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  1. The Babylonian Theory of the Planets.J. M. Steele & N. M. Swerdlow - 1999 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 119 (4):695.
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  • Studies on Babylonian goal-year astronomy I: a comparison between planetary data in Goal-Year Texts, Almanacs and Normal Star Almanacs.J. M. Steele & J. M. K. Gray - 2008 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 62 (5):553-600.
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  • A study of Babylonian planetary theory I. The outer planets.Teije de Jong - 2019 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 73 (1):1-37.
    In this study I attempt to provide an answer to the question how the Babylonian scholars arrived at their mathematical theory of planetary motion. Although no texts are preserved in which the Babylonians tell us how they did it, from the surviving Astronomical Diaries we have a fairly complete picture of the nature of the observational material on which the scholars must have based their theory and from which they must have derived the values of the defining parameters. Limiting the (...)
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  • A Study of Babylonian Observations of Planets Near Normal Stars.Alexander Jones - 2004 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 58 (6):475-536.
    Abstract.The present paper is an attempt to describe the observational practices behind a large and homogeneous body of Babylonian observation reports involving planets and certain bright stars near the ecliptic (“Normal Stars”). The reports in question are the only precise positional observations of planets in the Babylonian texts, and while we do not know their original purpose, they may have had a part in the development of predictive models for planetary phenomena in the second half of the first millennium B.C. (...)
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  • A study of Babylonian planetary theory I. The outer planets.Teije Jong - 2019 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 73 (1):1-37.
    In this study I attempt to provide an answer to the question how the Babylonian scholars arrived at their mathematical theory of planetary motion. Although no texts are preserved in which the Babylonians tell us how they did it, from the surviving Astronomical Diaries we have a fairly complete picture of the nature of the observational material on which the scholars must have based their theory and from which they must have derived the values of the defining parameters. Limiting the (...)
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