fbpx
Wikipedia

Dream Pool Essays

The Dream Pool Essays (or Dream Torrent Essays)[1] was an extensive book written by the Chinese polymath and statesman Shen Kuo (1031–1095), published in 1088 during the Song dynasty (960–1279) of China. Shen compiled this encyclopedic work while living in forced retirement from government office, naming the book after his private estate near modern Zhenjiang, Jiangsu province. The Dream Pool Essays was heavily reorganized in reprint editions by later Chinese authors from the late 11th to 17th centuries. In modern times it has been translated from Chinese into several languages. These include English, German, French, and Japanese translations.

Dream Pool Essays
Traditional Chinese夢溪筆談
Simplified Chinese梦溪笔谈
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinMèng Xī Bǐtán
Wade–GilesMeng4 Hsi1 Pi3-t'an2
Wu
Suzhounesemon6 chi1 piq7 de2
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutpingmung6 kai1 bat1 taam4
Middle Chinese
Middle Chinese/mɨuŋH kʰei pˠiɪt̚ dɑm/
Shen Kuo (沈括) (1031–1095 AD)

The Dream Pool Essays covers a range of topics including discoveries and advancements in Traditional Chinese medicine, mathematics, astronomy, science and technology, optics, architecture and civil engineering, metallurgy, and early archaeology. Observations of the natural world included those of wildlife, meteorology, hypotheses advancing early ideas in geomorphology and climate change based on findings of petrification and natural erosion, and strange recorded phenomena such as the description of an unidentified flying object. In addition to establishing the theory of true north in magnetic declination towards the north pole,[2] Shen was also the first to record the use of a compass for navigation,[3] the first to describe the invention of movable type printing by contemporary artisan Bi Sheng,[4] and the first in China to describe a drydock for repairing boats out of water.[5]

History

Shen Kuo was a renowned government official and military general during the Northern Song period of China. However, he was impeached from office by chancellor Cai Que (蔡確; 1036–1093), who wrongly held him responsible for a Song Chinese military defeat by the Tangut-led Western Xia dynasty in 1081 during the Song–Xia wars.[6] When Shen compiled and published The Dream Pool Essays (Meng Xi Bi Tan, 《梦溪笔谈》) in 1088, he was living in retirement and relative isolation on his lavish garden estate near modern-day Zhenjiang, Jiangsu province. He titled the book after the name he gave to his private estate, the "Dream Brook". In English a full literal translation of the title is Brush Talks from a Dream Brook, and Shen Kuo is quoted as saying:[7]

Because I had only my writing brush and ink slab to converse with, I call it Brush Talks.

As the historian Chen Dengyuan points out, much of Shen Kuo's written work was probably purged under the leadership of minister Cai Jing (1046–1126).[8] For example, only six of Shen's books remain, and four of these have been significantly altered since the time they were penned by the author.[9] The Dream Pool Essays was first quoted in a Chinese written work of 1095 AD, showing that even towards the end of Shen's life his final book was becoming widely printed.[10] The book was originally 30 chapters long, yet an unknown Chinese author's edition of 1166 AD edited and reorganized the work into 26 chapters.[10] There is one surviving copy of this 1166 edition now in Japan, while a Chinese reprint was produced in 1305.[10] In 1631 another edition was printed, but it was heavily reorganized into three broad chapters.[10]

In modern times, Zhang Jiaju's biographical work Shen Kuo (1962) contains selected translations of the Dream Pool Essays from Middle Chinese into modern Vernacular Chinese.[11] The Dream Pool Essays has also been translated from Chinese into various foreign languages. Various volumes of Joseph Needham's Science and Civilization in China series published since 1954 contain a large amount of selected English translations of the Dream Pool Essays.[12] The Brush Talks from Dream Brook is the first complete English translation, presented in two volumes by translators Wang Hong and Zhao Zheng, and published in 2008 by the Sichuan People’s Publishing House, China. A Japanese translation of the 1166 Chinese edition was prepared by the History of Science Seminar, Institute for Research in Humanities (Jimbun Kagaku Kenkyusho) for Kyoto University, and printed by the author Umehara Kaoru in his 3-volume edition of Bokei hitsudan (1978–1981).[12] Quoted excerpts from the Dream Pool Essays in French were printed in the written works of J. Brenier in 1989 [a] and J. F. Billeter in 1993.[b] A complete German translation is offered in Shen Kuo: Pinselunterhaltungen am Traumbach. Das Gesamte Wissen des Alten China, translated and edited by Konrad Herrmann, and published in 1997 by Diederichs Verlag Munich (Gelbe Reihe Magnum, vol. I).

Quotes

Geological theory

With Shen's writings on fossils, geomorphology, and shifting geographical climates, he states in the following passages:

In the Zhi-ping reign period [1064–67 AD] a man of Zezhou was digging a well in his garden, and unearthed something shaped like a squirming serpent, or dragon. He was so frightened by it that he dared not touch it, but after some time, seeing that it did not move, he examined it and found it to be stone. The ignorant country people smashed it, but Zheng Boshun, who was magistrate of Jincheng at the time, got hold of a large piece of it on which scale-like markings were to be seen exactly like those on a living creature. Thus a serpent or some kind of marine snake (chhen) had certainly been turned to stone, as happens with the 'stone-crabs'.[13][14]

In recent years [cca. 1080] there was a landslide on the bank of a large river in Yong-ning Guan near Yanzhou. The bank collapsed, opening a space of several dozens of feet, and under the ground a forest of bamboo shoots was thus revealed. It contained several hundred bamboo with their roots and trunks all complete, and all turned to stone...Now bamboos do not grow in Yanzhou. These were several dozens of feet below the present surface of the ground, and we do not know in what dynasty they could possibly have grown. Perhaps in very ancient times the climate was different so that the place was low, damp, gloomy, and suitable for bamboos. On the Jin-hua Shan in Wuzhou there are stone pine-cones, and stones formed from peach kernels, stone bulrush roots, stone fishes, crabs, and so on, but as these are all (modern) native products of that place, people are not very surprised at them. But these petrified bamboos appeared under the ground so deep, though they are not produced in that place today. This is a very strange thing.[14][15]

