The Antikythera Mechanism Explained with Dr. Tony Freeth

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  • @poughkeepsieblue
    @poughkeepsieblue Рік тому +175

    I love how John and crew just let their guest talk, for over half of the episode.
    I am here for your amazing guests, their stories, and the good questions John asks.
    Good show.

    • @Mortonbmx
      @Mortonbmx Рік тому +6

      A rare trait in a largely narcissistic society...

    • @Njkk500
      @Njkk500 Рік тому +1

      I wonder how it would be if Neil DT was on, would John even get a sentence in? 😂

    • @poughkeepsieblue
      @poughkeepsieblue Рік тому +1

      @@Njkk500 neil tyson is dipshit. He is to science, what kenneth coplan is to religion.

    • @toddloosli3376
      @toddloosli3376 Рік тому +1

      😊

    • @toddloosli3376
      @toddloosli3376 Рік тому

      😊

  • @_morla_
    @_morla_ Рік тому +167

    For anyone interested, the youtuber/clock maker Clickspring has an amazing series where he recreates a working model from scratch while also going into its history, recent discoveries, possible ways it was created at such precision at the time, and iirc made some discoveries himself that ended up in a peer reviewed study. Pretty fascinating stuff, and extremely satisfying videos! Great interview as ever, keep up the good work John!

    • @ModernArtisanCasey
      @ModernArtisanCasey Рік тому +18

      Was gonna suggest this and i am glad I was beat to it. I tip my hat to you... and Clickspring

    • @mrln247
      @mrln247 Рік тому +9

      Clickspring did a beautiful job.

    • @mrln247
      @mrln247 Рік тому +19

      It slightly boggles my mind there wasn't more fanfare of him making the device with experimental methods trying to be historically accurate and a large chunk entirely by hand.
      I would have expected it to go on tour around the world and be shown in exhibitions, but as far as I can tell it's just quietly gone away and just sits as a collection off UA-cam video's.

    • @slipperysam1337
      @slipperysam1337 Рік тому +7

      Came here to shout out click spring

    • @markcampbell7577
      @markcampbell7577 Рік тому

      I was wondering if this has been accurately reproduced and if I could convince them to produce a permanent magnet pendulum clock and permanent magnet motor clock..

  • @rptaraporevala
    @rptaraporevala Рік тому +35

    Amazing! So, I have a few questions and thoughts:
    1. How the beep did they "machine" or fashion the gears?
    2. How did they write letters that were 1.6 to 2 mm high?
    3. Did they have magnifying devices to see these letters while writing?
    4. How did they read them? much better eyesight than mine or - again, magnifying devices?
    5. There was a mention of a 1 mm offset between centers of spindles to get to the last cycle of the moon as described in the video. How do you manage such critical tolerances in a manufacturing process that predates current robust mechanical/automated manufacturing?
    6. So, you manufactured one of the sixty odd gears (I hope my memory serves me right) - how did they verify that the gear was to spec?
    7. Specification! How did they specify and draw out the device for the manufacturing team to follow - let alone design it!
    8. How many discards did they have before they got a correctly working piece?
    9. So, who did the QA on the device and when? One of the cycles was 19 years! So did they wait for that period (or an average of 9.5 years) to test that functionality?
    One can go on... So many questions and thoughts.
    Thank you for this detailed description.

    • @sottyify
      @sottyify Рік тому +11

      Some answers (These answers are my own view). . .
      1) Simple tools fashioned to be filing kits. They then would cut out perfect circles from 1/8 inch thick bronze plate. As for where to cut, Clickspring does a good explainer on his second channel I believe.
      2) Solder. Most glyphs and characters of the mechanism (+3,000 characters - 2019 Tony Freeth) were sculpted out of the plating, however the few above characters above the plating, were made from solder.
      3) The Greeks made small bottles by winding threads of molten glass onto a core of clay mixed with manure. Blacksmiths and craftsmen alike would manufacture glass designed to magnify.
      4) Eye sight - Unless you were a Roman, than you might need a translator from Greek to Latin.
      5) I don't know the right answer to this. My own view is too cut precise and lightly sand until tolerance is achieved.
      6) The gear is the right 'spec' when the gear has the right Module (Gear Tooth Count / Gear Diameter). Again, Clickspring's second channel goes through how they could have found this. The total number of gears: depends who you ask: Freeth, Wright, Price, C. Carman. By my count: 54 (2 Lunar Gears as per Freeth - Private Communication - Sorry :( C.Carman).
      7) The Ancient Greek crafts were very Very competitive. Greek neighbours wanted to own the better version of whatever their neighbour owned. Ancient Greek crafters would obtain a version of the Mechanism, and replicate it with improvements. They'd then pass on these improvements to their apprentice, and the cycle repeats.
      8) It's hard to say how much discard there was when the mechanism was in its initial construction. However, they used Bronze plating which there was an no shortage of. In it's refinement and cleaner manufacturing process, the discard would be to the minimal.
      9) This question does make me smile. No, short answer. The craftsmen would set the dial to the beginning of the 19 year cycle, and wind it forward to the current date and would see if everything lined up.
      I've been researching the mechanism for several months for my own reconstruction for a Fully 3D printable Mechanism that anyone could print. I also know why Freeth didn't mention Clickspring but you didn't ask that question 0.0

    • @rptaraporevala
      @rptaraporevala Рік тому +1

      @@sottyify thanks

    • @rptaraporevala
      @rptaraporevala 11 місяців тому

      @traybern yes, also the hardness of the cutting tool would have to be high. This means having a good experience with metallurgy.

