Promoting astronomy in developing countries: an historical perspective
Abstract
Any international effort to promote astronomy world wide today must necessarily take into account its cultural and historical component. The past few decades have ushered in an age, which we may call the Age of Cultural Copernicanism. In analogy with the cosmological principle that the universe has no preferred location or direction, Cultural Copernicanism would imply that no cultural or geographical area, or ethnic or social group, can be deemed to constitute a superior entity or a benchmark for judging or evaluating others.
- Publication:
-
IAU Special Session
- Pub Date:
- 2007
- DOI:
- 10.1017/S174392130700662X
- Bibcode:
- 2007IAUSS...5...21K
- Keywords:
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- History and philosophy of astronomy;
- "Cultural Copernicanism";
- astronomy and civilization;
- astronomy in relation to Eastern and Western thought and culture