Astronomy

When the Director of the Astronomical Observatory asked Shen Kuo if the shapes of the sun and moon were round like balls or flat like fans, Shen Kuo explained his reasoning for the former:

If they were like balls they would surely obstruct each other when they met. I replied that these celestial bodies were certainly like balls. How do we know this? By the waxing and waning of the moon. The moon itself gives forth no light, but is like a ball of silver; the light is the light of the sun (reflected). When the brightness is first seen, the sun(-light passes almost) alongside, so the side only is illuminated and looks like a crescent. When the sun gradually gets further away, the light shines slanting, and the moon is full, round like a bullet. If half of a sphere is covered with (white) powder and looked at from the side, the covered part will look like a crescent; if looked at from the front, it will appear round. Thus we know that the celestial bodies are spherical.[16]

When the director of the astronomical observatory asked Shen Kuo why eclipses occurred only on an occasional basis while in conjunction and opposition once a day, Shen Kuo wrote:

I answered that the ecliptic and the moon's path are like two rings, lying one over the other, but distant by a small amount. (If this obliquity did not exist), the sun would be eclipsed whenever the two bodies were in conjunction, and the moon would be eclipsed whenever they were exactly in position. But (in fact) though they may occupy the same degree, the two paths are not (always) near (each other), and so naturally the bodies do not (intrude) upon one another.[16]

On the use of the sighting tube to fix the position of the pole star, Shen Kuo wrote:

Before Han times it was believed that the pole star was in the center of the sky, so it was called Jixing (Summit star). Zu Geng(-zhi) found out with the help of the sighting tube that the point in the sky which really does not move was a little more than 1 degree away from the summit star. In the Xining reign-period (1068–1077) I accepted the order of the emperor to take charge of the Bureau of the Calendar. I then tried to find the true pole by means of the tube. On the very first night I noticed that the star which could be seen through the tube moved after a while outside the field of view. I realized, therefore, that the tube was too small, so I increased the size of the tube by stages. After three months' trials I adjusted it so that the star would go round and round within the field of view without disappearing. In this way I found that the pole star was distant from the true pole somewhat more than 3 degrees. We used to make the diagrams of the field, plotting the positions of the star from the time when it entered the field of view, observing after nightfall, at midnight, and early in the morning before dawn. Two hundred of such diagrams showed that the 'pole star' was really a circumpolar star. And this I stated in my detailed report to the emperor.[17]

Movable type printing

On the methods of Bi Sheng's invention of movable type printing between the years 1041 to 1048 AD, Shen Kuo wrote:

[Bi Sheng] took sticky clay and cut in it characters as thin as the edge of a coin. Each character formed, as it were, a single type. He baked them in the fire to make them hard. He had previously prepared an iron plate and he had covered his plate with a mixture of pine resin, wax, and paper ashes. When he wished to print, he took an iron frame and set it on the iron plate. In this he placed the types, set close together. When the frame was full, the whole made one solid block of type. He then placed it near the fire to warm it. When the paste [at the back] was slightly melted, he took a smooth board and pressed it over the surface, so that the block of type became as even as a whetstone. If one were to print only two or three copies, this method would be neither simple nor easy. But for printing hundreds or thousands of copies, it was marvelously quick. As a rule he kept two forms going. While the impression was being made from the one form, the type was being put in place on the other. When the printing of the one form was finished, the other was then ready. In this way the two forms alternated and the printing was done with great rapidity.[18]

Personal beliefs and philosophy

Of Taoism and the inability of empirical science to explain everything in the world, Shen Kuo wrote:

Those in the world who speak of the regularities underlying the phenomena, it seems, manage to apprehend their crude traces. But these regularities have their very subtle aspect, which those who rely on mathematical astronomy cannot know of. Still even these are nothing more than traces. As for the spiritual processes described in the [Book of Changes] that "when they are stimulated, penetrate every situation in the realm," mere traces have nothing to do with them. This spiritual state by which foreknowledge is attained can hardly be sought through changes, of which in any case only the cruder sort are attainable. What I have called the subtlest aspect of these traces, those who discuss the celestial bodies attempt to know by depending on mathematical astronomy; but astronomy is nothing more than the outcome of conjecture.[19]

Dissertation on the Timberwork Manual

Below are two passages from Shen's book outlining the basics contained in Yu Hao's Timberwork Manual. Yu Hao was a Chinese architect of the earlier 10th, and Kuo was one to praise his work. In the first quote, Shen Kuo describes a scene where Yu Hao gives advice to another artisan architect about slanting struts for diagonal wind bracing:

When Mr. Qian (Wei-yan) was Governor of the two Zhejiang provinces, he authorized the building of a wooden pagoda at the Fan-tian Si (Brahma-Heaven Temple) in Hangzhou with a design of twice three stories. While it was under construction General Chhien went up to the top and was worried because it swayed a little. But the Master-Builder explained that as the tiles had not yet been put on, the upper part was still rather light, hence the effect. So then they put on all the tiles, but the sway continued as before. Being at a loss what to do, he privately sent his wife to see the wife of Yu Hao with a present of golden hair pins, and enquire about the cause of the motion. (Yu) Hao laughed and said: 'That's easy, just fit in struts (pan) to settle the work, fixed with (iron) nails, and it will not move any more.' The Master-Builder followed his advice, and the tower stood quite firm. This is because the nailed struts filled in and bound together (all the members) up and down so that the six planes (above and below, front and back, left and right) were mutually linked like the cage of the thorax. Although people might walk on the struts, the six planes grasped and supported each other, so naturally there could be no more motion. Everybody acknowledged the expertise thus shown.[20]