    • @sr4087
      @sr4087 10 місяців тому

      written by someone who has never made anything with their hands @@sottyify

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 7 місяців тому

      ⁠​⁠@@sottyify
      Don’t tease like that - why didn’t Freethe mention Clickspring? Haha.
      Also, Freethe mentioned that a working model can’t be done yet until one thing he’s working on is figured out, but he couldn’t say what it was yet since he’s in the middle of that research. Do you happen to know if anything has come of that specific research since this video was recorded, and what he was referring to exactly!

  • @BriarLeaf00
    @BriarLeaf00 Рік тому +82

    I could listen to this man talk about this for days. Really fascinating subject and a really wonderful orator. Thanks for letting the man speak, John, you really are a top, top notch interviewer.

    • @stijnvdv2
      @stijnvdv2 Рік тому +5

      I'm busy writing a novel with this as one of the MacGuffins. Apparently Indiana Jones 5 took an interest in it too, the difference is that I've done my research and made a story that's rather close to the truth and close to what people would expect from an Indiana Jones type story.... Disney..... yeah from what I heard, they pretty much fucked up with it, modern tinseltown style. Such a pity, coz there is a really fascinating story to tell, I know, coz I've written it. Just need to polish some dialogue and certain scenes, but the overall story is finished, think I'm on draft 7 now, with continuous improvements on it.

    • @BriarLeaf00
      @BriarLeaf00 Рік тому +3

      @@stijnvdv2 screw Hollywood, if you've got a great story to tell, then tell it. Good writing will stand on its own regardless of what other people do. Best of luck in your endeavors.

    • @macysondheim
      @macysondheim Рік тому

      @@BriarLeaf00 it’s all total bogus. None of these things have every been proven scientifically. The truth is that Christ sacrificed himself for your sins & was sent to earth to cleanse mankind of all sin & evil, all that’s required is you repent to Christ & accept as Lord & savior

    • @stijnvdv2
      @stijnvdv2 Рік тому +3

      @@macysondheim right.... 🙄 the psychology of ideologies and cults is no doubt fascinating, just as with the (in my opinion mentally ill) woke people. But that's not the topic of conversation here.

    • @BriarLeaf00
      @BriarLeaf00 Рік тому +1

      @@macysondheim Lololol

  • @TheAmericanAmerican
    @TheAmericanAmerican Рік тому +53

    The guest's voice is absolutely fantastic! It's like listening to a wise grandfather telling you an ancient epic! 😁

    • @ocalicreek
      @ocalicreek Рік тому +5

      Or a very well read Pirate. I’d buy the audio book of Treasure Island if this man read it.

    • @a.j.infowars7582
      @a.j.infowars7582 Рік тому +3

      That’s why I listened to the whole thing ❤️

    • @kenlieck7756
      @kenlieck7756 Рік тому +1

      @@a.j.infowars7582 If listening to a wise grandfather telling you an ancient epic is your thing, I have two words: Irving Finkel...
      (Are you an Infowars staffer or just a fan? I used to work with AJ back in the Sacred Cow/ACTV days...)

    • @a.j.infowars7582
      @a.j.infowars7582 Рік тому +1

      @@kenlieck7756 thanks cool man, I love AJ & Infowars. I’m just a fan.

  • @DuncansWildEscapes
    @DuncansWildEscapes Рік тому +5

    Great show. Great guest 👍

  • @JonnoPlays
    @JonnoPlays Рік тому +11

    I watched the full Stanford presentation on this device and it was absolutely incredible. Very technical and difficult to understand, but still very much worth the watch. UA-cam does a good job of recommending the video so you should be able to find it.

    • @robertbraun7155
      @robertbraun7155 6 місяців тому

      Akin to sitting down (hypothetically) someone from two thousand years ago
      In front of a laptop or a smart phone. Them let them figure out what in the world it was used for or the base meaning for its existence.

  • @c0ldsh0w3r
    @c0ldsh0w3r Рік тому +2

    Lovely as always

  • @yerabbit
    @yerabbit Рік тому +7

    There has been so much nonsense when discussing this device. Fun though it is to speculate, it's nice to hear some real discussion about it!

    • @TestTemp-rd1tu
      @TestTemp-rd1tu 2 місяці тому

      I get the strong impression you aren't qualified to participate in a "sensical" conversation about the subject, hence your comment.

