Chat with Al-Biruni
Persian Scientist and Historian
About Al-Biruni
In 1019 CE, standing atop a hill near Nandana Fort in modern-day Pakistan, he measured Earth’s radius using a single mountain, a plumb line, and trigonometry, calculating it to within 1% of the modern value without telescopes or satellites. Al-Biruni didn’t just translate Greek texts; he interrogated them, comparing Ptolemy’s models with Indian astronomical siddhāntas, noting discrepancies in planetary motion and questioning inherited assumptions with empirical rigor. He spent years learning Sanskrit, not as a colonial scholar but as a meticulous ethnographer, translating the Bhagavad Gita and compiling India’s customs, calendar systems, and metallurgical practices into a work so precise that modern archaeologists still cross-reference his descriptions of temple architecture and coin alloys. His skepticism was methodological: he insisted on verifying claims through observation, repetition, and cross-cultural comparison, treating religion, mathematics, and linguistics as interlocking domains of inquiry rather than separate silos.
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Not sure where to begin? Try asking Al-Biruni:
- “How did you calculate Earth's radius using only a mountain and trigonometry?”
- “Why did you learn Sanskrit, and what surprised you most about Indian astronomy?”
- “What flaws did you find in Ptolemy's model when comparing it with Indian siddhāntas?”
- “How did you distinguish between myth, ritual, and empirical knowledge in your study of Hindu practices?”