In this next quote, Shen Kuo describes the dimensions and types of architecture outlined in Yu Hao's book:

Methods of building construction are described in the Timberwork Manual, which, some say, was written by Yu Hao. (According to that book), buildings have three basic units of proportion, what is above the cross-beams follows the Upperwork Unit, what is above the ground floor follows the Middlework Unit, and everything below that (platforms, foundations, paving, etc.) follows the Lowerwork Unit. The length of the cross-beams will naturally govern the lengths of the uppermost cross-beams as well as the rafters, etc. Thus for a (main) cross-beam of (8 ft) length, an uppermost cross-beam of (3.5 ft) length will be needed. (The proportions are maintained) in larger and smaller halls. This (2/28) is the Upperwork Unit. Similarly, the dimensions of the foundations must match the dimensions of the columns to be used, as also those of the (side-) rafters, etc. For example, a column (11 ft) high will need a platform (4.5 ft) high. So also for all the other components, corbelled brackets, projecting rafters, other rafters, all have their fixed proportions. All these follow the Middlework Unit (2/24). Now below of ramps (and steps) there are three kinds, steep, easy-going, and intermediate. In places these gradients are based upon a unit derived from the imperial litters. Steep ramps are ramps for ascending which the leading and trailing bearers have to extend their arms fully down and up respectively (ratio 3/35). Easy-going ramps are those for which the leaders use elbow length and the trailers shoulder height (ratio 1/38); intermediate ones are negotiated by the leaders with downstretched arms and trailers at shoulder height (ratio 2/18). These are the Lowerwork Units. The book (of Yu Hao) had three chapters. But builders in recent years have become much more precise and skillful (yen shan) than formerly. Thus for some time past the old Timberwork Manual has fallen out of use. But (unfortunately) there is hardly anybody capable of writing a new one. To do that would be a masterpiece in itself![21]

Botany and zoology

Shen Kuo described the natural predator insect similarly shaped to the gou-he ("dog-grubs") which preyed upon the agricultural pest infestation of zi-fang, the moth Leucania separata:[22]

In the Yuan-Feng reign period (1078–1085), in the Qingzhou region, an outbreak of zi-fang insects caused serious damage to the crops in the fields in autumn. Suddenly another insect appeared in swarms of thousands and tens of thousands, covering the entire ground area. It was shaped like earth-burrowing gou-he (dog grubs), and its mouth was flanked by pincers. Whenever it met a zi-fang, it would seize it with the pincers and break the poor beast into two bits. Within ten days all the zi-fang had disappeared, so the locality had an abundant harvest. Such kinds of insects have been known since antiquity and the local people call them pang-bu-ken ("not allowing other [insects] to be").[22]

Natural phenomena

Around 1078, Shen Kuo wrote an accurate description of the damaging effects of lightning to buildings and to the specific materials of objects within. Taking an objective and speculative viewpoint, he stated:

A house belonging to Li Shunju was struck by lightning. Brilliant sparkling light was seen under the eaves. Everyone thought that the hall would be burnt, and those who were inside rushed out. After the thunder had abated, the house was found to be alright, though its walls and the paper on the windows were blackened. On certain wooden shelves, certain lacquered vessels with silver mouths had been struck by the lightning, so that the silver had melted and dropped to the ground, but the lacquer was not even scorched. Also, a valuable sword made of strong steel had been melted to liquid, without the parts of the house nearby being affected. One would have thought that the thatch and wood would have been burnt up first, yet here were metals melted and no injury to thatch and wood. This is beyond the understanding of ordinary people. There are Buddhist books which speak of 'dragon fire' which burns more fiercely when it meets with water instead of being extinguished by water like 'human' fire.[i] Most people can only judge of things by the experiences of ordinary life, but phenomena outside the scope of this are really quite numerous. How insecure it is to investigate natural principles using only the light of common knowledge, and subjective ideas.[23]

"Strange Happenings"

A passage called "Strange Happenings" contains a peculiar account of an unidentified flying object. Shen wrote that, during the reign of Emperor Renzong (1022–1063), an object as bright as a pearl occasionally hovered over the city of Yangzhou at night, but described first by local inhabitants of eastern Anhui and then in Jiangsu.[24] Shen wrote that a man near Xingkai Lake observed this curious object; allegedly it:

...opened its door and a flood of intense light like sunbeams darted out of it, then the outer shell opened up, appearing as large as a bed with a big pearl the size of a fist illuminating the interior in silvery white. The intense silver-white light, shot from the interior, was too strong for human eyes to behold; it cast shadows of every tree within a radius of ten miles. The spectacle was like the rising Sun, lighting up the distant sky and woods in red. Then all of a sudden, the object took off at a tremendous speed and descended upon the lake like the Sun setting.[25]

Shen went on to say that Yibo, a poet of Gaoyou, wrote a poem about this "pearl" after witnessing it. Shen wrote that since the "pearl" often made an appearance around Fanliang in Yangzhou, the people there erected a "Pearl Pavilion" on a wayside, where people came by boat in hopes to see the mysterious flying object.[26]

Swords

Around 1065 Shen Kuo wrote about the assembly methods for swords, and the patterns produced in the steel:[27]

Ancient people use chi kang, (combined steel), for the edge, and jou thieh (soft iron) for the back, otherwise it would often break. Too strong a weapon will cut and destroy its own edge; that is why it is advisable to use nothing but combined steel. As for the yu-chhang (fish intestines) effect, it is what is now called the 'snake-coiling' steel sword, or alternatively, the 'pine tree design'. If you cook a fish fully and remove its bones, the shape of its guts will be seen to be like the lines on a 'snake-coiling sword'.[28]

Chinese clothing

Shen Kuo observed that the Chinese since some centuries prior had entirely adopted barbarian fashions.

