History of ancient and medieval mathematical astronomy: A 1-year post doc
position within the 
PSL research project TAMAS-Tables Analysis Methods for the history of
Astral Sciences 

 

Deadline: September 30, 2016 

Notification: November,1, 2016 

Sarting dates: between January 1 and June 1, 2017 

 

Observatoire de Paris, SYRTE, Equipe dÕhistoire. 

 

Post doc description 

The postdoctoral researcher will participate in TAMAS a PSL research
project that pursues new standards 
in the edition and analysis of ancient and medieval astronomical tables. 

For centuries across Eurasia, astronomical tables were constructed,
compiled and copied to meet a wide 
range of religious, ritualistic and political needs, to make calendars, to
predict the future astrologically, 
and to understand the natural world. Such tables circulated among cultures
and were appropriated and 
transformed by a great diversity of actors. Thus, the numerical data
conveyed in these tables provide 
rich evidence for exchange and ancient scientific practices. For example,
from tabular data, we can 
recover how complex massive numerical computations were handled in the
ancient world. Tables also 
reveal how astral phenomena were modelled and how reasoning and prediction
were shaped. As written 
documents of a special type, falling between computation per se and data
storage, astronomical tables 
expose epistemic writing practices in their layout and their combination
into ÒsetsÓ of tables. Created 
by complex computation with often-interlinked algorithms, circulating
tables generally were adapted to 
new contexts and purposes rather than recomputed from scratch. Thus in
addition to their individual 
contents, astronomical tables viewed more generally can provide unmatched
sources for studying the 
transmission of computational know-how, writing technologies and layouts,
theoretical models, and 
numerical parameters. With enhanced digital editorial and analytical tools,
scholars will be able to chart 
previously unrecognized paths of circulation, to learn how large
collections of tables were shaped, and 
to track the spread and appropriation of particular computational
practices. 

A central goal of TAMAS is to bring together emerging and more senior
scholars. By working together 
through carefully selected case studies, such collaboration encourages both
the transmission of tacit 
know-how generally not found in scholarly publications as well as the
critical reappraisal of the 
traditional and fundamental research questions in the discipline. 

The project focuses on two sets of questions: 

. What type of database should we design in order to ÒeditÓ sources in
the ancient astral sciences 
in the context of the digital humanities? How can a single tool handle
diverse tabular layouts, 
different types of numbers, different kinds of errors and variants between
copies, as well as the 
variety of publishing options in paper and digital formats? 
. What kinds of tools should we create to explore materials within this
database and to analyse 
these sources? How can we employ modern computational power with the
necessary attention 
to the historical computation practices of the actors? How can we describe
the algorithms 
presented in texts and their eventual effective uses in computing tables? 


These two groups of questions are obviously closely related and need to be
treated together in order to 
guarantee the compatibility of the analytical tools with the database on
which they should operate. For 
the first group of questions we intend to produce innovative table- and
parameter-databases and to 
develop new ways to publish our research in conjunction with
well-established journals in the field such 
as the Journal for the History of Astronomy and SCIAMVS. For the second set
of questions we will 
create shared, historically based computation routines allowing us to
explore in new ways the numerical 
content of astronomical tables. These efforts will be based on original,
individual cases studies from 


specific sources by each participant in the project. These studies will be
published as a book that will be 
the first exploration, of this breadth, of these methodological issues. 

 

TAMAS is based at the Observatoire de Paris (France) and is bringing
together 14 scholars from 9 nations 
on 4 continents. It cover sources in the major languages of ancient
science: cuneiform, Greek, Arabic, 
Latin, Sankrit and Chinese. Based in Paris the postdoctoral researcher will
actively participate in the 
design of TAMAS digital tools with the two IT specialists associated with
the project based in the 
Observatory. The successful candidate will also have the opportunity to
contribute to the collective 
book. She/he will cooperate closely with Dr Matthieu Husson (project PI)
and be expected to take an 
active part in the collective events of the project over the course of the
year. 

 

Applicants should propose a research project addressing a specific set of
ancient or medieval 
astronomical tables. They must show how this specific set of astronomical
tables presents challenges 
which will help shape the design of various TAMAS digital tools and offer
methodological reflections 
in original and pertinent ways. 

 

Qualifications: 

. A PhD in the history of ancient and medieval sciences, preferably closely
connected to the 
history of Astronomy or a manuscript submitted to the PhD committee. 
. Knowledge of the ancient(s) language(s) related to the sources addressed
in the proposed 
research project are required. 
. Good writing and communication skills in English are required. 
. A demonstrated capacity for creative and independent research. 
. The ability and willingness to work as a member of an international
research team. 
. Demonstrated experience in the domain of Digital Humanities would be an
advantage. 
. Demonstrated experience in publishing in peer reviewed journals is also
an asset. 


 

Offer 

We offer a one year post-doctoral position. The proposed salary is
according to the Paris Observatory 
regulation around 2400 euros gross per month on a full time basis. Contract
will start at the soonest on 
January 1, 2017 and at the latest on June, 1 2017. 

 

How to apply 

Applications are to be sent by the September 30, 2016 deadline as a pdf
attachment by email to Matthieu 
Husson (matthieu.husson@obspm.fr).
Applications must include the following: 

1. Curiculum Vitae (max 2 pages) 
2. Research track records: publications, invited lecturesÉ (max 2 pages) 
3. Research project (max 3000 words) 
4. Pdf-copy of the doctoral dissertation 
5. Certified copies of the relevant diplomas 
6. Contact details of two referee (name, institutional affiliation and
email address) or two letters 
of reference 


 

Evaluation process 

Each application will be reviewed by one of the referees proposed by the
applicant and a referee external 
to the TAMAS project. Based on this, a selection committee from the TAMAS
project will establish a 
ranking of three candidates. The result will be communicated to the
applicant by November, 1 2016. 

 

Additional information 

Applicant are encouraged to consider additional information on the project
at tamas.hypotheses.org. 
They can also contact the project PI Matthieu Husson (matthieu.husson@obspm.fr).