  • @BloodyBobJr
    @BloodyBobJr Рік тому +52

    Antikythera Mechanism I think is one of the greatest discoveries in archeology maybe ever. Only certain events could be higher, like the discovery of Tutankhamen tomb or finding the burial complex of the 1st Emperor of China or the ancient structure of Göbekli Tepe. But for me this Mechanism blows me away.. just the questions it brings up intrigue me too no end.
    Who made it? How many were around in ancient times. How old is this device really, could it be a design 100's or even 1000 years older than its determined age. Was this some one off Genius creation by some master craftsman or was this a ancient design passed on through the ages. This level of technology is 1000's of years ahead of established understanding.. I wish it was talked about more. Some experts seem to dismiss it, cause we never found any other devices like it or even similar kinds of evidence. The fact it's only one of it's kind ever found is absolutely insane.
    It generates so many questions in my mind, it basically rewrites how we envision people of those ancient times. How many other inventions of that time have we never seen?

    • @markbeames7852
      @markbeames7852 Рік тому +1

      Check 27:50 for possible construction dates.

    • @NarenLumpkin
      @NarenLumpkin Рік тому +1

      Our history is an estimate @ best we forget more than we remember, HUMANS ARE DESIGNED TO FORGET WHAT THEY CANNOT UNDERSTAND. Understanding

    • @a.j.infowars7582
      @a.j.infowars7582 Рік тому +4

      The advanced technology was lost during a cataclysmic event.

    • @tatradak9781
      @tatradak9781 Рік тому

      It's all in the mathematics... But without knowing the cycles then the formula could not be created.. There wasone point mentioned which give a clue to the date.. The accuracy calculated is not as precise as today.. What calculations amd how inaccurate? This will should be able to be picked up via Pi.

    • @ShizukuSeiji
      @ShizukuSeiji Рік тому +1

      @@a.j.infowars7582 "The advanced technology was lost during a cataclysmic event."
      No it wasn't.

  • @dennisdrayna9383
    @dennisdrayna9383 Рік тому +4

    A remarkable explanation of the history and function of what is probably the most important object we have from the ancient world. Dr. Freeth, who made many of the crucial discoveries about this object, gives simple, user-friendly explanations. I highly recommend his two papers in Nature, which are easy for non-scientists to understand, and which convey the intellectual excitement that surrounded this work. Best of all, Dr. Freeth credits the many contributions made by others in this amazing story. The best 53 minutes I've spent in a long time.

  • @mikedjames
    @mikedjames Рік тому +24

    Some time in the 1990s I was on holiday near Athens. I went to visit the NAM in Athens and find the Mechanism before the Mechanism had been decoded. I think IBM had taken a look at it and done some X-Rays but it was displayed in a corner surrounded by many vases which seemed to be presented as more important than something with gears in it.. I am glad I have seen it for real.

  • @caseyrharris
    @caseyrharris Рік тому +1

    Thanks!

  • @ryanb9749
    @ryanb9749 Рік тому +182

    The Scientists and Engineers that built this device 2200 years ago were incredible, and they don't get enough respect.

    • @erikjrn4080
      @erikjrn4080 Рік тому +31

      Well, they made a few mistakes. For instance, there's no user manual, and no customer support. They don't even have a Web site with a faq! The main problem with giving them credit, though, is that they forgot to sign the bloody piece. There isn't even a company logo!
      I'm not entirely joking. Respect needs an object; something to be respected. We can admire their work, and respect their skill, but we can't respect them, because we don't know who they are. They may have been OK with that, though. I'm getting a serious nerd vibe from this mechanism, so they might have preferred to shut themselves into their workshop and avoid attention.

    • @CharlieBrown-zr9wk
      @CharlieBrown-zr9wk Рік тому +5

      They were black 😂😂😂😂

    • @ryanb9749
      @ryanb9749 Рік тому +20

      @@CharlieBrown-zr9wk They were Greek...

    • @kidssport8167
      @kidssport8167 Рік тому +3

      They had help

    • @RiversJ
      @RiversJ Рік тому +13

      This is caused by the myopic tendency of some people to think technological and cultural advancement is somehow linear when history clearly shows that is quite far from the historical trend. The people who made such were absolute experts at their trades back then and you'd need to look hard to find modern engineers who could build similar complexity devices leveled to our current tech base. They exist for sure but it's likely a smaller share than we'd care to admit.

  • @baarbacoa
    @baarbacoa Рік тому +30

    I saw it when even through the National Archeological Museum. I called my wife over and said "look it's the Antikythera mechanism!" She said, "Uh, Ok...." But to her credit, she pretended to be excited after she saw I was hyped up about seeing it.😂😂

    • @ulfhedtyrsson
      @ulfhedtyrsson Рік тому +3

      *files for divorce*

    • @baarbacoa
      @baarbacoa Рік тому +1

      @@ulfhedtyrsson She was an artist, and appreciates art much more than science and history. I've probably underappreciated great art at times.

    • @ulfhedtyrsson
      @ulfhedtyrsson Рік тому +1

      Sorry it's just a joke

    • @baarbacoa
      @baarbacoa Рік тому +3

      @@ulfhedtyrsson I know. My post makes it sound like she's a dummy. But I was just letting folks know that's not the case. It's that our interests are not 100% aligned

    • @KaterinaStamatelos
      @KaterinaStamatelos Рік тому +4

      @@baarbacoa You might find this fact interesting: medicine, by the Ancient Greeks, was considered an "art" while MUSIC was considered a science! Their "ascending scale of Knowledge" was: Arithmetic, Geometry, Stereometry, Music, Astronomy. This is why ALL Greeks (including children and women) had to learn Music! They were also taught to love LIFE, conquer their fear of Death and do NOT expect life "after death" (unless they became heroes-serving Humanity-then Gods might grand them IMMORTALITY) and to always look at the stars at night, because "that's where the Greeks came from"!