中國衣冠,自北齊以來,乃全用胡服。窄袖、緋綠短衣、長靿靴、有鞢帶,皆胡服也。窄袖利於馳射,短衣、長靿皆便於涉草。胡人樂茂草,常寢處其間,予使北時皆見之。雖王庭亦在深荐中。予至胡庭日,新雨過,涉草,衣褲皆濡,唯胡人都無所沾。帶衣所垂蹀躞,蓋欲佩帶弓劍、帨、算囊、刀勵之類。

The clothing of China since the Northern Qi [550–557] onward has been entirely made barbarian. Narrow sleeves, short dark red or green robes, tall boots and metal girdle ornaments are all barbarian garb. The narrow sleeves are useful when shooting while galloping. The short robes and tall boots are convenient when passing through tall grass. The barbarians all enjoy thick grass as they always sleep in it. I saw them all do it when I was sent north. Even the king's court is in the deep grasses. On the day I had arrived at the barbarian court the new rains had passed and I waded through the grass. My robes and trousers were all soaked, but the barbarians were not at all wet. With things hanging from robe and belt they walk about. One perhaps might want to hang items like a bow and blade, handkerchief, coin purse or knife from the belt.

Book chapters

On the humanities:

On natural sciences:

Humanistic sciences:

(Total number of paragraphs = 584)[29]

See also

Notes

  • ^ a: Shen Gua (1031–1091) et les Sciences, Revue d'Histoire des Sciences et de Leurs Applications (1989)
  • ^ b: Florilège des notes du Ruisseau des rêves (Mengxi bitan) de Shen Gua (1031–1095) by Jean-François Billeter and 31 of his Geneva University students, in Études Asiatiques (1993)
  • ^ i: See Greek fire

References

Citations

  1. ^ John Makeham (2008). China: The World's Oldest Living Civilization Revealed. Thames & Hudson. p. 239. ISBN 978-0-500-25142-3.
  2. ^ Sivin (1995), III, 22.
  3. ^ Mohn (2003), 1.
  4. ^ Bowman (2000), 105.
  5. ^ Needham (1986), Volume 4, Part 3, 660.
  6. ^ Sivin (1995), III, 9.
  7. ^ in his biography in the Dictionary of Scientific Biography (New York 1970–1990)
  8. ^ Sivin, III, 44.
  9. ^ Sivin, III, 44–45.
  10. ^ a b c d Sivin, III, 45.
  11. ^ 张家驹 (1962). 沈括. 上海人民出版社.
  12. ^ a b Sivin (1995), III, 49.
  13. ^ Needham, Volume 3, 618.
  14. ^ a b Chan, 15.
  15. ^ Needham, Volume 3, 614.
  16. ^ a b Needham, Volume 3, 415–416.
  17. ^ Needham, Volume 3, 262.
  18. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 1, 201.
  19. ^ Ropp, 170.
  20. ^ Needham, Volume 4, Part 3, 141.
  21. ^ Needham, Volume 4, 82–84.
  22. ^ a b Needham, Volume 6, Part 1, 545.
  23. ^ Needham, Volume 3, 482.
  24. ^ Dong (2000), 69. (Professor Zhang Longqiao of the Chinese Department of Peking Teachers' College, who popularized this account in Beijing's Guang Ming Daily on February 18, 1979, in an article called "Could It Be That A Visitor From Outer Space Visited China Long Ago?", states is "a clue that a flying craft from some other planet once landed somewhere near Yangzhou in China.")
  25. ^ Dong (2000), 69–70.
  26. ^ Dong (2000), 70–71.
  27. ^ "A History of Metallography" by Cyril Smith (1960)
  28. ^ "A History of Metallography" by Cyril Smith (1960) Page 45
  29. ^ Needham, Volume 1, 136.

Bibliography

  • Bowman, John S. (2000). Columbia Chronologies of Asian History and Culture. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Chan, Alan Kam-leung and Gregory K. Clancey, Hui-Chieh Loy (2002). Historical Perspectives on East Asian Science, Technology and Medicine. Singapore: Singapore University Press ISBN 9971-69-259-7
  • Mohn, Peter (2003). Magnetism in the Solid State: An Introduction. New York: Springer-Verlag Inc. ISBN 3-540-43183-7.
  • Needham, Joseph (1986). Science and Civilization in China: Volume 1, Introductory Orientations. Taipei: Caves Books, Ltd.
  • Needham, Joseph (1986). Science and Civilization in China: Volume 3, Mathematics and the Sciences of the Heavens and the Earth. Taipei: Caves Books, Ltd.
  • Needham, Joseph (1986). Science and Civilization in China: Volume 4, Physics and Physical Technology, Part 3: Civil Engineering and Nautics. Taipei: Caves Books, Ltd.
  • Needham, Joseph (1986). Science and Civilization in China: Volume 5, Chemistry and Chemical Technology, Part 1: Paper and Printing. Taipei: Caves Books, Ltd.
  • Needham, Joseph (1986). Science and Civilization in China: Volume 6, Biology and Biological Technology, Part 1: Botany. Taipei, Caves Books Ltd.
  • Sivin, Nathan (1995). Science in Ancient China: Researches and Reflections. Brookfield, Vermont: VARIORUM, Ashgate Publishing.
  • Ropp, Paul S. (1990). Heritage of China: Contemporary Perspectives on Chinese History. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-06440-9

