Newton vindicates Homer – the sublime synthesis of science, art and history

If you did not see this marvellous story is 2008, it really is well worth reading (on the Guardian http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2008/jun/24/spaceexploration.sciencenews).

Apparently, scientists have used clues from Homer’s Odyssey and the science of Sir Issac Newton to determine when the events described in the Odyssey actually occurred.

According to the article, the events surrounding the Trojan Horse took place in 1188 BC and the bloody massacre of Penelope’s suitors took place during an eclipse on April 16 1178BC (as calculated by some equally clever people back in the 1920s but up to now not proven).

Since the legend of Troy turned out to be based on history, will we now come to see the Odyssey as being more history than in legend?

Thank you to Marcelo Magnasco, head of the Laboratory of Mathematical Physics at Rockefeller University, New York, and Constantino Baikouzis of the Proyecto Observatorio at the Observatorio Astronómico in La Plata, Argentina, for their report in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences for this news.

My #TFSFlashFiction entry from 21 November 2011

Help! The machines have started taking over the world – Please retw… *THIS ACCOUNT HAS BEEN TERMINATED* #tfsflashfiction

Stories in 123 Characters – competition now closed – details here: http://thefictionshelf.com/competition

Pleased to say I’ve been short-listed along with five other entrants, including fellow Norfolk tweeter @SarahHopkinsUK – results will be out 20 Jan 2011.

What to do with the Lords?

If we must have a second chamber then it must have democratic legitimacy if it is to act as a check (though not a block) on the Commons and initiate some laws. Since people complain about the lack of proportional representation when voting for MPs, the second chamber should rectify this deficiency. However, since using direct elections to select representatives for a second chamber would undermine the primacy of MPs, we need a system that is both indirect and proportional.

The second chamber should have just 300 members (half the number of the, to be reformed, Commons). We would only select these after each general election from those candidates who failed to win election to the Commons (this would prevent the list from becoming just another patronage tool for party leaders – since local constituency parties select most candidates).

We would divide the seats between all the parties contesting the general election based on their total share of the national vote. Parties with less the 1% of the national vote would not get a seat. In the interests of fairness, Independents would count as one party.

We would rank all the losing candidates for the Commons by the total number of votes they won in their local election. This would favour candidates who nearly won in constituencies where more people voted. This should encourage people to vote for a good candidate who is unlikely to win because they might still get a seat in the second chamber.

Example
Say the Conservative Party wins 33% of the national vote – we therefore allocate it 99 seats in the second chamber. Ms Blueeyes is their losing candidate with the most votes so she gets the first seat. Mr Bluenose also got more votes than most other Conservative losers – so he gets the second seat, and so on until we have allocated all the party’s seats to its top 99 losers, (the remaining losers don’t get a second chance).

If Independents got 5% of the national vote – they would get 15 seats in the second chamber. Again, the losing Independent candidate with the most votes in their local election would get the first seat.

We would not allow parties to replace candidates with other nominations – if a candidate dropped out then the seat would go to the next losing candidate down the list. This way, every person in the second chamber is a named individual who has at least stood in a general election and gained a reasonable number of votes. The overall makeup of the second chamber would be proportional but since none of the members would represent a constituency, they could not usurp the role of the MP.

Second chamber representatives could naturally stand for the Commons in future elections – their role in the second chamber might help them build (or destroy) their political reputation with the electorate – somewhat reducing the advantage usually held by incumbent MPs and so making for fairer elections.

@HuwSayer

Newton vindicated – the sublime synthesis of science, art and history

This is wonderful – if you did not see the original story (in 2008) you can still find it here on the Telegraph:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/main.jhtml?view=DETAILS&grid=&xml=/earth/2008/06/24/scitrojan124.xml

And here on the Guardian:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2008/jun/24/spaceexploration.sciencenews

Apparently, scientists have worked out the actual dates when the events described in Homer’s Odyssey occurred, using the science of Sir Issac Newton to analyse the clues in the book.

According to both articles, the events surrounding the Trojan Horse took place in 1188 BC. While the bloody massacre of Penelope’s suitors took place during an eclipse on April 16 1178BC (as calculated by some equally clever people back in the 1920s but not proven until now).

The legend of Troy turned out to be based on history. Now it seems the Odyssey was more grounded in history than previously believed (an idea that Tim Severin explored in his book ‘The Ulysses Voyage‘).

Thank you to Marcelo Magnasco, head of the Laboratory of Mathematical Physics at Rockefeller University, New York, and Constantino Baikouzis of the Proyecto Observatorio at the Observatorio Astronómico in La Plata, Argentina, for their report in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences for this news.