  • @txrwauy
    @txrwauy Рік тому +6

    This was another incredible episode. I learned so much, having known very little about this topic before. I am in awe of the craftsmanship, design work and attention to scientific detail that the Greeks put into this mechanism. I don't need people telling me that aliens built the pyramids etc - our ancestors were capable of incredible feats of engineering all on their own by putting in a lot of thought and hard, skilled work. Dr Freeth spoke very well and is obviously passionate about his subject.

  • @babybluesky9238
    @babybluesky9238 Рік тому +11

    oh well there's tonights video sorted... Just spent 2 hours listening to a breakdown of how they figured this out - this will be a great follow on, thank you GMD - been watching for years

  • @alexprice104
    @alexprice104 Рік тому +13

    Great show.
    Absolutely fascinating.

  • @TheAmericanAmerican
    @TheAmericanAmerican Рік тому +18

    Amazing! Incredible! Outstanding episode John!
    As someone who used to believe a decade ago that ancient alien made this device and gave it to ancient humans, listening to an actual expert explain his discoveries about this Incredible HUMAN-MADE device almost brought tears to my eyes...
    We humans are unbelievably clever given enough time and resources! We built our current global civilization on the shoulders of giants and we have to make sure we can be the next giants for our descendants to stand on!

    • @legitbeans9078
      @legitbeans9078 Рік тому +3

      I'm glad you're no longer so silly to think that aliens have contacted humans.

    • @monsvillerailways5736
      @monsvillerailways5736 Рік тому +2

      So how did they build such a precision device in that early time?
      Your original deduction is more realistic.
      Not made by humans...
      with the level of technology required to create such a device it seems obvious this was not man made back then.
      What other conclusion is there?
      1mm precision back then???

    • @ohgary
      @ohgary Рік тому

      We stand on the shoulders of giants and the signal issue of our times is whether to allow our governments to sexually mutilate children. Thank goodness for videos like this.

  • @AbbStar1989
    @AbbStar1989 Рік тому +5

    I love this channel so much. Every time a new video drops it's such a good feeling.

  • @TheSouthernorycle
    @TheSouthernorycle Рік тому +20

    Really blows my mind that this channel doesn’t have several million subscribers. Love your content John!

    • @TestTemp-rd1tu
      @TestTemp-rd1tu 2 місяці тому +1

      Imagine the Bell Curve. Draw a line at the right most limit, near the 2% line. That's the limited audience that would find this interesting.
      Everyone else is arguing Trump vs. Harris, and twerking.

    • @TheSouthernorycle
      @TheSouthernorycle 2 місяці тому +1

      @@TestTemp-rd1tu that’s sad. I weep for the future. 🥲

    • @TestTemp-rd1tu
      @TestTemp-rd1tu 2 місяці тому

      @@TheSouthernorycle
      Shoulder your White Man's Burden, and keep marching.

  • @derp195
    @derp195 Рік тому +4

    Love. This. Topic. Can't wait to watch later!

  • @alexherbert9404
    @alexherbert9404 Рік тому +14

    Aliens, space tech, dinosaurs and ancient humanity ....this podcast reads my fantasies. Cheers John. Awesome.

    • @johnhickey6114
      @johnhickey6114 Рік тому +1

      All of the above ❤
      I see dinosaurs as aliens in a way.

    • @JH-ce7yd
      @JH-ce7yd 5 місяців тому

      @@johnhickey6114 No doubt about it. In our world they would be. If it could be done, my fondest wish would be to go back in time and observe them in 'their' world as an alien myself.

  • @jackesioto
    @jackesioto Рік тому +49

    The Antikythera mechanism was WAY ahead of its time no matter how you look at it! Gears are generally thought to have been invented during the medieval period, but here we have a set of gears from Antiquity!

    • @Dr.Gunsmith
      @Dr.Gunsmith Рік тому +1

      Yes and they been hiding things ever since about our true human history.

    • @view1st
      @view1st Рік тому +7

      Before you make such claims check with the Chinese. More often than not they will have invented something first.

    • @view1st
      @view1st Рік тому +1

      Before you make such claims check with the Chinese. More often than not they will have invented something first.

    • @nickmonk7945
      @nickmonk7945 Рік тому +11

      Not only a set of gears but an incredibly small and precise set some with teeth only 1.6mm long! Contrast this with the crude gearings of medieval times!

    • @thesenamesaretaken
      @thesenamesaretaken Рік тому +4

      @@view1st I believe the process goes thus
      Mediterranean: hey check out this cool idea
      India: um actually we invented it first
      China: ayyy lmao

  • @kateS72
    @kateS72 2 місяці тому

    Thank you so much for bringing this researcher to explain his own work on the Antikythera mechanism.
    Loved it

  • @John-mf6ky
    @John-mf6ky Рік тому +4

    I love seeing John branching out a little from the typical topics. This mechanism has always fascinated ne!