Further reading

External links

dream, pool, essays, dream, torrent, essays, extensive, book, written, chinese, polymath, statesman, shen, 1031, 1095, published, 1088, during, song, dynasty, 1279, china, shen, compiled, this, encyclopedic, work, while, living, forced, retirement, from, gover. The Dream Pool Essays or Dream Torrent Essays 1 was an extensive book written by the Chinese polymath and statesman Shen Kuo 1031 1095 published in 1088 during the Song dynasty 960 1279 of China Shen compiled this encyclopedic work while living in forced retirement from government office naming the book after his private estate near modern Zhenjiang Jiangsu province The Dream Pool Essays was heavily reorganized in reprint editions by later Chinese authors from the late 11th to 17th centuries In modern times it has been translated from Chinese into several languages These include English German French and Japanese translations Dream Pool EssaysTraditional Chinese夢溪筆談Simplified Chinese梦溪笔谈TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinMeng Xi BǐtanWade GilesMeng4 Hsi1 Pi3 t an2WuSuzhounesemon6 chi1 piq7 de2Yue CantoneseJyutpingmung6 kai1 bat1 taam4Middle ChineseMiddle Chinese mɨuŋH kʰei pˠiɪt dɑm Shen Kuo 沈括 1031 1095 AD The Dream Pool Essays covers a range of topics including discoveries and advancements in Traditional Chinese medicine mathematics astronomy science and technology optics architecture and civil engineering metallurgy and early archaeology Observations of the natural world included those of wildlife meteorology hypotheses advancing early ideas in geomorphology and climate change based on findings of petrification and natural erosion and strange recorded phenomena such as the description of an unidentified flying object In addition to establishing the theory of true north in magnetic declination towards the north pole 2 Shen was also the first to record the use of a compass for navigation 3 the first to describe the invention of movable type printing by contemporary artisan Bi Sheng 4 and the first in China to describe a drydock for repairing boats out of water 5 Contents 1 History 2 Quotes 2 1 Geological theory 2 2 Astronomy 2 3 Movable type printing 2 4 Personal beliefs and philosophy 2 5 Dissertation on the Timberwork Manual 2 6 Botany and zoology 2 7 Natural phenomena 2 8 Strange Happenings 2 9 Swords 2 10 Chinese clothing 3 Book chapters 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Bibliography 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory EditShen Kuo was a renowned government official and military general during the Northern Song period of China However he was impeached from office by chancellor Cai Que 蔡確 1036 1093 who wrongly held him responsible for a Song Chinese military defeat by the Tangut led Western Xia dynasty in 1081 during the Song Xia wars 6 When Shen compiled and published The Dream Pool Essays Meng Xi Bi Tan 梦溪笔谈 in 1088 he was living in retirement and relative isolation on his lavish garden estate near modern day Zhenjiang Jiangsu province He titled the book after the name he gave to his private estate the Dream Brook In English a full literal translation of the title is Brush Talks from a Dream Brook and Shen Kuo is quoted as saying 7 Because I had only my writing brush and ink slab to converse with I call it Brush Talks As the historian Chen Dengyuan points out much of Shen Kuo s written work was probably purged under the leadership of minister Cai Jing 1046 1126 8 For example only six of Shen s books remain and four of these have been significantly altered since the time they were penned by the author 9 The Dream Pool Essays was first quoted in a Chinese written work of 1095 AD showing that even towards the end of Shen s life his final book was becoming widely printed 10 The book was originally 30 chapters long yet an unknown Chinese author s edition of 1166 AD edited and reorganized the work into 26 chapters 10 There is one surviving copy of this 1166 edition now in Japan while a Chinese reprint was produced in 1305 10 In 1631 another edition was printed but it was heavily reorganized into three broad chapters 10 In modern times Zhang Jiaju s biographical work Shen Kuo 1962 contains selected translations of the Dream Pool Essays from Middle Chinese into modern Vernacular Chinese 11 The Dream Pool Essays has also been translated from Chinese into various foreign languages Various volumes of Joseph Needham s Science and Civilization in China series published since 1954 contain a large amount of selected English translations of the Dream Pool Essays 12 The Brush Talks from Dream Brook is the first complete English translation presented in two volumes by translators Wang Hong and Zhao Zheng and published in 2008 by the Sichuan People s Publishing House China A Japanese translation of the 1166 Chinese edition was prepared by the History of Science Seminar Institute for Research in Humanities Jimbun Kagaku Kenkyusho for Kyoto University and printed by the author Umehara Kaoru in his 3 volume edition of Bokei hitsudan 1978 1981 12 Quoted excerpts from the Dream Pool Essays in French were printed in the written works of J Brenier in 1989 a and J F Billeter in 1993 b A complete German translation is offered in Shen Kuo Pinselunterhaltungen am Traumbach Das Gesamte Wissen des Alten China translated and edited by Konrad Herrmann and published in 1997 by Diederichs Verlag Munich Gelbe Reihe Magnum vol I Quotes EditGeological theory Edit With Shen s writings on fossils geomorphology and shifting geographical climates he states in the following passages In the Zhi ping reign period 1064 67 AD a man of Zezhou was digging a well in his garden and unearthed something shaped like a squirming serpent or dragon He was so frightened by it that he dared not touch it but after some time seeing that it did not move he examined it and found it to be stone The ignorant country people smashed it but Zheng Boshun who was magistrate of Jincheng at the time got hold of a large piece of it on which scale like markings were to be seen exactly like those on a living creature Thus a serpent or some kind of marine snake chhen had certainly been turned to stone as happens with the stone crabs 13 14 In recent years cca 1080 there was a landslide on the bank of a large river in Yong ning Guan near Yanzhou The bank collapsed opening a space of several dozens of feet and under the ground a forest of bamboo shoots was thus revealed It contained several hundred bamboo with their roots and trunks all complete and all turned to stone Now bamboos do not grow in