.
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Dates et versions

halshs-01362429 , version 1 (08-09-2016)
halshs-01362429 , version 2 (05-10-2016)

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Paternité - Pas d'utilisation commerciale - Pas de modification

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  • HAL Id : halshs-01362429 , version 1

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Daniel Patrick Morgan. What good's a text? Textuality, orality, and mathematical astronomy in early imperial China. 2014. ⟨halshs-01362429v1⟩
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