    • @EventHorizonShow
      @EventHorizonShow  Рік тому +2

      More to come!

    • @John-mf6ky
      @John-mf6ky Рік тому

      ​@@EventHorizonShowcan't wait to watch and listen to it! Hope all is well with you and yours ✌️

    • @John-mf6ky
      @John-mf6ky Рік тому

      Hopefully doing some different topics like these will bring you in some more viewers and subs. You definitely deserve way more than you have!

  • @ivan-Croatian
    @ivan-Croatian Рік тому +18

    I love these videos to watch before sleep. I'm thinking about what's being said until my brain slowly switching to dream, and those dreams are trippy as hell. And I basically must watch one video 3-4 times until I get to the end of it 😄

    • @cropcircle5693
      @cropcircle5693 Рік тому +1

      Literally me!! This channel and Isaac Arthur are about the only way I get to sleep! Anton Petrov is great too but his videos usually aren't long enough.

    • @PatPauloMMA
      @PatPauloMMA Рік тому +2

      So you put it on and fall asleep to it? I do that with The Why Files. I’ll start with this channel too. Thanks

    • @ethyrice
      @ethyrice Рік тому +1

      @@PatPauloMMA Always!

  • @exoexpansion
    @exoexpansion Рік тому +8

    Î am fascinated by this and the fact that the ancient Greeks built such a machine. It only proves that my old obsession with ancient Greece is not that crazy.

  • @walterwally983
    @walterwally983 Рік тому +1

    This was great "new" information. Absolutely enjoyed this! Thank you both!

  • @peterpayne2219
    @peterpayne2219 Рік тому +1

    Outstanding video! I’ve never been so enthralled!

  • @8-7-styx94
    @8-7-styx94 Рік тому +3

    There's a video here on youtube of someone recreating the Antikythera mechanism. Took him something like 18 months with modern machines. I can only imagine how many years this must have taken to make in Ancient Greece.

  • @EksaStelmere
    @EksaStelmere Рік тому +8

    It really feels as though the tendecy for man to disassemble and recycle metals like the copper alloys has caused lots of old world tech to vanish.

    • @captainhakob814
      @captainhakob814 Рік тому +1

      I mean they took the pyramid cap stones off to build a city. People are too lazy to cut the stone, mine the metal themselves so we are recyclers. I feel like a lot of humans are good at reconstituting objects to achieve a goal, maybe it's because we have been doing it so long.

    • @JH-ce7yd
      @JH-ce7yd 5 місяців тому

      @@captainhakob814 Describing ancients as lazy recyclers is very accurate and very true, at least from our perspective. From their perspective it was just practical and efficient. The immediate needs almost always outweigh the future needs, both then and now. Only the perspective changes.

  • @idea999
    @idea999 Рік тому +3

    Another big thing people are missing with this device is how they were able to strategically place so many gears into such a small device and have it operate smoothly without binding up.

  • @seranonable
    @seranonable Рік тому +5

    keep in mind that ancient people took omens very seriously and the cosmos was a great source of omens... so if you're an emperor, or a general or a city-planner, or some high level decision-maker, a computer that can track major omens in the cosmos with a high degree of accuracy could potentially be a priceless asset. important to consider these things through what we know about people's worldview at the time.

    • @robsan52
      @robsan52 Рік тому

      Well...maybe. Much of what we know about ancient culture and the educated people of the time is just made up by archeologists to fit a convenient theory that shows history is completely linear and that we are the end all and be all and everything great about homo sapiens.
      Much of history is just fantasy created to explain ancient cultures that doesn't upset the pet theories of the status quo. Archeology is not much of a science...its more of a philosophy created in the humanities.

  • @rodrigoff7456
    @rodrigoff7456 Рік тому

    Thank you very much for this incredible podcast!

  • @Grandremone
    @Grandremone Рік тому +1

    I love the humility on this guy

  • @PBeringer
    @PBeringer Рік тому +4

    Such a fan of Tony Freeth! Michael Wright's working models are pretty incredible; he's the quintessential eccentric English, garden shed engineer/inventor. This was a fantastic listen! When was this interview recorded; close to 2 June 2023, or earlier?

  • @uwu-gr7il
    @uwu-gr7il Рік тому +5

    Your guest is a.great fast thinking speaker. If you were to print out and read all of of his dialogue,it would be a perfect script for a documentary his study of the previous people studying the mechanism and the origin of the discovery are ingrained in his contiousness and the way he keeps me glued to this episode even though I have heard most of these facts previously after viewing every UA-cam channel I could find on the subject. Personally I would like to see individual photos of everything found from the shipwreck

    • @aceloco817
      @aceloco817 10 місяців тому

      Shoot, i thought it was a documentary! Lol. Great voice too.