Yanzhou These were several dozens of feet below the present surface of the ground and we do not know in what dynasty they could possibly have grown Perhaps in very ancient times the climate was different so that the place was low damp gloomy and suitable for bamboos On the Jin hua Shan in Wuzhou there are stone pine cones and stones formed from peach kernels stone bulrush roots stone fishes crabs and so on but as these are all modern native products of that place people are not very surprised at them But these petrified bamboos appeared under the ground so deep though they are not produced in that place today This is a very strange thing 14 15 Astronomy Edit When the Director of the Astronomical Observatory asked Shen Kuo if the shapes of the sun and moon were round like balls or flat like fans Shen Kuo explained his reasoning for the former If they were like balls they would surely obstruct each other when they met I replied that these celestial bodies were certainly like balls How do we know this By the waxing and waning of the moon The moon itself gives forth no light but is like a ball of silver the light is the light of the sun reflected When the brightness is first seen the sun light passes almost alongside so the side only is illuminated and looks like a crescent When the sun gradually gets further away the light shines slanting and the moon is full round like a bullet If half of a sphere is covered with white powder and looked at from the side the covered part will look like a crescent if looked at from the front it will appear round Thus we know that the celestial bodies are spherical 16 When the director of the astronomical observatory asked Shen Kuo why eclipses occurred only on an occasional basis while in conjunction and opposition once a day Shen Kuo wrote I answered that the ecliptic and the moon s path are like two rings lying one over the other but distant by a small amount If this obliquity did not exist the sun would be eclipsed whenever the two bodies were in conjunction and the moon would be eclipsed whenever they were exactly in position But in fact though they may occupy the same degree the two paths are not always near each other and so naturally the bodies do not intrude upon one another 16 On the use of the sighting tube to fix the position of the pole star Shen Kuo wrote Before Han times it was believed that the pole star was in the center of the sky so it was called Jixing Summit star Zu Geng zhi found out with the help of the sighting tube that the point in the sky which really does not move was a little more than 1 degree away from the summit star In the Xining reign period 1068 1077 I accepted the order of the emperor to take charge of the Bureau of the Calendar I then tried to find the true pole by means of the tube On the very first night I noticed that the star which could be seen through the tube moved after a while outside the field of view I realized therefore that the tube was too small so I increased the size of the tube by stages After three months trials I adjusted it so that the star would go round and round within the field of view without disappearing In this way I found that the pole star was distant from the true pole somewhat more than 3 degrees We used to make the diagrams of the field plotting the positions of the star from the time when it entered the field of view observing after nightfall at midnight and early in the morning before dawn Two hundred of such diagrams showed that the pole star was really a circumpolar star And this I stated in my detailed report to the emperor 17 Movable type printing Edit On the methods of Bi Sheng s invention of movable type printing between the years 1041 to 1048 AD Shen Kuo wrote Bi Sheng took sticky clay and cut in it characters as thin as the edge of a coin Each character formed as it were a single type He baked them in the fire to make them hard He had previously prepared an iron plate and he had covered his plate with a mixture of pine resin wax and paper ashes When he wished to print he took an iron frame and set it on the iron plate In this he placed the types set close together When the frame was full the whole made one solid block of type He then placed it near the fire to warm it When the paste at the back was slightly melted he took a smooth board and pressed it over the surface so that the block of type became as even as a whetstone If one were to print only two or three copies this method would be neither simple nor easy But for printing hundreds or thousands of copies it was marvelously quick As a rule he kept two forms going While the impression was being made from the one form the type was being put in place on the other When the printing of the one form was finished the other was then ready In this way the two forms alternated and the printing was done with great rapidity 18 Personal beliefs and philosophy Edit Of Taoism and the inability of empirical science to explain everything in the world Shen Kuo wrote Those in the world who speak of the regularities underlying the phenomena it seems manage to apprehend their crude traces But these regularities have their very subtle aspect which those who rely on mathematical astronomy cannot know of Still even these are nothing more than traces As for the spiritual processes described in the Book of Changes that when they are stimulated penetrate every situation in the realm mere traces have nothing to do with them This spiritual state by which foreknowledge is attained can hardly be sought through changes of which in any case only the cruder sort are attainable What I have called the subtlest aspect of these traces those who discuss the celestial bodies attempt to know by depending on mathematical astronomy but astronomy is nothing more than the outcome of conjecture 19 Dissertation on the Timberwork Manual Edit Below are two passages from Shen s book outlining the basics contained in Yu Hao s Timberwork Manual Yu Hao was a Chinese architect of the earlier 10th and Kuo was one to praise his work In the first quote Shen Kuo describes a scene where Yu Hao gives advice to another artisan architect about slanting struts for diagonal wind bracing When Mr Qian Wei yan was Governor of the two Zhejiang provinces he authorized the building of a wooden pagoda at the Fan tian Si Brahma Heaven Temple in Hangzhou with a design of twice three stories While it was under construction General Chhien went up to the top and was worried because it swayed a little But the Master Builder explained that as the tiles had not yet been put on the upper part was