    • @TestTemp-rd1tu
      @TestTemp-rd1tu 2 місяці тому

      I wanted accurate subtitles because some of his words were not completely enunciated. Several times I had to rewind and re-listen, and a few of those attempts did not result in clarity.
      My concern is that this man, and others like him, could keel over dead 10 minutes after the interview, and taking with them all their knowledge that should have been recorded. We're in the middle of a struggle to rediscover history, while simultaneously failing to record our own to a degree that our descendants might regard as foolish, and stupid.
      There isn't one single detail of this man's life experience that does not have value, even if he is (in his own words) "wrong". Knowing what WRONG is, is called PROGRESS. They should install a microchip on his body and record his every utterance for the rest of his life, to be stored in a great online repository.

  • @roshee5573
    @roshee5573 11 місяців тому +1

    The discovery of devices like this just make one wonder what other great knowledge was lost and forgotten . Imagine if these sort of this were never lost

  • @lisabracken9317
    @lisabracken9317 Рік тому

    The 2016 Stanford lecture was just as engaging! Thank you all for the new review!

  • @peterdhess6913
    @peterdhess6913 Рік тому

    Thanks for topics and guests I hope to hear ! Thanks John & co

  • @matc4882
    @matc4882 Рік тому +4

    Great journey you took us on,beautifully informative.
    Tiny criticism- you don’t need the music - it distracts rather than adds to the sense of wonder

    • @ShizukuSeiji
      @ShizukuSeiji Рік тому

      "Tiny criticism- you don’t need the music"
      I thought it was fine and added to the sense of wonder of the spoken voice.

  • @cholst1
    @cholst1 Рік тому +12

    Great to get this "from the horses mouth" so to speak! Such fascinating item.

  • @jtcorey7681
    @jtcorey7681 Рік тому

    Thank you for keeping the imagery on the device and not on talking heads. Well done.

  • @harryrammer
    @harryrammer 10 місяців тому +1

    The Greeks made some incredible mechanism all those years ago. Nowadays, they make incredible souvlaki pitta wraps - you know, the ones with the chips and white sauce😋

  • @MB-nn3jw
    @MB-nn3jw Рік тому

    Great interview/discussion on an amazing artefact that still holds immense fascination, and unanswered questions still.

  • @denvan3143
    @denvan3143 11 місяців тому

    The Enigma machine, and the Antikythera mechanism Are two of my favorite devices, one from antiquity, and the other from recent history (I have apps for both on my iPhone). Thanks for this great interview.

  • @DesignateVoid
    @DesignateVoid Рік тому +2

    Looking forward to this one

  • @sergicardo5631
    @sergicardo5631 Рік тому +1

    Congrats, amazing podcast!

  • @paige-vt8fn
    @paige-vt8fn Рік тому +1

    Incredibly interesting, thanks for another great interview and video, John. ♥️👍

  • @ryanb9749
    @ryanb9749 Рік тому +3

    I'm loving these archeology episodes. I wonder if Eric Cline would be interested in doing an interview. 🤔

  • @beekneed
    @beekneed 10 місяців тому

    Astonishing! Thank you!

  • @jaymobiggety9903
    @jaymobiggety9903 Рік тому +1

    This was extra good, thank you!

  • @johndoe-ep7qk
    @johndoe-ep7qk Рік тому

    genius mechanism and lovely presentation

  • @RobertClolery
    @RobertClolery 5 місяців тому +1

    It might be interesting to guess how many people were needed to run the shop that made this,

  • @2inabillion
    @2inabillion 11 місяців тому +1

    Its a device which was used for making Astrological predictions of when things will happen in people's life, to the country and society in general.
    The only branch of study which require this detailed knowledge of the position of planets for the betterment of people and society is Astrology!!
    This is a powerful device for the ancient Greek astrologers who needed the position of moon, planets and eclipses for making astrological predictions

    • @jrrarglblarg9241
      @jrrarglblarg9241 11 місяців тому

      I suspect the statue of Marduk was a crude early version of this using rolling wheels rather gears.

  • @LordTempist
    @LordTempist Рік тому

    Love the podcast. I really look forward to seeing all of these. Thank you so much.

  • @sofia_ines
    @sofia_ines Рік тому

    I subscribed yesterday! This is great content, thank you!

  • @DwainDwight
    @DwainDwight Рік тому +1

    it's amazing also that with everything we have, the decades of work etc... we still haven't completely figured it out yet or have a complete working model. so intriguing

  • @MadderMel
    @MadderMel Рік тому +2

    One of the most amazing objects we've ever seen on Earth

  • @unvergebeneid
    @unvergebeneid Рік тому +5

    No love for Chris from Clickspring? I mean his reconstruction might be as flawed as others from a theoretical point of view but it's probably the most advanced from a manufacturing perspective and we _are_ on UA-cam after all.

  • @thepartysjustbegun5557
    @thepartysjustbegun5557 Рік тому

    That was amazingly interesting, I've been interested in this for a long time and this was a well shared insight into the understanding of it.

  • @uktenatsila9168
    @uktenatsila9168 Рік тому

    Outstanding interview.
    Thank you.

  • @re_roar
    @re_roar Рік тому +3

    Having an interest in design, I personally think the most interesting part of this is the development phase that went into creating it. I mean how many steps of more simple mechanisms went before it? Was it possible to be a one off creation? I doubt it, was this a top line model of a more common device? We'll never know but I think its intriguing.

  • @HAL-vu8ef
    @HAL-vu8ef Рік тому +3

    The engraved text, thousands of digits, were less than 2mm tall, did they have magnifying glasses back then ?

  • @dannyarcher6370
    @dannyarcher6370 9 місяців тому

    31:30 - It's so humbling looking back at our ancestors from more than two millennia, and knowing that they were just as ingenious and curious in understanding their world as we are, despite their lack of knowledge and technology.

  • @jamielondon6436
    @jamielondon6436 Рік тому

    Utterly fascinating!

  • @manuellubian5709
    @manuellubian5709 Рік тому

    Fascinating video.

  • @aljosacebokli
    @aljosacebokli Рік тому +1

    what a remarkable interview....time flew

  • @jtucker4419
    @jtucker4419 Рік тому

    Excellent coverage. Keep it coming. ❤

  • @ronald4700
    @ronald4700 10 місяців тому

    These people were a lot more sophisticated then history gave them credit for,amazing devise for the time.any idea who made this.

  • @Dr.Gunsmith
    @Dr.Gunsmith Рік тому +3

    Makes one wonder what’s been lost to time that we don’t know anything about.

  • @MAElbashir
    @MAElbashir Рік тому

    This is absolutely amazing. It very hard for us to understand this device because we don't really now how much the ancient people new. This device shows the knowledge of these people more than the written history does.

  • @chrisu.5097
    @chrisu.5097 17 днів тому

    At about 40:30 in the video, do you think Dr. Freeth's undisclosed thing he is working on about the device has to do with predictions of the appearance comets?

  • @ratatoskr1069
    @ratatoskr1069 10 місяців тому

    I would strongly suggest, that if a device like this was found through archaeology, then it was much more common than we think. The chance of discovering an already rare object at the time of its original construction, thousands of years later throudh excavation is astronomically small. The time is just such an immensly destructive and devastating force... sooo little survives the mistress of the universes steady work.

  • @urphakeandgey6308
    @urphakeandgey6308 Рік тому +5

    On the topic of why they made the Antikythera Mechanism, but not simpler things like clocks: Just because they could make the Antikythera Mechanism doesn't mean a clock would be easy. Why go through the intense effort of manufacturing something that tells the time? The average pleb at the time probably just looked at where the sun was in the sky and said "yeah, it's about dusk." That was all the timekeeping they needed. If they really wanted something more accurate, even a sundial would be infinitely more easier and reasonable to make.
    So why the Antikythera Mechanism? I think because it literally tracks the movement of The Heavens... Of the Gods... It basically calculated divine knowledge. Might as well make at least one of these both for it's potential practical purposes and as a tribute to The Gods it keeps track of.

    • @JohnMichaelGodier
      @JohnMichaelGodier Рік тому

      The thing about clocks is that they had them. The Greco-Roman world had really elaborate water clocks, some even self-correcting to a degree, so the concept was there. It just appeared that they hadn't made the leap to the job of the water being done through a wound metal spring. They may not have had springs, but It might also just have been a matter that they did actually know to do that, but these mechanisms were so expensive to construct at the time that no one bit when the water clocks and sun dials were good enough.

    • @Carnagath82
      @Carnagath82 Рік тому +2

      As a Greek guy who has tried to read some of the transcribed text on the machine (and understands most of the words), it looks like a user's manual that was printed right on top of the device. Many words are missing of course, but in general I think it's trying to explain to the user what the outputs mean. That's probably the reason for the small text, they just had to fit all those words there. I just find that very interesting, because if that's true it means that the device was made for laymen, it wasn't a device that was shared between scientists in academies. Probably government officials or farmers or just rich people who wanted a cool gadget and didn't understand/weren't interested in learning how it works, they just wanted to be able to read it.

    • @richarddietzen3137
      @richarddietzen3137 Рік тому

      I think you’ve understood it exactly. A device that could be use to predict in advance when the gods would smile or frown could have led to success or failure of human enterprise under the polytheistic belief system of astronomical signs. Wealthy men and kings would pay a fortune to accurately ensure that fate smiled upon risky endeavors. Whoever could establish himself as a guarantor of heavenly signs would be a most trusted advisor, or a proven analog computing device might do so without the chance of subterfuge.
      No disruption of space-time continuum required.

    • @zion897
      @zion897 2 місяці тому

      Mass extinction event clock. Astronomy.

  • @RedeyedJedi00
    @RedeyedJedi00 Рік тому

    One of the most fascinating archeological objects ever discovered

  • @zvisger
    @zvisger 9 місяців тому

    Yes! Good ol John Godier, I know it's gonna be good when he's the speaker.

  • @rogerdudra178
    @rogerdudra178 6 місяців тому

    Greetings from the BIG SKY of Montana. Falling into your space is fun.

  • @simonstrandgaard5503
    @simonstrandgaard5503 Рік тому +1

    Are there records elsewhere that the ship has sunk, containing the Antikythera mechanism?

  • @reidspeed77
    @reidspeed77 Рік тому

    Superb...knowledge....knowledge.... knowledge .....the group that produced this could be flying 🛸 those discs we se .........fascinating ....music in background is very cool.....