still rather light hence the effect So then they put on all the tiles but the sway continued as before Being at a loss what to do he privately sent his wife to see the wife of Yu Hao with a present of golden hair pins and enquire about the cause of the motion Yu Hao laughed and said That s easy just fit in struts pan to settle the work fixed with iron nails and it will not move any more The Master Builder followed his advice and the tower stood quite firm This is because the nailed struts filled in and bound together all the members up and down so that the six planes above and below front and back left and right were mutually linked like the cage of the thorax Although people might walk on the struts the six planes grasped and supported each other so naturally there could be no more motion Everybody acknowledged the expertise thus shown 20 In this next quote Shen Kuo describes the dimensions and types of architecture outlined in Yu Hao s book Methods of building construction are described in the Timberwork Manual which some say was written by Yu Hao According to that book buildings have three basic units of proportion what is above the cross beams follows the Upperwork Unit what is above the ground floor follows the Middlework Unit and everything below that platforms foundations paving etc follows the Lowerwork Unit The length of the cross beams will naturally govern the lengths of the uppermost cross beams as well as the rafters etc Thus for a main cross beam of 8 ft length an uppermost cross beam of 3 5 ft length will be needed The proportions are maintained in larger and smaller halls This 2 28 is the Upperwork Unit Similarly the dimensions of the foundations must match the dimensions of the columns to be used as also those of the side rafters etc For example a column 11 ft high will need a platform 4 5 ft high So also for all the other components corbelled brackets projecting rafters other rafters all have their fixed proportions All these follow the Middlework Unit 2 24 Now below of ramps and steps there are three kinds steep easy going and intermediate In places these gradients are based upon a unit derived from the imperial litters Steep ramps are ramps for ascending which the leading and trailing bearers have to extend their arms fully down and up respectively ratio 3 35 Easy going ramps are those for which the leaders use elbow length and the trailers shoulder height ratio 1 38 intermediate ones are negotiated by the leaders with downstretched arms and trailers at shoulder height ratio 2 18 These are the Lowerwork Units The book of Yu Hao had three chapters But builders in recent years have become much more precise and skillful yen shan than formerly Thus for some time past the old Timberwork Manual has fallen out of use But unfortunately there is hardly anybody capable of writing a new one To do that would be a masterpiece in itself 21 Botany and zoology Edit Shen Kuo described the natural predator insect similarly shaped to the gou he dog grubs which preyed upon the agricultural pest infestation of zi fang the moth Leucania separata 22 In the Yuan Feng reign period 1078 1085 in the Qingzhou region an outbreak of zi fang insects caused serious damage to the crops in the fields in autumn Suddenly another insect appeared in swarms of thousands and tens of thousands covering the entire ground area It was shaped like earth burrowing gou he dog grubs and its mouth was flanked by pincers Whenever it met a zi fang it would seize it with the pincers and break the poor beast into two bits Within ten days all the zi fang had disappeared so the locality had an abundant harvest Such kinds of insects have been known since antiquity and the local people call them pang bu ken not allowing other insects to be 22 Natural phenomena Edit Around 1078 Shen Kuo wrote an accurate description of the damaging effects of lightning to buildings and to the specific materials of objects within Taking an objective and speculative viewpoint he stated A house belonging to Li Shunju was struck by lightning Brilliant sparkling light was seen under the eaves Everyone thought that the hall would be burnt and those who were inside rushed out After the thunder had abated the house was found to be alright though its walls and the paper on the windows were blackened On certain wooden shelves certain lacquered vessels with silver mouths had been struck by the lightning so that the silver had melted and dropped to the ground but the lacquer was not even scorched Also a valuable sword made of strong steel had been melted to liquid without the parts of the house nearby being affected One would have thought that the thatch and wood would have been burnt up first yet here were metals melted and no injury to thatch and wood This is beyond the understanding of ordinary people There are Buddhist books which speak of dragon fire which burns more fiercely when it meets with water instead of being extinguished by water like human fire i Most people can only judge of things by the experiences of ordinary life but phenomena outside the scope of this are really quite numerous How insecure it is to investigate natural principles using only the light of common knowledge and subjective ideas 23 Strange Happenings Edit A passage called Strange Happenings contains a peculiar account of an unidentified flying object Shen wrote that during the reign of Emperor Renzong 1022 1063 an object as bright as a pearl occasionally hovered over the city of Yangzhou at night but described first by local inhabitants of eastern Anhui and then in Jiangsu 24 Shen wrote that a man near Xingkai Lake observed this curious object allegedly it opened its door and a flood of intense light like sunbeams darted out of it then the outer shell opened up appearing as large as a bed with a big pearl the size of a fist illuminating the interior in silvery white The intense silver white light shot from the interior was too strong for human eyes to behold it cast shadows of every tree within a radius of ten miles The spectacle was like the rising Sun lighting up the distant sky and woods in red Then all of a sudden the object took off at a tremendous speed and descended upon the lake like the Sun setting 25 Shen went on to say that Yibo a poet of Gaoyou wrote a poem about this pearl after witnessing it Shen wrote that since the pearl often made an appearance around Fanliang in Yangzhou the people there erected a Pearl Pavilion on a wayside where people came by boat in hopes to see the mysterious flying object 26 Swords Edit Around 1065 Shen Kuo wrote about