  • @ArienMasterpiece
    @ArienMasterpiece Рік тому

    Love love love a Thursday, Event Horizon is a highlight of every week, greatness! 🙌❤💫

  • @tdowl
    @tdowl Рік тому +1

    I can't help wondering whether there might be indications of the precession of the equinoxes built into this incredibly complex device?

  • @Jay_in_Japan
    @Jay_in_Japan Рік тому +3

    Imagine future humans find a Nokia phone, then create a whole project and research group for this one unique mechanism.

  • @juliafox7904
    @juliafox7904 Рік тому

    Fascinating

  • @baarbacoa
    @baarbacoa Рік тому +5

    Technology like this must have taken generations upon generations to mature. Ignoring what they might have used this device for, there almost had to be various sorts of complex gear devices being used by relatively wealthy people.

    • @madmattdigs9518
      @madmattdigs9518 Рік тому +4

      Yes, you would certainly think so. They didn’t just suddenly create a device like this… without any predecessor. Even if those earlier examples of this technology are out there somewhere waiting to be discovered, the creator of this one had to be an absolute genius. It’s fascinating to think about.

    • @Atrahasis7
      @Atrahasis7 Рік тому +1

      That is certainly the suspicion of many historians but the lack of evidence prevents speculation. But I mean when one looks at the relative sophistication of the greco roman world, its almost unavoidable. Its like all the other books from antiquity mentioned only in passing. Happens all the time. A good example for the anglo world is like if Shakespeare whole saved body of work would be A Midsummer Night's Dream, but in passing by other peoples writing you hear there were other works like Hamlet or Macbeth. Probably masterpieces but who knows.

    • @Dragrath1
      @Dragrath1 Рік тому

      @@Atrahasis7 Yeah it has been noted however that because its bronze once any tool or other artifact is no longer needed/useful they generally remelted it down because bronze was very valuable. Thus the absence of such artifacts outside of things lost at sea or burial isn't that surprising either.

  • @michaelbruns449
    @michaelbruns449 Рік тому +1

    We've done this all before, risen up and driven down over and over again for probably millions upon millions of years.

  • @brenton2561
    @brenton2561 Рік тому +3

    Seems like this would be invaluable for navigation in an open ocean when clouds obscure the sky.

  • @robertbraun7155
    @robertbraun7155 6 місяців тому +1

    I feel that was not the only one.. As they said it seemed the ship was full of cargo thst seemed higher value thus carrying things important.
    My thought is it was made for 1. Was to track stars, moon and planets and the cycles.
    I believe the other reason was for agriculture. Used to know when was best to plant crops and such. I would bet they were more made just for that reason. Maybe to trade or sell to ther regions and countries to use to have successful the best chance agriculturaly for success..

  • @FairwayJack
    @FairwayJack Рік тому +2

    ... the question remains "why did the ancients want to track eclipses?" ... how did it serve their purposes?

  • @MichielHollanders
    @MichielHollanders Рік тому

    Fascinating!

  • @HAL-vu8ef
    @HAL-vu8ef Рік тому +2

    Look for ancient jewellery and religious icons that have over engineered parts that look like gears and you may find repurposed parts of a broken mechanism.

  • @blacktriangle9490
    @blacktriangle9490 Рік тому

    Love the show guys ❤

  • @yesitsthetruth1774
    @yesitsthetruth1774 3 місяці тому +1

    Great video and it would make a lot more sense to viewers when they understand the earth is a circular flat topographical plane with Polaris directly over the center and the luminaries rotate in a circle over this circular flat topographical plane. The Antikythera mechanism is a demonstration device and it represents what the luminaries are actually doing circling over the Earth around Polaris. That's why it can predict the movements is because it's actually reproducing the movements.

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor5462 Рік тому +1

    43:00 The thing that really held back technology in the classical world was slavery. The steam engine toy invented at the time could have been employed as a labor saving device, but who cares about labor savings when you have slaves?
    You aren't engaged in labor yourself, and so you would never see better ways to do the work. The slaves might, but they had no power to effect change.

  • @JohnRodriguesPhotographer
    @JohnRodriguesPhotographer Рік тому

    This us a great video on a facinating device. The questions it creates and some of answers are startling. I hope Xtech, not sure of the spelling, is doing well. They pursued an expensive project when most businesses would have been more concerned with existence.

  • @fnersch3367
    @fnersch3367 Рік тому +1

    A few years back I purchased as partially working full scale model of this device from a museum (Kotsanas Museum) in Greece for 550 Euros (2019). It is based on models predating 2005 (Freeth et al). This is a nice model but a bit pricey.

  • @RamondeMey
    @RamondeMey 7 днів тому

    Such knowledge was not in fact lost as evinced by watches today, but the Antikythera mechanism is a work of art, because it cannot predict the phases of the Moon, unless those were the paschal (predicted) phases of the Moon.

  • @Jason-hb8jy
    @Jason-hb8jy Рік тому +2

    All these lost and rediscovered technologies and people still try to deny that there was a pre-younger dryas civilization.

  • @amangogna68
    @amangogna68 Рік тому

    Great video !