the assembly methods for swords and the patterns produced in the steel 27 Ancient people use chi kang combined steel for the edge and jou thieh soft iron for the back otherwise it would often break Too strong a weapon will cut and destroy its own edge that is why it is advisable to use nothing but combined steel As for the yu chhang fish intestines effect it is what is now called the snake coiling steel sword or alternatively the pine tree design If you cook a fish fully and remove its bones the shape of its guts will be seen to be like the lines on a snake coiling sword 28 Chinese clothing Edit Shen Kuo observed that the Chinese since some centuries prior had entirely adopted barbarian fashions 中國衣冠 自北齊以來 乃全用胡服 窄袖 緋綠短衣 長靿靴 有鞢帶 皆胡服也 窄袖利於馳射 短衣 長靿皆便於涉草 胡人樂茂草 常寢處其間 予使北時皆見之 雖王庭亦在深荐中 予至胡庭日 新雨過 涉草 衣褲皆濡 唯胡人都無所沾 帶衣所垂蹀躞 蓋欲佩帶弓劍 帨 算囊 刀勵之類 The clothing of China since the Northern Qi 550 557 onward has been entirely made barbarian Narrow sleeves short dark red or green robes tall boots and metal girdle ornaments are all barbarian garb The narrow sleeves are useful when shooting while galloping The short robes and tall boots are convenient when passing through tall grass The barbarians all enjoy thick grass as they always sleep in it I saw them all do it when I was sent north Even the king s court is in the deep grasses On the day I had arrived at the barbarian court the new rains had passed and I waded through the grass My robes and trousers were all soaked but the barbarians were not at all wet With things hanging from robe and belt they walk about One perhaps might want to hang items like a bow and blade handkerchief coin purse or knife from the belt Book chapters EditOn the humanities Official life and the imperial court 60 paragraphs Academic and examination matters 10 paragraphs Literary and artistic 70 paragraphs Law and police 11 paragraphs Military 25 paragraphs Miscellaneous stories and anecdotes 72 paragraphs Divination magic and folklore 22 paragraphs On natural sciences On the I Ching Yin and Yang and 5 elements 7 paragraphs Mathematics 11 paragraphs Astronomy and calendar 19 paragraphs Meteorology 18 paragraphs Geology and mineralogy 17 paragraphs Geography and cartography 15 paragraphs Physics 6 paragraphs Chemistry 3 paragraphs Engineering metallurgy and technology 18 paragraphs Irrigation and hydraulic engineering 6 paragraphs Architecture 6 paragraphs Biological sciences botany and zoology 52 paragraphs Agricultural arts 6 paragraphs Medicine and pharmaceutics 23 paragraphs Humanistic sciences Anthropology 6 paragraphs Archeology 21 paragraphs Philology 36 paragraphs Music 44 paragraphs Total number of paragraphs 584 29 See also EditPortals China Books Science Technology Astronomy Chinese classics Chinese literature History of science and technology in China List of Chinese writers Technology of the Song dynastyNotes Edit a Shen Gua 1031 1091 et les Sciences Revue d Histoire des Sciences et de Leurs Applications 1989 b Florilege des notes du Ruisseau des reves Mengxi bitan de Shen Gua 1031 1095 by Jean Francois Billeter and 31 of his Geneva University students in Etudes Asiatiques 1993 i See Greek fireReferences EditCitations Edit John Makeham 2008 China The World s Oldest Living Civilization Revealed Thames amp Hudson p 239 ISBN 978 0 500 25142 3 Sivin 1995 III 22 Mohn 2003 1 Bowman 2000 105 Needham 1986 Volume 4 Part 3 660 Sivin 1995 III 9 in his biography in the Dictionary of Scientific Biography New York 1970 1990 Sivin III 44 Sivin III 44 45 a b c d Sivin III 45 张家驹 1962 沈括 上海人民出版社 a b Sivin 1995 III 49 Needham Volume 3 618 a b Chan 15 Needham Volume 3 614 a b Needham Volume 3 415 416 Needham Volume 3 262 Needham Volume 5 Part 1 201 Ropp 170 Needham Volume 4 Part 3 141 Needham Volume 4 82 84 a b Needham Volume 6 Part 1 545 Needham Volume 3 482 Dong 2000 69 Professor Zhang Longqiao of the Chinese Department of Peking Teachers College who popularized this account in Beijing s Guang Ming Daily on February 18 1979 in an article called Could It Be That A Visitor From Outer Space Visited China Long Ago states is a clue that a flying craft from some other planet once landed somewhere near Yangzhou in China Dong 2000 69 70 Dong 2000 70 71 A History of Metallography by Cyril Smith 1960 A History of Metallography by Cyril Smith 1960 Page 45 Needham Volume 1 136 Bibliography Edit Bowman John S 2000 Columbia Chronologies of Asian History and Culture New York Columbia University Press Chan Alan Kam leung and Gregory K Clancey Hui Chieh Loy 2002 Historical Perspectives on East Asian Science Technology and Medicine Singapore Singapore University Press ISBN 9971 69 259 7 Mohn Peter 2003 Magnetism in the Solid State An Introduction New York Springer Verlag Inc ISBN 3 540 43183 7 Needham Joseph 1986 Science and Civilization in China Volume 1 Introductory Orientations Taipei Caves Books Ltd Needham Joseph 1986 Science and Civilization in China Volume 3 Mathematics and the Sciences of the Heavens and the Earth Taipei Caves Books Ltd Needham Joseph 1986 Science and Civilization in China Volume 4 Physics and Physical Technology Part 3 Civil Engineering and Nautics Taipei Caves Books Ltd Needham Joseph 1986 Science and Civilization in China Volume 5 Chemistry and Chemical Technology Part 1 Paper and Printing Taipei Caves Books Ltd Needham Joseph 1986 Science and Civilization in China Volume 6 Biology and Biological Technology Part 1 Botany Taipei Caves Books Ltd Sivin Nathan 1995 Science in Ancient China Researches and Reflections Brookfield Vermont VARIORUM Ashgate Publishing Ropp Paul S 1990 Heritage of China Contemporary Perspectives on Chinese History Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 06440 9Further reading EditFu Daiwie On Mengxi Bitan s world of marginalities and south pointing needles Fragment translation vs contextual translation Archive In Alleton Vivianne and Michael Lackner editors De l un au multiple traductions du chinois vers les langues europeennes Translations from Chinese into European Languages Editions de la maison des sciences de l homme MSH 1999 Paris p 176 201 ISBN 273510768X 9782735107681 Fu Daiwie Mengxi Bitan as an example of organization of knowledge in Song biji Sinologie francaise 6 special issue on the history of science and technology 269 290 External links EditShen Kua mathematician engineer physicist and astronomer Archived 2011 08 17 at the Wayback Machine Works by Shen Kuo at Project Gutenberg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dream Pool Essays amp oldid 1121903335, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.